KMDLNj for Tome Gashi's shameful act: Played Police and Inspector

The Council for Protection of Human Rights and Freedoms has called it a violation of human rights, the act of lawyer Tome Gashi, who was taken several nights ago by kicking the box of a beggar in the capital's Mother Teresa Square. In an answer to Periscope, KLMDNj has stressed that he did not [...]
The Council for Protection of Human Rights and Freedoms has called it a violation of human rights, the act of lawyer Tome Gashi, who was taken several nights ago by kicking the box of a beggar in the capital's Mother Teresa Square.
In an answer to Periscope, KLMDNj has stressed that it is not up to lawyer Gashi to deal with the beggars, but the country's institutions.
The day before came a video at several portals where lawyer Tome Gashi kicked a box or plastic container of a “beggar “in downtown Pristina after they changed words to each other. In the concrete case, lawyer Gashi was in the role of the inspector or police officer who did not comply, neither with the profession nor with the mandate he has, said KMDLNj.
Some electronic media called on KMDLNj to get an opinion on whether attorney Gashi's action constitutes a violation of human rights for what they took a positive stance on the fact that this action does not belong to the lawyer Gashi, but to the relevant institutions, the inspection and the Kosovo Police”, has stressed KMDLNj.
The Council for Protection of Human Rights and Freedoms has repeatedly recalled that it has demanded that Kosovo police take concrete action for prevention, as this council says, begging that, in a concrete case, is organised and presents an organised criminal scheme where their bosses or faithful ones, at noon or at the end of the day, collect money from beggars, control their work, force them to retreat at low temperatures or stay with small children in some cases even at the most vulnerable points of the city.
The city's “is heard in the center of the city by thunder and lime oil of some who cause much discontent in citizens. Kosovo police, in some cases, have made the deportation of beggars, mainly in Albania who, after several days, have returned. Kosovo police have failed to fight this phenomenon that, without question, presents organised crime for the fact that it has not followed or arrested those behind the beggars but is dealing only with the consequences”, points out, among other things. KMDLNj. /Periscopi/












