Haradinaj: Special Empowerment Will Have Effects

The year 2017 has often been praised by Prime Minister and AAK Chairman Ramush Haradinaj. This year started for him with an arrest warrant issued by Serbia, which France implemented. After months of unrightful standing in France, Haradinaj returns to Kosovo to be taken after [...]
After months of being without movement in France, Haradinaj returns to Kosovo to become the country's prime minister for a second time after several months.
In an interview for Indexline, Ramush Haradinaj has spoken about France, the leadership of the Government of Kosovo, the problem with electricity, the widespread wage increase, the large number of prime ministers, demarcation, etc.
My arrest in France has been surprising, I have days since I have an arrest warrant or an arrest warrant, but I have waited to respect France. I am no longer afraid of arrests, I am not stopping in the past, nor am I going to stop”, Haradinaj said.
Speaking of his 100-day rule, the prime minister has told of the problems the country was facing when he became chief executive, as well as his achievements since taking office.
He has not failed to mention the criticism he has experienced since becoming prime minister, saying that neither the large number of deputy ministers nor the increase in wages nor the small number of women in institutions is something with which he boasts.
However, Haradinaj has stressed that his salary despite the increase continues to remain smaller than that of Parliament Speaker Kadri Veselin and the country's president, Hashim Thaci.
In last year's interview for Indexline, Haradinaj has also discussed the issue of ratification of the border demarcation agreement with Montenegro. He has called on the Parliament to send the agreement as soon as possible to MPs who, according to him, would either be better off either to tear it down or to approve it and to continue with the process.
As for the request by several Kosovo Assembly deputies to abolish the Special Court law, the chief executive has said that if this law is brought back to the Assembly and abolished, then he will respect it, since, according to him, Kosovo cannot evade justice, despite this initiative has damaged reports with international friends.
The prime minister has also spoken of deputies in the Kosovo Assembly who threw tear gas into the shed hall of plenary sessions, saying he opposes their persecution, when it is known that they have done so in the best interests of the country.
For more widely, find the full interview of Prime Minister Ramush Haradinaj.












