Citaku: For decades VV exhibits have planted threatened poison -- Society is more polarised than ever before

Democratic Party of Kosovo MP Vlora Citaku has recalled how during the time she served as Kosovo's ambassador to the US, she had been shot with eggs while part of a conversation with Christopher Hill at the University of Colorado. Citaku has recalled how the girl he was attacked from had called the MP [...]
Citaku has recalled how the girl he was attacked from had called PDK deputy killer and criminal (an allied in the Dehari case).
For decades, VV exhibits have been abusive, insulting, and threatened. They planted poison and stigmatized it. As a result, our society is more polarized than ever before. Part of the responsibility lies with us, for we have often chosen silence instead of law, forgiveness instead of justice, and it has written among other things.
She also said that violence, whether physical or verbal, should neither be amnified nor normalized.
These comments were made a day after the physical incident involving LDK deputy Armendi Zemaj, with a citizen, in Pristina Square.
Posting:
I never forget, about eight years ago, I was at the University of Colorado, in a conversation about Kosovo and the Western Balkans.
I was a guest of Ambassador Christopher Hill, who was then a dean of the International Relations Department.
Towards the end of the discussion, a young woman from Kosovo stood up, called me a killer and a criminal (an alloying in the Dehari case), while the ambassador accused her of promoting “assassins”.
Finally, he hit us with eggs.
I can't remember another time I felt embarrassed. MlA had to reason before an audience that had come to hear about Kosovo, our foreign policy and our aspirations for EU and NATO membership.
The mistake I made back then was that I didn't start the case with the consciences, because the attack on a country's ambassador is hard work, because of diplomatic immunity. I chose to house him.
But today I know that such cases must be followed legally. Violence, whether physical or verbal, should not be Amnesized or normalized.
For decades, VV exhibits have reviled, insulted, and threatened. They planted poison and stigmatized it. As a result, our society is more polarized than ever before.
Part of the responsibility lies with us, for we have often chosen silence instead of law forgiveness.












