Tomorrow will be the end of Sali Berisha

Sali Berisha needs a coffin tomorrow. At least one dead. Following the failure of the February 16th protest and its plan to repeat a bloodshed on Boulevard, he dragged opposition MPs towards burning their mandate, not only to degrade the standards of Albanian democracy and trying to tear down [...]
Sali Berisha needs a coffin tomorrow. At least one dead. Following the failure of the February 16th protest and its plan to repeat a bloodshed on Boulevard, he dragged opposition deputies towards burning their mandate, not only to degrade the standards of Albanian democracy and attempting to tear down the system, but, above all, to use this act, such as “burant” for his latest test of bloodshed, or to place Albania on. There are many misunderstandings among those today who hand over mandates, many uncertainty and questions about their future, but the truth is there is little choice.
None of them are an MP who deserved that place in Parliament. They took that country as a gift to be soldiers, and today they're just doing their duty. Parliamentism loses nothing of their absence, but loses out on the misuse of their mandates to violate it. They have no choice but to obey Sali Berisha, as they have been elected as deputies for this. But Sali Berisha has chosen to hand over the mandates today, in the hope that this will be “fuel” to light fires tomorrow and produce at least one coffin, with which he will then have a chance to walk the streets of Tirana.
His political death has landed today in the offices of the SHQUP, while forcing his soldiers to disarm the MP's mandate, but the chances of him leaving on a road without a return are tomorrow. The failure of his scenario to kill people and produce victims before the Parliament will be his real end. He is the only one who has articulated the threat of killing Eddie Rama, his political rival. Not that it endangers Eddie Rama, but that's an incentive for every soldier of his, to kill the opponents, a pledge ready for criminal action, for which he should be called to the prosecution urgently. Every victim produced by this protest is his criminal responsibility, as he is its verbal and political inspirer. With the burning of mandates, he has consumed all the possibilities he has to destabilise the system. 29 years after Enver Hoxha's fall, he desecrated what your Albanians at a very expensive price, walking with his famous camel-in-law “behind me, QAI”. Since he failed to succeed, he will remain in power, and seeing that he has no chance to return, he today decided to retaliate against the very system that brought him to power. But it's just a bite from an injured wolf of transition. Albanian democracy does not die from its bite, as has Albania not died from its massacres. His hope that tomorrow he can shed blood to survive politics with coffins on his arm must be over.
Albania no longer has blood to shed for Sali Berisha. His motives for the past, fears of the future and facing justice, and despair that on the horizon he no longer sees chance for him and his family, to return to power, are the real reasons why he has put money like the sheep of opposition MPs to hand over their mandates to his head. All those who think they're being heroised to return must count on cutting a one-way ticket, since they're used by a man who thinks that after him Albania should burn in hell. After that, Albania will find it more difficult to manage this democracy crisis, harder to get a positive investment and jobs climate, but there will be no going back. Like Gruevski in Macedonia, he thought Macedonia would die without him and his party, as well as DP and Berisha must understand, that Albania does without them. A less criminal in politics is not so little.











