Tahiri: Martin Berishaj Kurti sexist, Serbian energy mafia

The head of the Democratic Party of Kosovo parliamentary group, Abelard Tahiri, has said that the founding of the Investment Commission for Energy is necessary, especially after reporting on Kosovo's ambassador to Croatia, Martin Berisha, suspected of involvement in a financial scandal in Slovenia. After recent reports by Slovenian media on the ambassador's evolution [...]
After recent reports by Slovenian media on involving Kosovo's ambassador to Korac, in an extremely large corrupt relationship, where even Serbian companies are involved highlights another extremely important issue for Kosovo. It points out that our ambassador, who serves in Croatia, who in “the Kurti 1” was also adviser to Prime Minister Kurti, is currently a worker or adviser to a Serbian-based energy company, the company “GEN”, which has so far paid our ambassador about 600 thousand euros”, Tahiri said at the media conference.
“Del points out that this company as well during this last two-year period when a new management by Government “has been introduced in KEK, and thus has continued with government “Code 2” and this company, so company “GEN”, its branch in Serbia, has sold Kosovo electricity and also bought electricity from the Republic of Kosovo. So this is extremely scandalous”.
Tahiri even said Ambassador Berisha serves as a sexist between Kurti and the Serbian company, alluding that there may be something between this and the government's insistence on blocking the commission's establishment.
Our “Ambassador serves as a sextor between our prime minister and Serbian energy mafia, which with all perseverance and enormous devotion hinders the establishment of the Investigative Commission, to have a parliamentary investigation into energy developments in this period when Kosovo has allocated over 100m euros<1>.
So the discovery of this relative last night in the hours, and every hour new documents are emerging from this very relationship, making it necessary to establish the investigative commission”.
The PDK says recent developments have made the establishment of the investigative commission necessary, and that they want to know whether these two things are likely to have a link.
“We want to see how much of these tools, Kosovo citizens' taxes, more than 100m euros, how much of them the Serbia-based GEN company has benefited from in which our ambassador serves as adviser”.
“A has occurred that these tools have been transferred back into various forms as revealed by Slovenian media, through companies that have fallen into the hands of people of power in the Republic of Kosovo”.
Therefore, if we see that the real deadlock of the Investigative Commission's founding to investigate, a parliamentary investigation into any expenditures that have occurred in purchasing electricity, in selling electricity, is a major criminal enterprise behind this controversy. Nor have we believed until today that the Republic of Kosovo, senior Kosovo state officials, may be involved in such international corrupts links”.










