Sick Man Dies After Exile in Kosovo, Homazhe, Protests in Germany

The district office, Biberach, has decided this Monday that his 64-year-old wife, Mire G, who is also ill, is allowed to return to Germany. Sali Krasniqi died on March 12th, five months after his expulsion to Kosovo, which took place despite the fact that he had a serious illness, [...]
The county office, Biberach, has decided this Monday that his 64-year-old wife, Mire G, who is also ill, is allowed to return to Germany.
Sali Krasniqi has died on March 12th, five months after his expulsion to Kosovo, which took place despite the fact that he had a serious illness, writes the Schwäbische Zeitung newspaper and many other German media.
Death has occurred, according to assumptions, due to inadequate medical care in Kosovo, broadcasts albinfo.ch. Now, the district office in Biberach, in the quality of the responsible immigration authority, has decided this Monday that at least his 64-year-old wife, Mire G, who is also ill, is allowed to return to Germany.
The ban on the entry she was pronounced, along with the already felt mate, has been removed.
For Miri G, which suffers from the long-term consequences of pulmonary tuberculosis, return to Germany is officially allowed. But even when the authorities' language is about immediate re-entry, there is still an obstacle here: Mirja must apply for a tourist visa. Until her approval, a few months may pass.
It remains to be seen whether the expulsion after 28 years of stay in Germany, which ultimately cost her husband his life, will be judged as illegal by the courts. Meanwhile, Mirya will have no secure permission to stay even after she enters Germany again. The rules of application bureaucracy must be put back in motion. But the family that lives in the Biberach district, the six children, the 17 grandchildren, the great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-mother G., who mourns the late Sali Krasniqi, now has at least one hope: That they'll see Good G. Still alive.
The case of the Roma couple Sali and Mire Krasniqi's expulsion to Kosovo, after 28 years of stay in Germany, was conveyed with complaints and protests by citizens and civil society in the district where this family lived and beyond. And after the news of Sali's death, a tribute and protest are being organized in the center of the city, with speeches, mortories, and banners condemning the expulsion of the mentioned couple.












