Kurti in 2003 had no good words for Zoran Djindjic: Writing

Until Prime Minister Albin Kurti reminded former Serbian Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic of his authorship in the Day of 2003, it does not seem that Kurti had good words for Djindjic. In a 2003 script to the Koha Ditore newspaper, Kurti said that Djindjic has supported Serb leaders in [...]
In a 2003 script to the Koha Ditore newspaper, Kurti said Djindjic supported Serb leaders in Bosnia at the time of major crimes.
“It is evident that Djindjic in the 1990s despite the cruel crimes committed in the name of the Serbian holy “issue in Bosnia had backed Serbian leaders there, but he himself was not a person who wanted to run wars and manage conflicts in the future”, it says.
His political disqualify meant not to be accepted into Europe, but to return as Europe in the region to dominate. So for the exploitation of war that is still available, to replace it with the use of European trends by avoiding conflicts with them”, this text published in the Koha Ditore newspaper was said further.
In fact, Kurti at the time declared that Djindjic's murder does not present any chance of “who knew” of what is greater for Kosovo.
“That Zoran Djindjic would not even enter a war this would not facilitate Kosovo's fate and make it not -- as Kosovo politicians would say less dangerous. Well, neither does the fact that Zoran Djindjic was killed present any chance of what is greater for Kosovo. Legal frameworks where its powerless rulers are located and especially those where Kosovo is located will not change”, Kurti wrote.
Kosovo politicians will be the same, and so will their visions and strategies. Djindjic's murder saved Kosovo politicians from talks from which they had no way out of losing”, Kurti said further.
The late Serbian Prime Minister, Zoran Djindjic, had lived even three years after the war ended in Kosovo. However, he never apologized for the crimes committed in Kosovo. On the contrary, Djindjic was a close friend to one of the war criminals who had committed massacres in Bosnia, Hercegovinin and Kosovo, Zeljko Raznatovic-Aqiri.
The crimes ran over the Arkaqi did not sequence the response of Serbian Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic. He had continued his friendship with her.













