Historian who gives no five money for Kosovo's exclusion from ECAR

University of Pristina professor Frasher Demaj has not taken the exemption of the Kosovo Agency of Discretion (AKA) from the European Book for High Education Security (EQAR), despite experts saying this is a very serious event for higher education in the country. During a debate [...]
University of Pristina professor Frasher Demaj has not taken the exemption of the Kosovo Agency of Discretion (AKA) from the European Book for High Education Security (EQAR), despite experts saying this is a very serious event for higher education in the country.
During a debate last night on the “Click” RTV21, Demaj said this event is not the end of the world.
He has even blamed the media for sowing panic among students and professors that this is the end of the world.
Over the media, especially in the written, more precisely in the portals, there is a kind of panic in students and professors that is the end of the world. In fact, it is not the end of the world, because it is a period of three months that Kosovo institutions must make efforts to get back there”, Frasher Demaj has declared.
While acknowledging that this is bad news, he says, as if we are inclined to do media theatre.
The “Relaunching” of this situation from Demaj, contradicts education issues.
The star of this field, Yusuf Thaci, has said of the Insander Journal that the expulsion of AKA from ECAR is a serious blow to education in the country.
Kosovo's “Agency for Accreditation (AKA) from the European Writer for Quality Security at Higher Education (EQAR) is truly a serious blow to Kosovo's higher education and Kosovo's institutions of higher public and private education”, Thaci has said.
He has said this could have major consequences, saying that diplomas issued by public and private educational institutions may not be considered creditable.
This exclusion of AKA from ECAR could have major consequences for Kosovo's higher education. After that decision, The AKA is no longer viewed as creditable by institutions as European and international sisters, subsequently diplomas issued by Kosovo's institutions of higher education, public and private, may not be recognised as creditable, or may even be contested and not accepted by universities and different European and international states”, Thaci has added further Thaci to the Insideer.
The AkA's expulsion from ECAR, Thaci has described it as an unforgivable step in the field of education.
This is an unforgivable setback in the area of Kosovo's higher education, and the country's institutions should be given responsibility for this. In addition, the Government of Kosovo and the Ministry of Education must urgently take all necessary actions to recover this huge damage to the country's higher education”, he has praised.
However, Youth Qehaja from the organisation that is taken into the quality of education, EdGard, has told Inseder that Kosovo does not have the luxury of being excluded from European legal education organisations.
“The exclusion from ECAR is disturbing and should not dare be relatable, the state of Kosovo does not have the luxury to be excluded from the monetary institutions of the European Union, when this institution is the government's goal”, Qehaja has said.
He said MAST would have to make sure that the diplomas have credibility and validity and not the opposite.
August's “goal will have to be how university diplomas have international credit and currency, not August to be the cause of reverse. I hope that this situation is reflecting on the necessity of leaving the education policy are just such influences that have damaged the country's education system the most, he added.
On this very issue, the Assembly of Kosovo today is holding extraordinary sessions, demanding responsibility from the prime minister and minister of education.
Furthermore, the Kosovo Agency for Acronym (AKA) on March 1st has been excluded from the European Register for the Security of Quality in Higher Education (EQAR).
ACA was made part of ECAR in 2015, which is a registry of European quality insurance agencies that testify that their standards and procedures are in substantial harmony with the principles for quality security in Europe.
The exception decision is said to have found that following the decision by the Minister of Education, Science and Technology for the dismissal of the State Council of Quality and were. of the director of the Kosovo Accreditation Agency, this agency “has lost its ability to operate autonomously”.
The minister, Shyqi Bytyqi, on September 25th of last year, at the request of Prime Minister Ramush Haradinaj, has dismissed the State Council of Quality (known as the Agency of Accreditation Board), as well as the applicant of the Agency for Accreditment's duty, with the argument that the process of accreditation has been forwarded with many “impregtancy”.












