Nano: Azem Hajdari, a man of low intelligence, with no ideal and no state office.

Azem Hajdari was an ordinary man. Very common. Cut off the hard pose. With low IQ” So writes Mustafa Nano in a letter to ʹMapoʹ about Azem Hajdari, a day after the establishment of his September in his native country, where a pompous ceremony with participation was organised [...]
So writes Mustafa Nano in a letter to the Azem Hajdari, a day after the establishment of his September in his native country, where a pompous ceremony with widespread participation from the opposition was organised, which took place after so many years in Tropping Sali Berisha.
On the basis of his writing, Nano says Azem didn't deserve a state office, he wasn't a man for the office.
There was no ideal. Not for anything, but he didn't even know what an ideal was. It didn't take long to prove it. In the bow of two years, he was depreciated. He was abandoned. He became a helpless man. He began to make wild movements that were more impressive than his brave gesture, along with hundreds of others, in December 1990. And he would have lost without a trace if it didn't happen in 1997, in which Berisha needed it”writes Nano.
Further, the analyst writes that Azem Hajdari séka to remain in history, even making a thousand statues. According to Taj, the more statues you make, the more you get it out of history. Or they make it so funny in history.
Nano further writes that this game involving Azem Hajdari needs Berisha more than Basha. Stopping at this latter's word for Azem, says every eighth grade teacher would also have put a five-year favor to the DP chairman.
Finally Mustafa Nano concludes the writing with the question: Where will the other statue of Azem Hajdari be erected?











