Eric Krasniqi: The war ended in 2020 but in 1999

Altin Krasniqi, deputy of the Democratic Party of Kosovo, has reacted to criticism that has been staged for the nationwide protest held yesterday in Tirana, where it called for justice for former Kosovo Liberation Army leaders, who are being held in The Hague. Krasniqi in his Facebook response raises the question [...]
Krasniqi in his Facebook response raises the question that why are you hindering a certain category of justice requirements?
He also stated that post-war and political routes are part of the democratic reality of post-war, but they cannot be used to rewrite the history of war.
Posting:
Why is the request for justice holding up a certain category?
Who may fear the demand for respect for the rights of prisoners and the call for justice in the Special Court to be in line with European standards?
Beyond the political differences we may have today, we must have it clear that every family, every witness and every fellow fighter since the beginnings of the war for freedom are part of the same path, the same sacrifice and the same ideal.
We cannot accept that those who fell for freedom are called the good, and those who fought until the end are called bad.
We are all good, because we are together in the struggle for freedom, we are all bad if we deny that war today.
The war was not ended in 2020 but in 1999.
Post-war and political paths, whether co-operation or divisions are part of the post-war democratic reality, but they cannot be used to rewrite the history of war.
We need to distinguish between what happened during the war and what happened after that.
Because if we lose this dividing line, we lose the very meaning of freedom we earned with so much blood and sacrifice.












