Moliqaj for PSD action: Women's murders are warned

Chairman PSD, Dardan Moliqaj, has written about the action of this party with black flags across Pristina, writing that women's deaths are warned”. He says these killings are not effective killings, but the violence and systematic exploitation that culminate in murder. Molly writes: Homage: The darkness of the private sphere must [...]
Chairman PSD, Dardan Moliqaj, has written about the action of this party with black flags across Pristina, writing that women's deaths are warned”.
He says these killings are not effective killings, but the violence and systematic exploitation that culminate in murder.
Molly writes:
Homage: The darkness of the private sphere must be enlightened.
In the living room, darkness has replaced life. Every day is a new blow, although it is repetition. Family problems remain isolated until the woman betrays this pact. I violated her with life. A man kills his wife.
Women's murders are warned. They are not the killings in effect, but the violence and systematic exploitation that culminate in murder. When the word “neglecty” describes institutional inaction, it is known to be a soft language for participation in murder. The patriarchate co-exists with the exploitary economic structure, and ranks in perspective. The limitations and conditions imposed on a woman in life are the same as they eventually kill her.
Every time we hear a man has killed his wife, we need to know that there has been a long, painful struggle there, that there has been oppression and exploitation. Let every bullet crack give evidence of a man's violated privileges, a violation of power. Every time the woman's lifeless body lies on the floor, it must be implied that there is a history of resistance.
These individual attitudes should unite and bring back to the knowledge that forms and organize political communities. Women who are deprived of active organization and participation in the public sphere must be part of the discours and feminist organization. Private space must be politicised, and women with impossible collection should be just as part of the liberation battles through new forms of participation.
We dare not let our activity and the sensitivity of matters be defined by our experiences, different from those of women who are gone. Our experiences may be different, but war is common.
Today we remember, tomorrow we fight.











