Who really is Valdete aka the man who will administer your will?

Judge Valdete Daka has again been elected to head the Central Election Commission for a 7-year term by the country's president Hashim Thaci. She is a 57-year-old woman from Mitrovica who graduated from the Faculty of Jurydical at Pristina University and has been determined to work in the Kosovo judicial system. A determination [...]
She is a 57-year-old woman from Mitrovica who graduated from the Faculty of Jurydical at Pristina University and has been determined to work in the Kosovo judicial system. An inspired determination as she himself says by her father. But who's inspiring Daka to be in charge of the CEC for so long now?
Daka was certified by the Council of Europe as a coach for judges and prosecutors for the International Convention on Human Rights and Freedoms. At the same time, she was certified as an expert in the field, writes Periscope.
In December of last year, on behalf of the CEC, she accepted the international [first place] award for election organisation at a ceremony organised by the International Centre for Parliamentary Studies. [Getty Images] ICPS]. In the June 2017 elections, the largest party in Kosovo emerged from the Vetevendosje Movement and won 32 deputies.
She speaks Albanian, English, Serbian and Turkish.
As the CEC chairman, the biggest difficulties Mrs. Daka had in communicating the election results of political parties, who were eagerly hosted by the country's citizens. During these tiring media conferences, she had different wits. But difficulties Mrs. Daka also had with members delegated by political parties in the CEC in particular with that of the Vetevendosje Movement and once again with the AKR Fadil Malokun.
On one occasion, she had confused the name Shpend Maximus with that of Shpend Ahmeti. This is among dozens of other distractions that reveal her tense mind.
She has not been quite insistent in demanding electoral reform in Kosovo. Finally, it has demanded that the runoff be removed from the mayoral elections, but that requirement has been rejected by civil society, Periscopi writes.
Management with the political will of the citizens of the Republic of Kosovo was in the hands of Daka even at the time of the industrial elections, but also in recent elections, where there were not many incidents and thefts. So how well the elections are managed this is more merited by the very will of the political parties involved than the will of Mrs. Daka and CEC.
On April 16th, Portal Koha had reported that the CEC had spent a lot of money monitoring elections in Hungary, which had not been needed for Kosovo since Hungary is the presidential system while Kosovo is the parliamentary Republic. This confusion may be another illustration of the next series of confusions and irregularities recorded in the election processes at the time of Mrs. Daka. /Periscope.












