Albin Kurti's obsession with women's background: The one from the village, this city, my wife from Norway

The new prime minister of the Republic of Kosovo, Albin Kurti, is known for his strange flirting with different values, progressive and sometimes conservative. But his speech yesterday to Mrs. Nexmije Paganousha culminates in the terrifying cultural division still-principle village-city divide in Kosovo. Kurt is married to a woman from [...]
Kurt is married to a woman from Norway named Rita Augestad Knudsen, with whom she has a young daughter named Leah.
When she married Mrs. Augestad Knudsen, Kurti had raised numerous controversys that patriarchally mentioned his famous slogan against goods imported from Serbia “

Of course, such a demand was totally inappropriate, since the woman was directly conceived as a commodity, although on the other hand, Mr. Kurti demanded that the division between private and public do not exist.
In other words, then, the extent of this to the individual in social and cultural structure had to be examined. In what home he lived, who he was married to, who he wasn't married to, what he paid for, and things like in the communist Yugoslavia.
In addition, there are doubts based that Kurti is not as progressive as it should be a leader of a social-democratic party.
Mr. Kurt we've been able to look at several cases of cross-stepping people at his gatherings in rural countries, and he's also been criticised for not participating annually in the Crenaria Parade in support of the LGBTIQ community.
Kurti descended from the village of Sokobine in the suburb of Ulcinj in Montenegro. As his uncle, Hamez Kurti, related, had spent much of his childhood in that village.

“I'm not saying 100 percent, but... here, he's come on vacation every now and then. Brother [ Albin Kurti's father] has insisted on bringing his children to the village. ” he said.
But, Mr. Kurt had never mentioned his village of origin by insisting on when he was wrongly mentioned to the village of Quadwell [Vladimir] instead of the village of Sokobine ʹ that he was actually born and raised in Pristina.
Such disregard for his village received a special light during yesterday's day, in his reminder speech to Kosovo's whistle, Mrs. Njegmije Paganisha who died during the day.
He referred to Paganis as a girl from the village and then to a country woman who had enriched the culture of the city, Periscope follows.
“Negmija was a girl from the village, away from the capital, where people of art and culture lived... but she became a woman from the village who challenged prejudice and enriched the culture of the city and the whole nation. Mr. ” said yesterday. Kurt.

He even referred to her in a part of the talk as “da Nexe”, further highlighting its rural origin.
“Negmija, Nexmije Paganusa, dada Neda, was a happy yet sad whistle. ” he declared being completely insensitive to other women from the village of Paganisha, or other villages in Kosovo that may have similar ambitions.
That Kurti has a pronounced prejudice about the village, even though he lives in a small country like Kosovo, we can also note in the presentation that Mrs. Donika Gashi over the past year.
Today we were joined by our movement, Donika Gashi, poets and Crushing citizenHe wrote it last year.
So the new prime minister of Kosovo openly presents it as the value of being <x0-civilian pritines”, or simply <x2 plant”).

Such a thing can be very depressing for many women from different villages in Kosovo who on a daily basis face gender inequality, domestic violence, limited opportunities in the labour market, and non-cial education, among other things. /Periscope












