Rama: War law must be abolished, new era of strategic partnership between Albania, Greece

Prime Minister Edi Rama said that, with Greece we had the difficult moment on the issue you know. But today that issue is over, and we are in very good relationship with the Greek government. “The EU has assigned us a three-year-old calendar to do negotiations. There hasn't been a cure for other countries. [...]
“The EU has assigned us a three-year-old calendar to do negotiations. There hasn't been such a short time for other countries. Then the Commission will take all member states and Greece that we have finished with Albania and everything is ready and then in all the parliaments of the member states, will be voted to take over EU member Albania”, Rama said.
Speaking of relations with Greece, Rama called the war law absurdity.
You should know that with Prime Minister Mitsotakis and his government, we are in constant dialogue. We've made significant progress in addressing those issues that we've agreed on, for example, about those issues related to minority and some decisions we've made to sanction certain minority rights, as the right to declare. These are issues that need to be resolved and we've solved and it's positive”, Rama said, follow up. Periscope.
We're definitely on the table on our side asking to finally remove the law of war, because it's absurd. We are two very close peoples, we are two allied countries in NATO. In our foreign policy document Greece is a strategic partner together with Turkey and Italy, and we are in a state of war, because there is a absurd law here that is the law of war, and our insistence is that this law must be abolished. And I am very confident that even this one, but other issues that should be said very often have been confused with unfair politics, very often the owls of nationalist marshes around here and around have made a mess and put the entire world into a fight, and we will come out to rise above all these marshes and in close cooperation with our friends in Athens we will make a new era of strategic partnership, not just in the sense that we have today, but in the sense of a much stronger combination of jobs and people who are themselves, Ramah> said.












