Who does the Republic belong to? (Koha Ditore)
Lumir Abdixhiku writes that the seventh anniversary of Kosovo’s independence must have been the grimmest day, adding however that this was expected under the current circumstances. He writes that two mandates of the seized state were enough, and that the third one brought the exhausted Kosovo into its knees. He claims that there is coldness between the population and the government. “I do not remember to have seen a more sterile relation,” he writes adding that this lack of energy has led to the differentiation between the citizen and the state. “The truth is Kosovars do not have problem of being differentiated by the state, because unfortunately, the state was never theirs, and when they managed to finally have one, it got captured. During the seven years of independence the least has been done for the state and the most for power.” He writes that it is not easy to see Kosovars in 2015 leaving, humiliated, with lost dignity, in their knees, begging in tears.
“The Republic is not the governing party that we should hold grudge to…it is our fatherland, which unfortunately currently has on its back all the weaknesses, misery, seizure, violation, humiliation by the greedy, unappreciative, servants and god knows who else. Therefore, we feel the least for the Republic nowadays; it is not ours any more. It belongs to everybody and no one, to political gamblers, who consider taking of primacy to be a ticket to win on lottery, and to some brainwashed, dirty servants.
If there is a mission of idealism, we should follow it today, in order to start regaining the Republic, to start doing what is normal by accepting the Republic as it is, until it is changed,” writes Abdixhiku.