President Osmani is responsible for her reaction rather than her husband's uncle

It says: Merro Base Vjosa Osmani is not responsible if her husband's uncle is a pedophile and is charged with abusing two minors years ago during the Kosovo war. She also cannot be declared guilty of a conflict within her husband's tribe over this [...]
It says: Merro Base
Vjosa Osmani is not responsible if her husband's uncle is a pedophile and is charged with abusing two minors years ago, during the Kosovo war. She also cannot be declared guilty of a conflict within her husband's tribe over the matter.
The alleged victim of the pedophile, reports the media, is the man of the author's thesis that killed him, who has avenged his two abused sisters, whom the victim has sheltered in his home during wartime in Kosovo.
But President Vjosa Osmani is responsible for her response to journalists who denounced the concrete case against journalist Berat Buzhala, who mentioned it by name.
What's clear is that we're in front of a serious sexual abuse story, taking place under survival circumstances for two young girls, sheltered at their aunt's house, and allegedly abused by her husband, who is at the same time the uncle of the husband of Ousmane president.
Throughout the world, when there are convictions of sexual abuse against minors years ago and they are made public late, there is no state or public authority to respond more to the indictees than to the suspects.
Kosovo's president's first normal reaction should be to condemn the crime that took place and to open urgent investigations into allegations of sexual abuse against the two former minors years ago.
In any democratic and free country, publicly denounced sexual abuses, of course without many facts after so many years, have priority in the investigation and in the official support given in relation to allegations that may rise against the accusers.
In the concrete case, abusers themselves have opened criminal processes in Serbia, since the suspect lived in the Presevo Valley, but there are no officials, and then turned into a debate within the tribe, until he ended up in self-trial.
Kosovo, which suffers from the wounds of the Serbian Army's sexual abuse of Kosovo women and girls during the war, now has a list of more, Albanian rapists.
Their attitude should be the same.
Kosovo's president, who has supported the cause against sexual abuse of Kosovo women and girls from Serbia, cannot react in that way to a journalist who returns the case with an Albanian abuser, despite his shooting to be her husband's uncle.
Kosovo's president has been declared on the side of the victims of sexual violence, and this should make no exception when the bully is Albanian, even its relatives.
Its disproportionate reaction against journalists who are whitewashing events, not saying a word to the suspect already killed, shows that she is in a difficult position and has no power to separate the president's post from her status as the bride of the suspect's grandson.
It is also clear that the issue is old and with many developments and that it is almost impossible for her to be unaware of it, even though she is neither responsible nor guilty of it.
Kosovo's president should be taught that in his office, she does not represent the family of her husband and their problems, but Kosovo and her plight, and in this case she should immediately be listed on the side of the alleged victims and those who denounced her, until the state is clarified by justice.
Trying to be more aggressive with those who condemn rape than with the suspected rapist makes him an obedient bride of her tribe, but not a president of a country where sexual violence has been a weapon of national humiliation.









