VV MP says Serbian crimes should not be pardoned after 100 years

VV MP Saranda Bogujevci, the survivor of the 1999 Podujevo massacre, has published a text on Facebook account, through which she has reacted to a decal of journalist Baton Hadziu. I can't understand how individuals and certain groups get the right to speak on our behalf.
“fails to understand how individual and specific groups get the right to speak in our name whether we want justice and reconciliation”, she said.
This is her full post:
I was only 13 years old when I lost my family and was wounded as a child for this country! Today, almost 35 years old, I still live with the consequences of that time. I still need medical attention for my wounds, and the memory of that time lives with me every day.
So lives every citizen of the Republic of Kosovo who has experienced that war.
Today we have the state that we have given much for it, each person and family, in one form or another.
A few weeks ago, Nekibe Kelmendi's daughter said that “I do not forgive the blood of my family”, nor do I and my family forgive the blood of our family and I guarantee that not even a family forgives the blood of their family without bringing to justice the culprits.
I can't understand how individuals and certain groups are entitled to speak in our own name about whether we want justice and reconciliation.
No one has that exclusive right to speak on our behalf without us saying the last word on this matter. It's not for Baton Hadziu to tell us if there should be an amnesty for the crimes committed against our family by Serbian power. Even if we spend 100 years behind us and generations after us don't stop looking for justice for those crimes. We don't give anyone the right to decide our name.
Unfortunately, far-reaching it is not that these families and these war-affected citizens in Kosovo have had the state's support. But for one thing to be convinced that even without any support from our institutions, we will not stop seeking justice for our lost family and even for us survivors of that war.
It's our right, nobody else's.












