Reagon Obadiah: Scandal with Ambassador to Slovenia is the reason power is rejecting the Investigative Commission for the current

Democratic League of Kosovo Chairman Lumir Abdixhiku has reacted to the Kosovo Ambassador's case in Croatia, Martin Berisha, which Slovenian media are reporting is involved in a major financial scandal there. He has linked this case to Vetevendosje's refusal to form the Investigative Commission in the Assembly for [...]
He has linked this case to Vetevendosje's refusal to form the Investigative Commission in the country for energy, saying this is the real reason for the resistance of power for this.
No excuses to reject made sense. Neither the reasoning of war in Ukraine, so imagine this investigation; nor the excuse for the legitimacy of signatures meant anything. Only one big problem produced hopeless reasoning. But the more loud their refusal became, the more necessary our persistence became. Today, parliamentary investigation has no alternative. This scandal, and other scandals listed in the spending of 120m euros and the cost of bills up to 100%, must find light. The energy crisis is a pyramid of mismanagement, neglect and now crime. This pyramid we need and we're going to tear down the entire”, he wrote Obadiah.
He has said Ambassador Berisha must withdraw immediately.
Our voter “Bojkot in the country does not end without the formation of the Energy Investment Commission. Because there's no law, there's no issue of anything more important than energy. We'll clear the truth sooner or later. Until then, the immediate withdrawal of the now compromised ambassador, the formation of the Investigative Commission, and the dismissal of the Regulatory Board, which still refuses the Court's decision on tariffs, are the first steps in this direction”, Obadiah wrote.
His full post:
The outbreak of the scandal with the ambassador to Slovenia and now its expansion even in the region is the real reason for the resistance to the formation of the Investigative Commission in the Parliament.
No denial of their reasoning made sense. Neither the reasoning of war in Ukraine, so imagine this investigation; nor the excuse for the legitimacy of signatures meant anything. Only one big problem produced hopeless reasoning. But the more loud their refusal became, the more necessary our persistence became. Today, parliamentary investigation has no alternative. This scandal, and other scandals listed in the spending of 120m euros and the cost of bills up to 100%, must find light. The energy crisis is a pyramid of mismanagement, neglect and now crime. This pyramid must be destroyed.
Our voter Boyot in the Assembly does not end without the Constitutional Energy Commission formation. Because there's no law, there's no issue of anything more important than energy. We'll clear the truth sooner or later. Until then, the immediate withdrawal of the now compromised ambassador, the formation of the Investigative Commission, and the dismissal of the Regulatory Board that still refuses the Court's decision on tariffs are the first steps in this direction.












