KMDLNj: Why so many suicides in Kosovo?

The Council for Protection of Human Rights and Freedoms has raised concerns over the number of suicides in Kosovo. KMDLNj in a reaction to the media stressed that within 48 hours six persons lost their lives under suspicious circumstances were, respectively, suspicions that they had killed themselves. Read the full reaction: Why so many suicides [...]
KMDLNj in a reaction to the media stressed that within 48 hours six persons lost their lives under suspicious circumstances were, respectively, suspicions that they had killed themselves.
Read the full reaction:
Why so many suicides in Kosovo?
Within 48 hours, six people lost their lives under suspicious circumstances, respectively, the allegations were that they had killed themselves, with firearms or self - reliance. Finally, the causes of death described as suspicious only after the results of the autopsy by legal experts.
To The rise in these cases poses serious concern as soon as we all are dealing with the consequences, no one with preventive measures.
No one in Kosovo has done a serious and professional research on the causes affecting the growth of this phenomenon, after which it would be built on prevention strategies.
Kosovo, as a country out of war, has seriously had to deal with this issue in order to cut the posttraumatic deadline, this phenomenon says normal after the end of the war in countries where there has been war.
Surprisingly, there are more suicide cases 26 years after the war ended than during the period after the war ended.
According to KMDLNj, the fraught economic situation, increasing unemployment, the lack of treatment of cases identified with suicides, the lack of social solidarity, the lack or insufficientness of state institutions to help these cases, loss of hope, the unaffordable costs for businesses, and the ongoing pressure for war riskability are the main cause of increasing the number of suicides.
This phenomenon is on the rise in marginalised groups that have been sidelined by the state as pensioners and war veterans, while a smaller number go to businessmen who have no support or protection of the law.
KMDLNI expresses deep concern that this phenomenon is not being seriously handled by institutions that have a legal mandate to protect human rights so long ago that the main human right over which all other rights, the right to life, guaranteed by all international and national documents for human rights are seriously endangered.
With the impossible, objective or subject of the state to ensure the protection and health care of citizens, the state, without a legal basis, is applying euthanasia or assisted death.












