As ridiculous as this theater may seem, the precedent it set is still more dangerous than some others before it.
Black comedy became this work. Another record-breaking precedent was set these two days in official Tirana. In the Tirana of politics, the media and that of public figures who have long since sprouted like weeds in every commissioned debate arena.
A right-wing politician was sentenced to prison. Ervin Salianji was sentenced to one year in prison and yesterday, under the flood of comments and calls from his own people and not only, as if he was walking with his own feet towards the firing squad, Salianji surrendered to prison.
For those who do not remember, the accusation against him is that he published a wiretapping that implicated the brother of the former interior minister Xhafaj, Agroni, that he was not only hiding from a previous conviction in Italy, but also continued the traffic under the protection of the government.
It was widely called the 'Babale' file, and when Rama and Xhafaj failed to prove in European laboratories that the voice in the interception was a lie, they invented a repentant witness, some policemen who were later promoted and the case ended like this: Salianji with his legs that was shaking and the lamentation of Grida Dume from behind, he went and locked himself in the cell.
How and when this judgment was conducted is worth discussing in another analysis, but what remains of this story are two sides of the same coin: the hypocrisy with which Salianji's case was handled and the standard it set.
The tears and tears and the tendency to make him a hero went beyond the usual measure to gut-wrenching levels. It had happened that a convicted politician cried to the studios with appeals for his innocence, but for broadcast presenters, journalists and politicians of both sides to cry, this had not been seen.
From the bedroom, Sali Berisha called out with the pain of a parent having their child taken away. Salianji was declared a hero of democracy, an example, the future prime minister, a lifelong sacrifice of politics.
When you came, you went down to the palace, to tell you: hold on, Berisha, because the prison is for men.
As ridiculous as this theater may seem, the precedent it set is still more dangerous than some others before it.
Because Edi Rama has several ministers and high officials in line who have embezzled billions, for which they should rot in prison, but the new justice rubs their backs by playing prosecutors.
Salianji, a deputy, became a scheme of machination and went to prison. For slander. He eventually burned out as a political and public figure. The policemen who worked hard to reach this day have been promoted and are pursuing successful careers. And if Salianji ate a year in prison, what should others expect, with less immunity than him?
What should those journalists say who publish scandals every day, 4-especially proven ones that Edi Rama shouts are defamation? What can a common man do if, by chance, the machine of power overtakes him?
The concern was valid yesterday and the day before, but today has marked a dangerous precedent. Being disturbed by the black comedy of these days, with tears and tears from all sides, makes you want to vomit.
We are not going deeper to comment on what is being rumored up and down, that this was also an agreement between the government and the opposition, Rama and Berisha, so that the latter will come out of the trouble with the justice system with as little damage as possible. If so, it would not be less scandalous, even though it is not the first time it has happened.
Anywhere you turn it, this Salianji thing stinks. That with the calls for "sublime sacrifice for democracy" only turned it into a dirty and disgusting swamp./ Pamphlet
Lini një Përgjigje