Tahiri: The government is extending the time to the War Crimes Institute to fulfil yet another request to Radojicicqi

The parliamentary group's chief, Abelard Tahiri, has reacted to the law for the War Crimes Institute, which is today on the agenda in the Assembly. Tahiri has stressed that the government has extended the deadline to this institute until 31 December 2000, even though the war in Kosovo has ended on June 12th 1999. According to Tahiri, [...]
The parliamentary group's chief, Abelard Tahiri, has reacted to the law for the War Crimes Institute, which is today on the agenda in the Assembly.
Tahiri has stressed that the government has extended the deadline to this institute until 31 December 2000, even though the war in Kosovo has ended on June 12th 1999. According to Tahiri, this is a request by Milan Radojicicicic, which the government is meeting.
Posting:
Research into war crimes and Serbian genocide in Kosovo must continue without any doubt. But Albin Kurti's government, today, has laid down the adoption of the Law for the Institute for Investigation of the Crimes Done during the Kosovo War, which aims to investigate and investigate these crimes by December 31st, 2000. The Kosovo war has ended on June 12th, 1999, with the departure of Serbian military and police from Kosovo, and there has been no war after June 99. This anti-national and anti-state approach, to present and accommodate Serbia's interpretation through which it approaches that period, is nothing more than a great and co-ordinated zeal to fulfill yet another request of Milan Radojsic.
I invite all of the Parliament's deputies to respond to reason and consciousness and to reject this unsurpassed, unhistorical and antinational shame.












