OVL Cliaku: Not Thaci, but Special Court has broken itself

KLA OVL organisation Secretary Faton Klinkaku has said the Court has broken up without setting up charges. In a Facebook post, Klinaku has reaffirmed that this institution is working illegally after its mandate is over. “Not Thaci, but the Special Court has broken itself up without setting up charges. Works illegal [...]
In a Facebook post, Klinaku has reaffirmed that this institution is working illegally after its mandate is over.
“Not Thaci, but the Special Court has broken itself up without setting up charges. He works illegal because he no longer has a”, Klink wrote.
The Office of the Prosecutor specialised in The Hague has again pressed fierce accusations towards Kosovo President Hashim Thaci. This institution accuses the former KLA political director of trying to break up the Special Court.
The Specialised Prosecutor's Office estimates that its mandate is determined in the Constitution of Kosovo, and that any other interpretation can, according to them, affect the damage to the processes that are currently under way.
The prosecution claims that Thaci is subject to an indictment compiled by it, is trying to undo this criminal prosecution body in any form.
The proposed variables are intended to resize or reshape the mandate. Likewise, the timing of making these statements has no official history of drafting. However, the fact that the changes are proposed by a president who is the object of an indictment submitted by the SPO in connection with war crimes and crimes against humanity by praising them with special observation, Mr. T HACI is not an uninterested party, and there is good reason to believe that proposals for changes are part of a broader strategy to undermine the tribunal. Indeed, the basic context for understanding and interpreting the proposed changes is provided by the public statements of Mr. T HACHY on August 24, 2020, the day he decided to forward Proposed Changes”, is said further in the opinion of the Specialised Prosecutor's Office.











