It awaits Kosovo that killed two people after the prison ended

With the ruling handed down Monday, the Administrative Court of Bern Canton has ruled that a 58-year-old Kosovo, after it has ended its punishment, must leave Switzerland. It's about the person convicted of double murder committed in 2008 in the town of Wil of Canton St. Gallen, who is [...]
He, in a row between two Kosovo families, had killed in the middle of the street and coldly killed a father and his 18-year-old son, broadcasts albinfo.ch.
As seen in the Court's decision, 58 - year - old, in 2020, after suffering two thirds of his sentence, may be released on parole. During his stay in prison, he was sentenced to 18 years of freedom. He successfully finished a psychotherapy dedicated to crime.
Yet, in the view of Bern's judges, a credible prognosis in this regard does not seem possible, since the good “bringing a prisoner to narrow prison spaces does not imply his possible conduct in terms of freedom.
In his complaint to the Administrative Court, Kosovo had declared that in the event of return to Kosovo, it threatened blood feuds that would be exercised by the family members of persons it had killed. According to the court's stance, although blood feuding in Kosovo continues to be present, the return of the person to question Kosovo, taken in general, is not unreasonable.
In addition, his comments presented by the internet, recorded in 2009, do not provide concrete evidence of a further risk of blood feud. The court assumes the situation has already calmed down, broadcasts albinfo.ch.
But even if there were signs of his threat, the judges would insist on lifting Kosovo's permanent residence permit in Switzerland (Viza C). This is about the fact that neither in Switzerland can the risk of any person coming illegally from Kosovo with the purposes of blood feuding. And eventually, according to the court, Kosovo's risk of revenge must refer to its personal behaviour, the tranemseton albinfo.ch. When someone kills the other person on purpose, the risk of blood feuds threatening him should not be used as an argument for the right to his permanent stay in Switzerland”, the Bern judges argue.











