
Prime Minister Edi Rama's speech at the farewell ceremony for the historic leader of the Socialists, Fatos Nano, was full of jokes and stinging remarks, directed at those he considered to be the people who threw stones and put sticks under the wheels of the late former Prime Minister.
Rama compared his communication with Nano, as the first shift driver, with that of the second shift for the same car.
"After the burial of the Labor Party, Nano was key in crossing the desert of the socialists and their union with the democratic world. I remembered his joy when he announced the acceptance of the SP into the Socialist International. Today is like graduation day," he told me, laughing.
At the head of the government, he had to lead the people from the pyramid exit. After the leveling mess of '97, facing a vengeful opposition to armed attacks on institutions and on him, personally and physically. However, this is not the day to write the history of Fatos Nano, but the day to say goodbye to him.
Dear Fatos, I will miss the rare friendly dinners, our communication like that of the first shift driver with the second shift for the same car, when we happened to share a strategic dilemma, your advice helped me dot the "I".
"When I think about what Soviet 4-wheeler you received in the first shift and what I received in the second, it comes naturally to me not to say goodbye to you, but simply never die, Fatos Nano," said Rama.
Lini një Përgjigje