Is Time Writing Malformed for Prime Minister Ramush Haradinaj

In the last 24 hours, it has been echoed with the news of Turkey's prestigious magazine -- Timeme -- which lists Republic of Kosovo Prime Minister Ramush Haradinaj alongside the Catalonian Carls Puigdemon, Turkey's Fettullah Gulen, the Julian Assanges of Wilkileaks and Georgia's Mikheil Saakashvili. But how Haradinaj ended up among the five fugitives in [...]
In the last 24 hours, it has been echoed with the news of Turkey's prestigious magazine -- Timeme -- which lists Republic of Kosovo Prime Minister Ramush Haradinaj alongside the Catalonian Carls Puigdemon, Turkey's Fettullah Gulen, the Julian Assanges of Wilkileaks and Georgia's Mikheil Saakashvili.
But how Haradinaj ended up among the five fugitives at the time that Time considers a period of geopolitical dramas.
Kosovo's prime minister's name on the list has been cited, listing a chronology of his activities in the KLA war, his judicial processes, of which he was acquitted as innocent, as well as his recent confronting the court in Komar, France, where Haradinaj stayed several weeks due to the international arrest warrant Serbia has for him.
Since the return visit holds these events in several paragraphs, it finally mentions Kosovo's policy movements for the Special Court, where it probably refers to the night of December 22nd and the events after that night: the attempt to abolish the Law for the Special Court and Haradinaj's harsh disincentness in front of ambassadors.
But what remains a question in all this writing is which way is Haradinaj escaping?
Everyone on this list, including Fettullah Gulen and Julian Assangen, are on the run. One of them even, Fetullah Gulen, does not surrender to Turkey despite the ongoing demands and negotiations of the Turkish state with the US to enable that.
So all the names on the list of émeTimen but Prime Minister Ramush Haradinaj are on the run. Haradinaj is not.
From the description given to Haradinaj's image on this list of fugitives in dramatic geopolitical times in the world, it seems that Ramush Haradinaj's name has aroused curiosity because of his position as prime minister of the Republic of Kosovo. And of course: being prime minister of a state and facing Interpol's arrest warrant, you could end up a name mentioned among the legalist or most wanted.
The famous author who made this list, Ian Bremmer, does not mention that his listees are all people who are being owned by their country, until for Haradinaj, it suggests that he is escaping from Serbia.
Since last week Haradinaj declared that Kosovo does not ask ambassadors for all issues, the writing in Time appears to have caught this prime minister's stubbornness, since it writes as follows:
(Time): Perhaps Haradinaj and his allies say that Kosovo is too small for the important geopolitical powers to care for it, but the reality is that to maintain peace, Kosovo needs that caution”.
True, for more than 100 days, Kosovars have not received what they have expected from Haradinaj, but there is another truth: that Ramush Haradinaj, in all positions that have been so far, has never declared that he would face justice. /Periscope.











