
From the tent in front of the Prime Minister's Office, where he has been for more than two weeks, Adriatik Lapaj commented on the opposition protest yesterday. According to him, Edi Rama will not leave with Molotov cocktails and caps, but with civic resistance and organized pressure against the theft that has gripped the state.
On A2CNN, Lapaj recalled that 16 days ago he had gone out alone with a chair in front of the Prime Minister's Office, at a time when the country was "experiencing one of the most barbaric thefts in its history," but no one was protesting. Today, according to him, the movement has turned into a broad civic reaction, with a continuous increase in participants and protests that are growing day by day.
" The time has come for everyone to reach out and unite in a great front against the common evil. We may not like each other, but we must accept that this is a time for unity, not for quarrels among the opposition ," he said.
Lapaj warned that the next protest will be even more massive, while emphasizing that this is not the moment for party interests, but for a common mission: liberating the country from capture and corruption.
" Governments don't leave with 2-hour Molotov cocktails. They leave with long-term resistance, with real pressure and with a people who take their own salvation seriously. There is no more time to divide along political lines ," said Lapaj.
The protest that began with a chair, as a personal symbolic act, is transforming day by day into a national call for civic unity, where Lapaj seeks to include disappointed socialists, people without parties, and all those who no longer want to live in a state gripped by clientelism and corruption.
Lini një Përgjigje