
Analyst Neritan Sejamini has spoken about the large flow of clandestines who choose Albania as a transit route and the punishment of those who undertake to transport them towards the northern border against payment.
Sejami explains that this is a consequence of the criminal policy and the mentality of the regime, which punishes the vulnerable, but not the high officials.
Part of the conversation
Andi Tela: Every day you have police reports about the news of trafficking. It has to do with criminal policy, that these people should stay in prison and wait.
Neritan Sejamini: There are officials who are accused of abuses of millions of euros and are being investigated free of charge, while a taxi driver who received 100 euros to transport people is in prison. It is about the mentality of a regime. You also have the leader of the opposition on the balcony. While these officials are being investigated at large. We talk about big scandals, but the prosecution is not focused. If you are simple, you are investigated and punished. Violence is used against the small, against the defenseless.
Andi Tela: They solve everything by putting them in prison. Even when we had the great energy reform, all offenders were sent to prison. Here, if you accuse a high official, it is not important to punish him, but to recover the money.
Neritan Sejamini: You are a builder, you break the law and build without permission and the state comes to legalize it. You are a taxi driver, pick up a man who raised his hand there and you are sentenced to prison.
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