Berisha: I do not work with Nano
The international community has promised an early solution
Mano Jashte llojë
Roads, now blocked by snow
By GËZIM LEVONJA
The prime ministerial rally against the Democratic Party turns peaceful; there was not the slightest doubt that the composition of the new broad-based government would be announced. It would, inevitably, also bring the name of the new prime minister. On the other hand, and especially as stated by Prime Minister Berisha, there was no reason to regard it even as a blind desire to devour the defeated side, particularly in circumstances in which he was fighting hard against the former state leader Milo-Berisha would steer the government through softened and shattered roads. On the contrary, and despite the collapse for the public of the Serbian president of Montenegro, the noise of the inevitable populist demonstration in the districts, it was emerging alongside the others in a formula for a new opening of the state. On the other hand, this would not be surprising if one remembered that it was precisely Berisha and his government who tried to remain in alliance with the Serbian nationalists in Macedonia. In such a case, Prime Minister Nano was following not only his own scenario to awaken the torn-up, but also, according to a clear memory, that sketch which had been put forward for a provisional prime minister until the appointment of the broad-based government. If this development were possible, then the clearer lights of the years-end before the great misery would be possible. If one understands clearly, even for a minute, how the governing of a country could be placed in the hands of such a man, against every norm of democracy, one should be horrified. Moreover, when there is no one while the author, together with his assistants and with the noisy ministry, were marching all night across the field with automatic weapons, but never forgetting that the PS and its government are the blood of the state. After all this, it seems that Prime Minister Nano had no other alternative but to withdraw. Therefore it seems unbearable to know that, if Nano took his departure calmly, he needed a minimum amount of time, at least after his return from Gjirokastra, and not in the middle of an unprepared crowd and certainly not in a parliament plunged into a state of emergency. In such a situation, from the very beginning of the night and after the end of the PP presidium, he was to become a victim of his own power. Thus, for one night, the attack would remain unfinished and not end with his own dead and the cries of a pack of theirs. That is what it means to betray oneself and others, and likewise a country. Moreover, he needed to secure another legitimacy for his own power through a temporary arrangement made up of his own party, other allies, the youth group shattered before a wretched mass, and the voice of the internationals.
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The roads of northern Albania yesterday blocked by snow