KMDLNJ is surprised at the Up strike: these supermains and flirters with politics

The Council for Protection of Human Rights and Freedoms, says that Pristina University professors and other public universities formed during electoral campaigns have no single reason for strike, as an extreme response to discontent because compared with public universities in the region, income is very high and [...]
The Council for Protection of Human Rights and Freedoms says that Pristina University professors and other public universities formed during electoral campaigns have no single reason for strike, in an extreme response to discontent because compared with public universities in the region, income is very high and they have minimal responsibility.
Besides being lacking in laws and sending their assistants to them, the main distinctive feature of their majority is flirting and coexistence with political structures of power, regardless of which or which party is in power. “Nobelists “of the University of Pristina, not rarely have they been really supermened working on , up to seven (7 ) jobs!”, KMDLNJ says through a media response.
Criticising the quality of education in U P, KMDLNJ has stressed that nepotism is the way of working and standard moral and professional at the University of Pristina, as well as the scientific subx0> “that has been witnessed in many cases but that it has remained largely unpunished;
This council says they've turned to parents who, because of a public nursery strike, have been forced to send their children to private nests and are forced to pay additional means for either having to pay or not to go to work.
“For this reason KMDLNj has requested and wants not to pay for services not offered, respectively not pay for public nursery as long as he refuses to offer services. And if nests require compensation for services they haven't offered, and for this they use the threat that they will remove these children from their ranks, parents should file lawsuits at the relevant body”, KMDLNJ calls.
KMDLNj also requires parents to insist their children to continue their lessons by sending them to schools and by staying with them as if asking Pristina University students and other public universities formed during election campaigns to protest before the reactor, demanding responsibility for those who, without any good reason, lost their January term by questioning other deadlines.











