“I am not sleeping for Kosovo”, is insomnia affecting Vuciq's slide towards “a crazy”

For some time now, Serbian President Aleksandar Vuciq says he has trouble sleeping, or with what is known in psychology science as “Insomy”. On Sunday, the Serbian president, speaking to reporters, was harsh with them, telling them “Don't say that, I haven't slept all night”, almost journalists were they [...]
For some time now, Serbian President Aleksandar Vuciq says he has trouble sleeping, or with what is known in psychology science as “Insomy”.
On Sunday, the Serbian president, speaking to reporters, was harsh with them, telling them “Don't talk like that, I slept all night”, almost journalists who were ruining his night sleep.
This insomnia job, Vucinq, seems to highlight it whenever it comes to Kosovo. Even on Sunday, the journalists' question to him concerned the situation in Kosovo and tensions raised in the north.
That the Kosovo issue does not allow for a nap, the Serbian president had declared it even in 2020, just before the elections there.
The only reason I can sleep is Kosovo. I don't care about the economy. And what I can tell people is that it will fight even more than in the past”, Vuciq said,
“
Since people with Insomnia may have a heavy mental state, at least individuals who have admitted to such a problem have shown that they experience feelings of discontent, drowsiness, or anxiety, and do not be able to carry out their daily obligations.
It is not known for certain whether this situation may have affected a recent statement by President Aleksandar Vuciq, who said “that Serbian children aged 12 and 13 in Kosovo are willing to die”.
People's Party in Serbia MP Sanda Raskoviq Iviq psychiatrist said Thursday that Serbian President Aleksandar Vuciq intends to mobilise Serbian children for war in Kosovo, as did Adolf Hitler in 1945. She said the Serbian president should become a psychiatric control.
I haven't heard anything so crazy, heartless and irresponsible in a long time. To say that children 12 and 13 want to die is typical only of Islamic states where jihad reigns. That was true in 1945 in Nazi Germany, when Hitler no longer had anyone mobilized for war”, Raskovic Iviq said.
As “Danas” reported, in the question of whether President Vuciq should submit to psychiatric oversight because of such a statement, Raskovic Ivic said that, as a psychiatrist, she could not answer that question without a preliminary examination of it. /Periscopi/












