Was Vjosa Osman's visit to Switzerland related to the referendum held tomorrow in this country?

Vjosa Osmani days ago completed her visit to Switzerland. From it, the visit was promoted as very successful. There were meetings with various politicians in this country. Osmani met with Switzerland's foreign minister and also met with National Council Chairman Andreas Aebi. Mrs. Osman there was [...]
Vjosa Osmani days ago completed her visit to Switzerland. From it, the visit was promoted as very successful. There were meetings with various politicians in this country. Osmani met with Switzerland's foreign minister and also met with National Council Chairman Andreas Aebi.
Mrs. Osman was largely welcomed by leftist party personalities, as was the meeting with Cédric Wermuth, co-chairman of the Swiss Social Democratic Party.
But why is it at this very time and when it is only the Kosovo president's decision-finder, the invitation came?
As it is known tomorrow ( Sunday) in Switzerland, a referendum will be held on whether to ban or allow the maintenance of Islam's stock market and initiative through the public spaces of this state. The leftist parties, the greens and the Socialists oppose the ban.
The issue has politicised many Swiss opinion. It is known that referenda in this country are often passed or fell for a narrow margin, which does not exceed 1 or 2 per cent pro or against the issue posed in that referendum.
In Switzerland, there are estimated to be about 80 to 90 thousand Albanians with Swiss citizenship, with the right to vote. So, participants also in this referendum.
Her visit a few days before the referenda, her agenda, mostly with left-wing party politicians who oppose the ban on women's artificial cover in public places, suggests that Vjosa Osmani was invited to Switzerland by these parties to at least influence the Albanian diaspora to vote in this referendum against the ban on stock and niqabit.
Wyosa Osmani became the tool of the Swiss leftist.
So, even her meetings with the diaspora, where she clearly pledons to vote against the referendum tomorrow is an extremely bad example of our country's ungo-go foreign policy.
Right elements in this country, especially xenophobic-oriented parties, are gaining more and more support from Swiss citizens. Therefore, the intervention of Kosovo politics in the orientation of our diaspora vote does not do our diaspora there first, nor does our country with its ruined reputation.
Otherwise, Vjosa Osmani had earlier acknowledged publicly that she had once been manipulated by Democratic League of Kosovo officials to criticise and speak ill of her current political partner, Albin Kurtin.












