VV: The cases of suspicious deaths at KKUK show how far the crime level has gone.

Vetevendosje movement has called for whiteening the deaths that have occurred in the past few days at QKUK. This party's MP, Sami Kurteshi, has expressed concern over these cases during a media conference, saying that from all of this it is evident that staff neglect has almost reached the crime level, Periscope writes. “Now [...]
Vetevendosje movement has called for whiteening the deaths that have occurred in the past few days at QKUK.
This party's MP, Sami Kurteshi, has expressed concern over these cases during a media conference, saying that from all of this it is evident that staff neglect has almost reached the crime level, Periscope writes.
Now the risk is even greater because the gas is already in the system. WHICH as any other institution, such as the police, the prison, etc., has a secure life of”, he said.
These are named dead by the introduction of suspicious gas to the system in oskigenisation. Danger still exists because this gas is in the system. This is probably one of the cases that have come out of control like an explosion of a human bomb in hand. CKUK, such as prisons, detention centers, schools, and so on, are institutions where citizens surrender their lives. These institutions have a legal obligation to guarantee human life. Clearly, the neglect of responsible persons has reached a crime limit somewhere. The quick statements we've heard from the case's publication, beginning with the Minister of Health, leave them suspicious on two tracks. First, responsible people have known the danger before because they have such tenders in their hand. Second, it is possible that responsible persons starting with the minister himself want to hide something that is even more dangerous that can be made public at any moment. One is clear, with the aim of complication, they have a single goal and that is escape from responsibility”, he wrote Periscopi.
While Fatmire Mulhrama-Colqaku said that for the latest cases at QKUK the main blame falls on the management of this health institution.
The “says it's not about the human factor, but it's about that the human factor is completely responsible, she said.













