Week: Kurti government with VV and Serbian List VV activists on board, Serbia in North

Kosovo citizens continue to respect the restrictive measures to prevent the spread of the new Coronavirus, Covid-19. Fortunately, the number of confirmed cases continues to be low, while the death toll remains the same, only one. But outside, the political situation this week was more dramatic than ever [...]
This week began with heated discussions between Vetevendosje and other parties about what the president had the right to do after the situation created following the government's collapse by motion of distrust that was initiated by the LDK.
Kurti and his men insist that the constitutional verb “can” means the verb “should”, though, of course, the verb is “> ” not “should”. We know it's ridiculously banal, but here's what Kurt looks like in his charming attempt to manipulate Kosovo citizens with poor education. He wants the president to announce new elections through an unacceptable performance. And, as if that wasn't enough, his advice on legal issues came up, Durim Berisha, who had just said what other parties in Kosovo were saying, and not what Kurti said. His explanation? I don't read the texts I do.
Of course, things are very clear. The verb “can”, located at the provisions of the Constitution, allows the president to seek another mandate for forming the government if someone other than the first party secures the parliamentary majority.
What happened next?
Vetevendosje appointed four members of it on four public enterprise boards, including Mr. Kurti, Artan Dermak in Infrakos. This political party had once been highly critical of other parties in this regard, but it is evident that already the former standard of judgment, which called for the non-replacing of political boards members with political backgrounds, has been thrown into the large basket of violated positions of this party.
“Condemning unemployment activists and condemning depoliticisation professionals, we end up with schizophrenic in our public discussion, where politicians ask to be unprofessional people, i.e. Unable, where professionals need to be silent because they have to maintain political attitudes, that is. You're right.
And for the end, the most terrifying event of all is the offering of sovereignty to the two northern municipalities that the Government of Kosovo, the Belgrade Government. The North Mitrovica and Zvecan municipality settled in Karantina from the Republic of Serbia due to sixteen cases of coronary ʹ a move that did not be protested by the Government of Kosovo, as happened by previous prime ministers, but even collaborated.
As political clashes in Kosovo continue, the Coronavirus has already caused the biggest damage in the country: the reinforcement of Serbia's power in northern municipalities.
Ironically, Vetevendosje's best partner in Government shot, not an Albanian party, the LDK, but a Serb party, the Serbian List. /Periscope












