Ymer: Part of VV sees Kurt before party

Former Vetevendosje Movement Chairman Wisar Ymeri has said there are people in his former parliament who think the party comes after its chairman, Albin Kurti. Ymer has said it was also among the reasons for the clashes that led to the departure of a group of activists from the party. “has been mainly on this [...]
Ymer has said it was also among the reasons for the clashes that led to the departure of a group of activists from the party.
“was mainly in this form of organization, to explain simply, is Vetevendosje then Albini or is Albin then Vetevendosje. I thought it was the VV then Albin, and it could be Visari, Shpend and Dardan and whoever comes, Glauk and others. While there's a group of people inside Vetevendosje who thought Albin was first and then Vetevendosje. They see the VV as the extension of Albin”, he said.
Commenting on Vetevendosje's short governance, Ymer has said it is impossible to give an assessment.
However, he has stopped at the management of the coronary pandemic. He said it was good management, but “at very high economic cost”, he said in desk.
This is a short time to evaluate. You can't say good or bad. One hundred days, of which 50 days to fall, but the VV government has had some goods. The first was the way the pandemic was treated, especially by Minister Arben Vitita, where there is a kind of security and guarantees that it created on citizens of the Republic that the situation is being managed well and had good management but at a high cost. So the complete closure of Kosovo, of course, stopped the virus, or greatly slowed its distribution until we came to zero cases a day. The cost, however, was high. On the other hand, we then have the government Hoti who, when he came to power, found Kosovo open, the decision government Kurti had made earlier, but in which cases of infection rose in an ehortably, in which there are now said to be bad pandemic management. I think it should be, given that at the moment of opening, the number of cases with the virus goes up and can reach a point where it becomes unmanaged. It doesn't seem to me that we have arrived at that unmanaged point in Kosovo and I hope we never get to”, he added.










