Minister Hoti also finds inaccuracy for the Great Krusha: Retire materials, Prosecution Consider the Case

Andy Hoti, minister for Labour, Families and Values of the Liberation War, has reacted to the Pristina Square Fair for Massacres in Kosovo, where, among other things, 48 armed Albanians have been killed in the Dubrava massacre. For this, Hoti has said that the exposure of incorrect materials is unacceptable, and that [...]
Hoti, in his reaction, points to inaccuracies even in the Great Krusha massacre, saying that there, in addition to inaccuracies in the number of victims, there is also a dangerous and false narrator, in which women and children are supposed to be allowed to leave while men have been killed, which, the Minister Hoti points out, does not stand.
These are not simple technical errors, but deviations that are at risk of relating crimes and reinforceing false Narratia. As Minister of the Ministry of Labour, Family and Values of the Liberation War, I call for: The immediate attraction of materials containing inaccuracies; The complete institutional verifiation of the contents of the public war crimes exhibitions has written, among other things, Hoti.
Posting:
The display in Pristina's Square of incorrect materials for crimes committed during the war in Kosovo is unacceptable and directly violates historical truth.
Within a public exhibition of the 1998/99 war massacres, there are cases in which facts are incorrectly presented and, in some cases, even distortedly.
In the case of the Great Krusha massacre, in addition to the inaccuracies in the number of victims, there is also a dangerous and false narrator, under which women and children were allegedly allowed to leave while men were killed.
This doesn't stay.
Women, including pregnant women, have also been killed in the Great Crush, which undermines any attempt to present this crime as a <x0-second action”
In the case of the massacre in Dubrava Prison, the number of victims does not match confirmed data, while presenting some of them as “armed persons” is completely untrue. Albanian prisoners have been civilians, vulnerable and under full control of Serbian forces.
These are, not simple technical errors, but distortions that are at risk of relating crimes and strengthening false Narratia.
As Minister of the Ministry of Labour, Family and Values of the Liberation War, I call for:
The immediate attraction of materials containing inaccuracies;
A full institutional documentation of the contents of public war crimes exhibitions.
At the same time, I invite the responsible institutions, including the State Prosecutor and mechanisms for investigating war crimes, to consider the issue.
The truth about crimes committed in Kosovo cannot and should not be distorted.
It is the foundation of justice and obligation to victims, their families, and our history.












