Does it make sense to live in this country anymore, where the victim votes for the murderer?
What misery has Albania descended into, when the most voted candidate of the Socialist Party in the May 11 elections is Agron Malaj? When the party that shed blood on the boulevard, today applauds the one who shot at its protesters?
On January 21, 2011, Agron Malaj was an employee of the Republic Guard, acting under the orders of Sali Berisha. He was said to be defending the institutions, but in fact he and others like him shot at the bodies of citizens protesting against corruption, against poverty, against arrogant power.
Today, 14 years later, the same man is not only free, but also honored. Not only honored, but also voted for. Not only voted for, but the most voted for by the socialists themselves.
This is the Albania that Edi Rama built.
An Albania where there is neither justice, nor shame, nor memory.
An Albania that grants power to crime, that gives wealth to former police officers of violence, that rewards with mandates those who should have been brought to justice.
Today, Agron Malaj is the richest man in Burrel, a representative of a new political class that has emerged from the roots of crime, from the chains of corruption, and from the silence of the state.
He is the embodiment of the Renaissance model, a model where the state is maintained by people of means and means, where power is maintained through phalanxes, and where crime has made peace with politics to share the spoils and control of territory together.
If Edi Rama wants to convince us that this is the socialism of the future, then it would be better if there was no future at all. Because when the murderer becomes the representative of the victim, when the hand that shoots you also takes your vote, we are no longer in a free society, we are in a silent regime, where justice is buried and evil has become a flag./ Pamphlet
Lini një Përgjigje