This time, the diaspora is talking Pristina.

The diasporaFlet through Kosovo comes with the closing meeting for this edition, which will be held in Pristina and where it will be discussed about the possibilities of co-operation between diaspora professionals and young people in our country. On August 18th, 6:00 p.m. at MIQT The Pub will hold the meeting “DiasporaFlet in Pristine”, [...]
The diasporaFlet through Kosovo comes with the closing meeting for this edition, which will be held in Pristina and where it will be discussed about the possibilities of co-operation between diaspora professionals and young people in our country.
On August 18th, 6:00 p.m. at MIQT The Pub will hold the meeting “DiasporaFlet in Pristine”, with guest speakers: Annette Mihali Dziku and Mikra Krasniqi, who will share their experiences with you and discuss diaspora involvement in building a common future, submits KultPlus.
Since the U.S. family migration two decades ago, Annette Mihali Dyku worked in education as a science teacher, in the legal field as an intellectual law manager, and engaged with the U.S. State Department and contributed to various agencies as an interpreter of Albanian language. In 2005, it co-founded and conducted the first Albanian school “Moussemia” in the Washington DC area and has since organised numerous activities with the Albanian community in America. Newly returned home, Annette has started working in Albania and Kosovo with development projects. She also engaged in the field of Scripture.
While Mikra Krasniqi is an economist in the US government's economic department of Maryland. In this position, Mikra is in charge of managing and running a host of projects about the region's economy and beyond. Before engaging in government, Krasniqi had spent over eight years in the private sector and in the area of international development in organisations like: World Bank, International Finance Corporation, American Economic Oda in Washington DC, etc. He finished university and postgraduate studies at George Mason University and Harvard University in Boston. Through these meetings, Germin aims to change unilateral conviction for the diaspora, as well as to bring young people from Kosovo to diaspora through informal discussions between young people of different ages and Albanian professionals living abroad, to exchange experiences and knowledge.
These meetings are aimed closely to inform young people from Kosovo with the diaspora through informal discussions between young and Albanian professionals living abroad to exchange experiences and knowledge.