“was a Democrat, his favorite film was...” - Kurti remembers former Serbian Prime Minister Djindjic on 20th anniversary of the assassination

Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti has commemorated Serbian Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic on the 20th anniversary of the assassination. Kurti indicated that the two bombers who killed the Serbian democratic prime minister were war criminals in Kosovo. “Attators who killed the former Serbian prime minister on March 12th 2003, Zvezdan Jovanovic 50 Zmija and Milorad Ulemek '% Legija, ended up at the CZ [...]
Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti has commemorated Serbian Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic on the 20th anniversary of the assassination.
Kurti indicated that the two bombers who killed the Serbian democratic prime minister were war criminals in Kosovo.
“Attators who killed the former Serbian prime minister on March 12th 2003, Zvezdan Jovanovic 50 Zmija and Milorad Ulemek égija, ended up in the CZ in Belgrade sentenced to 40 years in prison, but not even the officers who were never discovered (why they were known from elsewhere). These two are also war criminals in Kosovo, organisers and executions of massacres on Albanians, and along with Goran Radisavjevich Gurin, are said to be also participants in the Jasarza state siege of Preskaz. Organised crime, war crimes committed and chauvinist dictatorships walk together”, Kurti wrote.
Total Kurt Posting:
20 years since the assassination of Zoran Djindjic
Serbia's government would already have been thinking of the 100th anniversary of King Aleksandar Obrenovic's macabre assassination, his wife and his two brothers, government chairman and his army minister. Two and a half months away from this century anniversary, when Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic was killed, among Serbia's rare political leaders who did not co-operate with Milosevic, although he never resolved the contradiction between liberalisation (Western) and nationalism (Serbian).
Djindjic was a democrat in the circumstances of the time, already under the intellectual background and philosophical orientation, even when he moved or changed, was highly influenced by the Frankfurt School, which owed him the critical thought of the opposition. As he admired Jürgen Haberma's communicative action, his favorite film was “Andrei Rublev” Andrei Tarkovsky's.
Atentators who killed the former Serbian prime minister on 12 March 2003, Zvezdan Jovanovic Zmija and Milorad Ulemek Legija, ended up in the CZ in Belgrade sentenced to 40 years in prison, but not even the officers who were never discovered (like why they were known from the centre). These two are also war criminals in Kosovo, organisers and executions of massacres on Albanians, and along with Goran Radisavjevich Gurin, are said to be also participants in the Jasarza state siege of Preskaz. Organised crime, war crimes committed and chauvinist dictatorships walk together.
In two centuries of existence, Serbia had two years of democracy. With the rule of Zoran Djindjic, support for membership in the European Union has reached 3/4 of Serbia's population, and now it has dropped to 1/3. For Djindjic today, there will be many false griefs and tears in Belgrade. The time that followed added weight to the opposite side of democracy. The time to come doesn't seem to change anything there soon.










