The 45-day ruling Kurt: She broke up with the U.S. report, violated dozens of principles and spent half her time talking

If you ask a Vetevendosje supporter what Kurti Government will remember if she falls now, he will surely mention several downloads made but without specifying which downloads were meant. In fact, the most popular dismissal was that of Ambassador Vlora Citaku most [...]
In fact, the most well-known dismissal was that of Ambassador Vlora Citaku -- the strongest point of Kosovo diplomacy to suffer a constant loss from Serbia. But this too can just remain like trying and fixing.
Kurti will long be remembered for placing Kosovo in a very uncomfortable position with our biggest ally for achieving our freedom, independence and defence from Serbian aggression. Even though he had violated the electoral promise of setting reciprocity in parallel with removing the fee, Kurti refused and refused the US on a Ramush Haradinaj case. For the 100% tax that was neither his idea nor protected by him.
The US threatened Kosovo with troop removal, and has already decided to suspend important financial projects worth about 200m euros.
Kurti had hoped for negotiations with Serbia under the European Union's tutelage, but it was a letter last week that mistook his hope. Josep Borrell, the EU High Representative, openly urged him to completely remove the tax.
But the most irritating part was the constant violation of his attitudes and principles.
Kurti changed his party's statute, which asked him to resign once prime minister is elected, even though openly at RTV Dukagjin's television studio promised otherwise.
Kurti took the Serbian List to the government even though he had repeatedly promised against it, naming it as “delegated from Belgrade”.
Kurti sat down next to Serbian Prime Minister Ana Brnabyq and called for negotiations with Serbia, even though he swept Kosovo's walls along with activists with “slogans. Not Negociata, Vetevendosje”, and named all Kosovo politicians participating in these negotiations as traitors.
Kurti had repeatedly opposed that electricity for northern Serbs be paid by the government.
And the list is infinite.
But, however, Kurti was endlessly involved in interviews, thus being the most talkative prime minister Kosovo has ever had.
On the prime minister's page, only five interviews given him as prime minister have been placed. But that is far from true. His interviews were almost daily, just like press conferences, videos-incriminating, Facebook status and other addresses, thus making his talk probably more than half the time he was in power. /Periscopi












