80 thousand euros were spent on “training workers”, but never worked at the animal waste processing plant.

The plant for processing animal waste, built with support from the European Union and the rest from Kosovo's budget, was launched in 2018. At least this was reported at the time by senior institutional leaders, including former AUV chief Valdet Djindovci, who had publicly declared that the factory had started working. But [...]
From: Blerta Agoshi
According to these documents, the company “Novus” S. The P.K was selected to provide training at this plant for a 20-day period. The purpose of this training would be to train officials working at the animal waste processing plant, a factory of critical public health and the treatment of animal waste. But in reality, as it turns out of the official data and verification of Periscop, neither of the trained was a technical staff of this factory, and the factory itself had no employees contracted for operation at the time.
To justify spending 80 thousand euros on pledge, The AUV had sent 10 officials for training that were not part of any factory operational structure, nor were they ever involved in its production or management process. In fact, many of them are appointed to positions related to inspection of veterinary standards or monitoring general procedures, but none of them were meant to ever work on the industrial lines of the processing factory.
The list of trained officials, according to secured documents, includes Alban Spahiu .A veterinarian official at AUV; Vladim Zaymi ) animal health inspector; Gresa Shala ) Veterinary Inspector; Africa Bajrami ? veterinarian inspector; Kreshnik paçarizi é inspector veterinarian; Hello Salihu official for Information and Reporting; Luxury Maxhun animal health inspector; Salaam Beluli é Inspector veterinarian; Kurtish Krasniqi ) Inspector Veterinary Regional; Enver Dembogay Inspector Veterinary.

All these officials have been involved in 20-day training, at a total cost of 80 thousand euros, including a closing dinner, calling for glasses that the factory would already start work.

Ironically, this amount spent on these officials never worked a day in the factory after the last seven years because the factory, as AUV acknowledges, never entered into real office, despite earlier official claims. However, according to public statements and the budget spent on it, the factory should have been functional since 2019.
The AUV, in response to Periscope, has acknowledged that training has not been aimed at preparing staff to work in the factory, but to get to know <x0modology and its <x1) features, so that inspectors could, in an indefinite future, monitor it more effectively. This form of reasoning, however, cannot explain why such training has cost so much at a time when objects and production lines have never been in real operation.
Veterinary inspectors are not trained to work in the factory! The training of inspectors was in the features of the factory's function and methodology of its work, since official checks concerning its functionality are their responsibility”, the AUV's response to Periscope says.
In another explanation of the matter. The AUV has confirmed in an experimental way that the factory has not been functional before, despite former chief-in-chief Valdet Djindovci, at the time he headed this institution, had publicly declared that it had begun working.
“Fabrika has not been functional before, no matter what then” statements are highlighted in the response to Periscope.
Periscope has asked former chief-in-chief Djindovci questions about these contradictions, but until the moment of the publication of this scripture, he has returned no response to clarifying the circumstances that conflict with his earlier statements.
80 thousand euros were spent on training, for the operation to run with staff factories, but on that day the workers did not do one hour's work on it. Meanwhile, the Ministry of Agriculture and the Food and Veterinary Agency now rented this factory, which has cost 8m euros to a company that was opened five days after public proclamation, that Periscopi was the first medium to report. The prosecution has then launched investigations and several officials have been interviewed, including Agriculture Minister Faton Peci. /Periscope/












