Former President Jahjaga talks about party employment in Kosovo

Former Kosovo President Atifete Jahjaga has said that in the public and private sector in Kosovo there is no room for corruption, for clienteleism and party-based employment. According to Jahjaga, even 20 years after the war, the state of Kosovo faces major problems, resulting in citizens leaving the country in the direction of [...]
According to Jahjaga, even 20 years after the war, the state of Kosovo faces major problems, resulting in citizens leaving the country in the direction of a better life.
For these, the former head of state has spoken at a ceremony organised by KUSA in Pristina.
At the conclusion ceremony of the KUSA project “Elimination of barriers to equal opportunities”, during her speech, the former Kosovo president, said the private sector in Kosovo is developing with difficulty.
Kosovo, neither in the public sector nor in the private sector, has no place for corruption, no room for nepotism, no room for customerism and party-based employment. Kosovo and its citizens need opportunities, its people, Kosovo needs development and Kosovo and its citizens desperately need positive changes”, she said.
Jahjaga said it is disturbing that Kosovo is losing human capital, one of the largest and most important resources of the state possesses.
Here, he thought about the young people who he said in the absence of living their potential, they're abandoning the country.
This year is going on 20 years since the war in Kosovo ended, while we are moving towards the 12th anniversary of our existence as a state, but Kosovo today is not Kosovo and the state that we have imagined we will have when we have established the foundations of this country and our democracy 20 years ago. Unfortunately, we still face many problems that are undermining our efforts to create a state, a fair, equal Kosovo, a developed state. Due to the inability of each citizen of this country living its or its full potential, Kosovo today has become a country that is abandoning a large number of our citizens”, Jahjaga said.
Jahjaga, who for a mandate led the presidential institution in the Republic of Kosovo, said that if it continues with this desperate trend, the country risks turning any progress and any achieved.












