Melza Haradinaj: As for Albin and the opposition, we would stay in Government for 50 years

Melza Haradinaj has made an analysis of the debate, or as she calls the unconstitutional authorities, over the recent actions of outgoing Prime Minister Ramush Haradinaj. Below, you bring her six-point analysis: We need to say a few things about resignations and voices “unconstitutional”: For illustration, I don't believe we will have an example [...]
Melza Haradinaj has made an analysis of the debate, or as she calls the unconstitutional authorities, over the recent actions of outgoing Prime Minister Ramush Haradinaj.
Below, you bring her six-point analysis:
We need to say a few things about resignations and voices “unconstitutional”:
- To illustrate, I don't believe that we will have a more dignified example of resignation than one that comes from the cradle of democracy in the world, the resignation of British Prime Minister Theresa May on June 7th, and the continuation of her duty as United Kingdom Prime Minister until yesterday on the 25th of July, when he even handed over his duty to young Prime Minister Boris Johnson and left on farewell from 10 Downing Street. State responsibility is sacred and must be held accountable for it until the last moment, despite personal challenges.
- Opposition Albin must be “praised” Special Court for the prime minister's resignation, because as for our fear of the government's collapse, we could have stayed “50 years”.
- The coincidence of the moment of the invitation to justice is hard to ignore. In fact, if we analyse in retrospect, the 4 times of confronting Ramush Haradinaj with justice (including France 2017) have been right in Kosovo's most sensitive political moments.
- After allowing the deviation of dialogue on issues of division and correction, at this invitation, it seems that justice is being handed over (again) to the political agenda.
- The act of resigning the prime minister is (only the moral responsibility for failing to hand over the state of Kosovo for experiment) is an act of disagreement with scenarios of defunctionation and defunction, and refusal to kneel to Kosovo by “threatening/fearing” the country's prime minister.
- It is normal that Serbia and Vuqi say it is political maneuvering, because Ramush Haradinaj's going to The Hague as a ordinary citizen, not as prime minister, empowers the privacy of the state of Kosovo, and redirects international political pressure on Serbia.
Finally, the act of resignation IT IS not an instrument to weaken partners or political opponents. Those who read it should be either too politically hurt because they recognize (without) their political power or are handed over to the principle of nobility and sincerity.











