Killer KLA commanders

Former KLA commanders who today run Kosovo have taken on their shoulders with a single act, the label of unscrupulous killers, whom they demand to press the former enemies of the battle two decades ago. Their decision to lead six Turkish citizens to hell, declared without evidence and evidence [...]
Many of my clubs in Pristina and Tirana have now witnessed with facts and arguments the lawlessness of this decision-making, violation of the Kosovo Constitution and desecration of international conventions.
But what bothers me most in this case is not disrespect for the law that we've almost become immune to on this side, but the criminal mind of this act.
Because those who have decided to lower their positions in the face of Erdogan's absurd request, besides twice as forced statesmen to enforce their country's rules, are also human, citizen, family.
And as such they were conscious of committing a crime. They knew that teachers who were being deported to Anadol wouldn't have a fair process, no fair judgment, no democratic game rules.
They have been aware that they were being sent to a capital prison, that they were eventually separating them from their families, guiding the fate of thousands of journalists, intellectuals and professors, who a mad regime has been keeping them under constant terror since the 2015 summer state's military coup.
But even though they knew all of this, they allowed the kidnapping, sent them with their heads in sacks toward a ghost plane and signed their future destiny with cold contempt.
It's this cynicism, this disrespect for human dignity, this coolness in destroying lives, in parallel with the debate over disrespecting the law in Kosovo, opens a perhaps greater discussion, dealing with criminal profiles of those leading this state today.
From Serbia, from Dick Marty, from international investigators, commanders who have power in Pristina have long been charged with monstrous crimes, murders and rapes of Serbs, the exercise of the same practices against their countrymen, the plunder of property, organ trafficking, and finally the disappearance of witnesses.
Some of these charges have never been confirmed in courts, some we've mocked, just as anyone can mock the notions that cross the boundaries of imagination, while others, we've just ignored them, with the argument that those who went out to risk their lives for freedom can't be such banal wrongdoers.
But, unfortunately, in this debate that has been pending for years, the scales today have tilted to the harm of former commanders. The recent event, the cynical destruction of the lives of those teachers who have tried to educate even children, does not basically differ from the coldness with which the past century's crimes were committed.
After that, everyone could ask a legitimate question: Why is it that when they're able to act like bandits under state clothes, they didn't do it any worse under the warrior's uniform?
Why is it that when they don't have scruples to destroy political lives, they're reluctant to do so privately?
These are dilemmas raised after the criminal act of handing over six Turkish citizens to a regime that will show no mercy to them.
And whether we want it or not, they match today's Kosovo leaders with the criminal identical that has been designed for them in Belgrade: as cynical killers, completely indifferent to human rights and totally indifferent to innocent lives.
The irony is that to prove this, it took special greed as our Muslim brother, Rexhep Tayyip Erdogan.
Taken from: Lapsy.al











