Kurti no words so far for the adoption of Resolution by Albania, against Dick Marty's report.

Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti has yet to respond to Resolution's approval against Dick Marty's report, which was approved yesterday in the Albanian Parliament, which will be sent to the Council of Europe. Through this resolution, Albania is aiming to dismiss accusations of human organs trafficking during the Kosovo war, [...]
Albania's Assembly has adopted the resolution against Dick Marty's report last night. In that case, 125 MPs voted.
President Vjosa Osmani has been declared today for approval of this resolution, after being questioned by reporters during the joint conference with Albania's president, Ilir Meta.
Osmani has said that a special greeting for such a development can be expected, since as she emphasises Kosovo's stance on the purity of the KLA war is daily.
You can't expect special greetings for a special day, because our attitude for the purity of the liberation war is everyday, it's in every act of ours, it's in every one of our jobs, it's in every breath of ours and every job we do to move Kosovo forward, we honor each deliverer. Therefore, whether the resolutions adopted in Albania, whether in Kosovo, we have repeatedly confirmed a truth that can never be changed by anyone, despite the efforts of Serbia and its allies. The truth is this. Serbia has been the aggressor, Kosovo has been the victim of a genocide regime, UCK has protected the people of Kosovo and fought for the freedom of our country”, Osmani has said.
The president has said there is also a basic judicial principle that a resolution or a political or judicial act can be abolished only by organs that have approved them.
The resolution, of course, expresses the political will of the respective parliaments. But there is also a basic law principle, that an act, whether that resolution or act of law, can be abolished only by organs that have approved them. Albania's Parliament has expressed what each Albanian has said so far that Kosovo's liberation war, the U war. Can't get rid of anyone. No one can change history. Kosovo has never had anything to hide, because Kosovo has defended itself from a genocide regime led by Milosevic at the time, whose remains are still in Serbia unfortunately, in the context of mentality I am speaking”, Osmani has added further.
Unlike Osman, Prime Minister Albin Kurti has issued no statements on the issue.
His latest Facebook post is the first two days, where he announced the decisions made at the government's final meeting, which he runs.
Meanwhile, in Titter, he posted 13 hours ago, where he said he was pleased that Kosovo's Assembly adopted the Bill for ratification of the co-finance agreement for the study of feasibility and the draft idea for the Durres-Pristina railway line.
Opposition leader has reacted PDK's Memli Krasniqi, who has welcomed this resolution.
Krasniqi has thanked all MPs who voted this resolution, in particular its initials and designers.
“E welcomes the adoption of the Republic of Albania Resolution, which, among other things, addresses the Council of Europe on the groundlessness of claims included in former Senator Dick Marty's report, which claims have been and are the cause of an unfair burden that has weighed on our shoulders as a state and as a society, already more than a decade.
Kosovo and Albanian institutions have fulfilled all obligations to address such claims, although there can be no result of something that neither base nor substance. However, we have paid and continued to face unjustly the cost of those groundless claims, something that would have to receive epilogue exactly from the Council of Europe, to free the truth of the glorious era of the Kosovo Liberation Army from the malicious factories of our enemies of freedom and independence”, Krasniqi wrote.
Albania's Assembly has unanimously voted, with 125 MPs' votes -- the resolution aimed at dismissing charges of trafficking in human organs during the war in Kosovo -- claims stemming from a Council of Europe report.
The hearing was conveyed with exchange of charges between the Socialist and Democratic Party, about their role in the Kosovo war and in proportion to charges brought against former Kosovo Liberation Army leaders.
Albania's prime minister, at the same time chairman of the Socialist Party, which has drafted this draft resolution, Edi Rama, said earlier in the day that through its approval the return of the dignity of the Albanian people and KLA fighters is aimed.
“Albania will address the damaged reputation of the Albanian people and will do so with dignity. Albania's voice will be heard in Strasbourg”, Rama said.
This investigation process has brought no justice, but has made victims the main figures of KLA”, he added.
Albania's Parliamentary Assembly resolution seeks to declare groundless allegations of organ trafficking, and asks the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe to review the resolution adopting Swiss Senator Dick Marty's report and the charges raised, which it considers to be “uncontested, untested and uncontested in evidence of the facts”.
Albania's Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe “requires that the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe implement a following report and review of Resolution 1782<11>, which fostered claims on human organs trafficking in Kosovo and Albania during the 1998-1999 war in Kosovo.
The report, drafted by Dick Marty, a Swiss politician and a former member of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe in 2010, was turned into the reason for establishing Kosovo's Specialised Chambers, a hybrid court before which former senior Kosovo Liberation Army leaders are already being tried on charges of war crimes against Serb civilians and political rivals.
Marty's report, which was adopted with a resolution by the Council of Europe in 2011, contains claims that former KLA leaders were involved in trafficking human organs during the war. The charges filed in Marty's report have been investigated by an American prosecutor, and his findings have not included evidence based that trafficking of organs with human beings occurred during the Kosovo war.
The claims of Marty's report on organ trafficking have not been materialised in either the 2020 indictment against former Kosovo President Hashim Thaci, former Kosovo Assembly Chairman Kadri Veselini, Jakup Krasniqi, and former KLA General Staff member Rexhep Selimi, who denies the charges.
However, Marty's claims have not been rejected by the Council of Europe, while Marty has recently come under Swiss police protection following the discovery that Serbian security structures were planning his murder.












