Pulls Albin Kurti: It does not call the “agreement” Thaci's correspondence with NATO

The prime minister of the Republic of Kosovo, Albin Kurti, has written a Facebook status on recent political developments following the publication of a correspondence between former Prime Minister Thaci and former NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen. Kurt this time does not use the term “secret agreement” as he did during yesterday, since [...]
Kurt this time does not use the term “secret agreement” as he did during yesterday, as the official himself NATO had denied that the correspondence in question was agreement, since it had not even been signed.
The prime minister has repeated some of the questions he wrote at yesterday's press conference, writes Periscopi.
He said he saw the legal opinion of “alone from his” office recommending the president's dismissal, rather than its publication.
This is clearly an attraction to the occasion in question.
The following is the full post of Mr. Kurti:
- Three months ago I was on the switch to KFOR command, where General Michele Reese took command. Today I welcomed him to the Prime Minister. I have said then, I say it now and will always say that NATO's presence in Kosovo is irreplaceable while the region is still unstable and while we face a state that has territorial claims on us.
- NATO does not need secret exchanges with the people of Kosovo because we have met with flowers and hugs. It's not random since official NATO I received the correspondence, not from our president. The question is why did the president make that vow just on the day he even signed Zayednica with Dachy in Brussels? Why didn't the president inform anyone, and did he comply with the law and the Constitution?
- What we have done is publish a letter that was kept hidden from the public. As far as I have seen, no one has criticized us for making a hidden letter transparent, which was no classified document but criticised the legal opinion from my office why he recommended the president's dismissal.
- We are open society that we are building stable democracies with the work of a progressive government. There will be debates and criticism and disagreements every time, but we must build the rule of law. Institutions must respect and enforce the constitution and laws. /Periscope












