Fetiu: Ideas that exiles are deprived of their right to vote come from the regime's Scorpion and Friend”

Various reactions have come from people of media and politicians following narrow results among candidates in the race that the winner can determine the diaspora votes. There were even expressed ideas for the diaspora to get the right to vote. But to these ideas, Abrer Fetiu, a Kosovo who lives and acts abroad, has reacted [...]
Various reactions have come from people of media and politicians following narrow results among candidates in the race that the winner can determine the diaspora votes.
There were even expressed ideas for the diaspora to get the right to vote.
But to these ideas, Abrer Fetiu, a Kosovar who lives and acts outside Kosovo, has reacted specifically to Canada.
Fetiu, on Facebook, has expressed concern over these positions, saying that not necessarily these ideas are expressed on these days when the results are narrow to determine the winner.
According to him, these ideas are provided by the regime's <x0-seconds and friendly coalition <x0x1>, which, according to him, is experiencing panic versus results in Pristina and Prizren, writes Periscopi.
“I am seeing regimen comments about the diaspora, which denigrate this and describe it as incompetent and uninformed about political flows in Kosovo and demand that diaspora have no right to vote in local and national elections. Not by chance, these comments are made at a moment when the vote results are narrow among the political parties in local elections, and these comments are made by the regime's friendly pion, which appears to be experiencing panic crisis compared to the results in Pristina and Prizren. I realize how difficult it is for someone to look ahead to the almost unexpected collapse of privileges! ” wrote Fetiu on Facebook.
He says there are very few countries in the world which refuse citizens living outside their political geography to vote.
Most states don't do that bullshit. In fact, some of the states, such as France, Italy, Romania and others, are offered separate seats in their parliaments elected by the diaspora, in this way not only does the diaspora have power in general and local elections, but it has the opportunity to choose individuals who will represent it and push policies that take into account its needs. The diaspora -- not only has it had an empty role before and during the war in Kosovo, but it continues to be social authority through which the state of Kosovo financially survives, in some form it is its existential peri. It continues to be almost organically linked to Kosovo, and is proportionally more educated than the Kosovo population... even when it's a swing. Perhaps someone in the Kosovo Parliament should seek special seats for those elected by the diaspora, as do in many other countries, among other things from our neighbours or our Macedonian and Croatian neighbours. So beyond being a source of pride with its athletes and artists, this proportion of voters gets the sense that it should, not only for the sake of the contribution they have made to that country, but above all because it continues to be actively associated with the reality of that country”, he wrote. /Periscopi/











