Protecting Jahjaga: Sisters Avdiu attack Professor Blerim Latifi

Renowned activists, Sisters Arta and Zana Avdiu, have reacted to Professor Blerim Latifi after the latter in a Facebook writing, criticised former President Jahjaga for the aesthetic interventions. The problem is the other thing: surgical interventions to adorn your face contradict the gender equality and emancipation of women in general. [...]
Renowned activists, Sisters Arta and Zana Avdiu, have reacted to Professor Blerim Latifi after the latter in a Facebook writing, criticised former President Jahjaga for the aesthetic interventions.
The problem is the other thing: surgical interventions to adorn your face contradict the gender equality and emancipation of women in general. Why? Because aesthetic surgery of women is the result of a masquerade society where women are valued for their appearance, not their personality and professionalism. Aesthetic surgery of women is the result of a masquerade society in which women have to use physical lure strategies”, writes Professor Latifi, whose complete writing, You can read it here.
Activist Zana Avdiu says that “now a man is showing a woman when she docks”
When a man likes to sell to a woman even since I'm right. A woman, an activist who has made much of the rights of women and their position in this society. Until I read the statement of Blerim Latifi, who teaches Atifet what gender equality is, I remember the case of Rebecca Soln when a man explains her book. The same self-confidence, the same behavior is that of buying against the former President. And what is gender equality and since you've fought me, you want us to be middle? Come on! writes Zana, until her sister Arta writes:
Well, that was a very good president. As an activist, it's for all praise.
It's not a man's job to show what women should look like. So much less an activist for women's rights.
Shahen and Igball Rugova and Meliate Termkoli are criticised for their appearance and style. The same size attacks on women who have an extravagant style and appearance.
In fact, in patriarchal society, women should be beautiful, but not very beautiful, that now they're launching communication attacks.
In a free, equal society, women don't want to know what to do, they know themselves.
Media and professors better appreciate the work of the former president, not her appearance! ”












