Week: Coalition V V- PDK, worsening Kosovo's coronary situation

Today, another terrifying week is ending for Kosovo citizens who remain confined for the fourth week in a row, amid a tense political environment and a constant poverty and danger from the Coronavirus. The political situation in the country is again tense following the collapse of Kurti Government, which effectively led to the president [...]
The political situation in the country is again tense following the collapse of Kurti Government, which effectively led to the country's president and to what he could and could not do. Thaci seems to be interested in a new government, more than in new elections. Meanwhile, Vetevendosje requires completely the opposite. The new government appears to require all other parliamentary parties in the country as well.
Vetevendosje requires new elections, but until new elections, it really wants to retain the power it has gained along with the LDK in the Kosovo Assembly on 3 February. Other parties, meanwhile, seek a new transitional government based on the 6 October elections, until the transition to new elections.
In fact, although political tension is high, the gap in attitudes is very small. Both sides want a transitional government except Vetevendosje and want a Kurti Government on duty, while parties of the potential coalition LAN ( The LDK, AAK, Initiative) wants a transitional government with a new prime minister in office. However, it would remain clear that the parties of this potential coalition government would not have enough power and legitimacy to govern the country even after the corruption pandemic exceeded.
In the meantime, Mr. Glauk Konjufca for The PDK began stuttering the possibility of an eventual coalition between this party and Vetevendosje. If that were to happen, that would be the most recent materialization of a change of attitude by Mr. Albin Kurti, who had actually proposed such a thing at a Vetevendosje forum many years earlier.
Vetevendosje has in some cases mentioned number 51, as reference to the percentage that it would like to achieve in the upcoming elections in order to govern on its own. But the risk of scandals and responsibilities overburdened by this possibility is not believed to be so much desired by this political party. Power is not so easy to manage, and maybe this is the lesson learned by this political party.
And as this meaningless political game continues, half of Kosovo has been quarantined this week. Last night it was Pristina, whose municipality was confirmed over 20 cases.
At the country level so far, 283 cases infected with Covid-19 have been confirmed, and 7 have died.
Kurti's government, however, has failed to control the situation in the north of the country as it would have liked. It was emergency crisis stations in Serb-run cities that announced retributive measures, brought doctors from Serbia and transported the infected in critical situations to Novi Sad and Belgrade, and generally violated the authority of the Republic of Kosovo.
But the situation continues to deteriorate even in Kosovo's majority Albanian municipalities. Poverty continues to increase because of these measures, since a large number of people have been unemployed, have been half paid, or their businesses have been severely damaged.
The PDK has requested an extraordinary session of the Assembly on Tuesday, demanding an Emergency Pack of far higher value than the Kurti Government has proposed. This party has apparently realised that words do not cost dearly as opposition or proposals. Whether such a Pako has been nominated is the location of the party logo led by Kadri Veselin as it had been to some aid in the Skenderaj municipality. /Periscope












