Matoshi: With all due respect, our diaspora educators count on fingers

In Ilir Mirena's interview that completes Periscopi in co-operation with television7, analyst, journalist and writer Halil Matoshi recounts even moments past, about his early activism of Kosovo independence. Commenting on the abuses and insults that go to his address and analyzing the context of the iccalils from our diaspora. [...]
Commenting on the abuses and insults that go to his address and analyzing the context of the diaspolics from our diaspora that we do not give out even in front of America, Mr. Matoshi says there is a lot of respect for the Kosovo exile, but that the number of their schoolchildren is very small.
“You know that Kosovo's extradition, with all due respect that most are hard workers and love their homeland, of course, but you know that schooling and diet on Kosovo's exile, are counted by fingers.
There are very few people who have arrived as a lawyer, a doctor well known as a businessman.
They live in social, they're protected by the most powerful Western state, and by the social night of that state, with the most profound security, the most expensive health, possibly even the most expensive school, and we've been swearing to a political elite who's been through the hell of the former Yugoslavia, where they've practically put their youth in prisons, when, in 99, we've been hostages of war, practically in the camps of Serbia”, he said. /Periscopi
In this situation, from the west, those people with super conditions, with ash and ash, these people who haven't gone to 90, Matosh says.












