Jews were behind Pacolli's campaign in local elections

The campaign, which many appreciated creatively, and which brought significant results to Selim Pacolli, candidate of the New Kosovo Alliance in Pristina, is conceived by Jews. More precisely, Moshe Klughaf, known for his success in Romania's electoral campaign, has worked for Pacolli in recent weeks. Selim Pacolli [...]
The campaign, which many appreciated creatively, and which brought significant results to Selim Pacolli, candidate of the New Kosovo Alliance in Pristina, is conceived by Jews. More precisely, Moshe Klughaf, known for his success in Romania's electoral campaign, has worked for Pacolli in recent weeks.
Selim Pacolli has finished third in Pristina, winning over 80,000 votes, while the AKR, as the subject, has won 7.72 per cent. During the time when the Jewish company has advised them about local elections, AKR's leader, Behgjet Pacolli, has also unveiled his plan for building an Islamic Centre, where it is currently the Faculty of Philology of the University of Pristina.
Jerusalem Post writes that the political campaign manager, Moshe Klughaf, who has campaigned for the rightist Jewish party, Bayit Yehud, has recently added another campaign to his résumé, following the campaign in Kosovo, the predominantly Muslim country, records the newspaper Express.
The Jewish media have not mentioned any amount of money that Pacolli may have dedicated to the commitment of this strategist, but they have also reported in the form of curiosity, as Clujft in Israel is committed to radical parties, while his commitment to majority Muslim Kosovo has been compromised.
Jerusalem Post describes the Jewish strategist as also known for his successful campaigns in Romania and Austria HINA Clujafti was asked by the New Kosovo Alliance, the liberal democratic party (Behgjet Pacolli), to make its campaign in the country's recent local elections.
Kosovo is a secular state with a 95% Muslim population, although, according to the International Crisis Group, its citizens define their national identity more through language than religion, and have a relaxed approach to Islamic implementation, writes the Jerusalem Post.
The country declared independence from Serbia in 2008, and has been recognised by 111 countries in the world, even though not yet by Israel.
During the campaign, Clujaf took time to discover Kosovo's small Jewish heritage, where nearly 550 Jews lived before World War II.
He visited the Jewish cemetery in the country, where he said “caddish” near gravestones, and has also contacted Jews still living in Kosovo who asked him for help to enable the broadcast of a song for survivors of the Holocaust on national television.
Clujaft carried out a provocative campaign for the New Kosovo Alliance, including the so-called <x0) guerrilla operations”, at night in cities, where seemingly official signs were set up with the inscription “A Hospital will be built here” or “A school will be built here”, which the party has been fined for.
The New Kosovo coalition also held a media conference near the Government building, where it announced it aims to remove Government from the capital, Pristina, and accommodate students, while party members dressed as garbage collectors to underline rejection of collection of problems.
Clujaf has not discovered his presence in Kosovo in two months while working there.
He has said of Jerusalem Post that the campaign was evidence that political campaigns can unite and not only divide, adding that “as if we could bring about successful co-existence between Jews and Muslims, as we have in Kosovo. It's a great place with fantastic people and a big future of”.












