Week: The New Attitude Changed by Kurt and the Poisoning of Women

Another week is closing down today, with other significant political developments and in the context of increasing American pressure on the Government of Kosovo. The US continues to demand the full removal of the fee on goods imported from Serbia. Albin Kurti, the country's prime minister, spoke on the phone with the White House this week, [...]
The US continues to demand the full removal of the fee on goods imported from Serbia. Albin Kurti, the country's prime minister, spoke on the phone with the White House this week but reportedly turned down their request, not strictly. What the United States really wants is what Kosovo wanted for a century now: ending the long-standing dispute with Serbia and opening a new chapter without its major obstacles.
And it seems that the government led by Kurt continues to be completely irresponsible and insensitive to what happens. No member of the government even knows what to think about the issue of Kosovo's recognitions by ignoring it in a form as a trivial matter. The latest recognition came from Sierra Leone, causing Kosovo to risk losing support from most UN member states for the first time.
And as that recognition caught Kosovo asleep, Serbia continues to be treated privilegedly by the EU. Despite failing to implement most of the agreements reached in Brussels over the years, this country is continuing to fight against Kosovo in a clear way and without being overheard by the EU, which was fascinating and guarantor for implementing the agreements.
But as Kurt continues to dialogue with himself what to do and ask questions “why” before international factors, things are changing at a faster pace than ever before.
Thaci's meeting with Vuciqi at the White House was the first between a Kosovo leader and a Serb leader in the most important place of global policy. The agreement must be reached. Meanwhile, what is Prime Minister Kurti looking for? Let's go. By a politician who demonstrated negotiations, he suddenly became a producer of negotiation as if all this fatigue and crushing for Kosovars were not abundant.
But what was said at the White House? Analyst Edward Joseph stated that according to his sources, he had also spoken about partitioning Kosovo. This was exposed by those present at the meeting, chief Richard Green, and who said that such was not mentioned.
And while in these important political developments Prime Minister Kurti seems completely lost and ignorant, his supporters have already launched a very dangerous campaign: to denigrate US and US representatives themselves. For the first time, Kosovo and the United States have the worst reports in 20-year diplomatic history, and for the first time, supporters of a political party denigrate the role of the world's most powerful state in Kosovo through social networks, spreading anti-Americanism.
The party's personal interest is once again becoming more intense than the state's interest. But what else is Kosovo's powerful alliance if we lose America? Ah, there's no other.
However, a Minister of Kurt finally tried to save the prime minister from the total loss in which he has now come and how long. Blerim Reka recently made a proposal under which Kosovo would have to give Serbia a corridor to the Adriatic Sea in view of the international emergency to jump into ideas which the Serbian state would potentially accept.
Vetevendosje movement is moving again. Her attitudes that are constantly violated actually do only one thing in the public sphere: demonize our opponents and our allies, and they consume a lot of time because in the end they are transformed into exactly attitudes that were opposed.
I'm done today, March 8, International Woman Day. But how was this last week for women in Kosovo? If we were to take a careful look at the main political debates developed on our televisions, we would hardly find a woman. Why? Because public debate has been contaminated so much and so badly, analysts are so badly abused that women who seem to have more integrity in Kosovo like men do not want to participate. But who initiated the contamination of public debate? Who began to label people with shameful words that they personally denigrate? We all know the answer to that question. March 8 should warn us that public debate is of far greater importance than we think, and that it is indirectly cultivating problematic sex value with the personal denigration spread by supporters of political parties.












