Majko “kisses” Nano too
The Kosovar singer Gili “kissed” Berisha with Majko, while last night the Majko-Nano meeting took place, with the Socialists’ leader’s number one rival, Ilir Meta, also present
The removal of the kiosks from the center of Tirana has begun
The top three figures of socialism laid the wreath [?] at the monument of the Albanian State in yesterday’s ceremony for the 80th anniversary of the army’s founding. “I love you Majko, dance with me” was the Gili-Majko spectacle, while today’s “Koha Jonë” also writes about the second kiss, having uncovered the chronicle [?] of the political elite’s battles. And while there was a “kiss” in the Nano-Majko relationship, it seems that this time the only ones who were absent were the leaders of the Socialist Party. Fatos Nano, who insulted the elected prime minister one month before being dismissed from office with the harsh words “Majko, dance with me,” had been dancing more than ever in the lobby of Hotel Tirana. But it seems that Majko may lose his composure, but not the seriousness of the leader, something that was at least visible yesterday. Nano, meanwhile, can’t even hold back his humor with the memory of the 25th anniversary of the founding of the Socialist Party, and the joke of the wild courage of Majko-Nano may take on dangerous proportions. Why? It is clear from the meeting held three hours after the end of yesterday’s ceremony. Almost all the areas of the Socialist Party headquarters and of the closed venue were talking about this meeting. To understand that it was an important meeting, it is enough to mention that only Spartak Braho was absent from the hall. Meta, regardless of whether yesterday’s popular anecdote in which a scene from the film “Beni ecën vetë” offered irony toward the head of government and part of the pro-Majko clan, laughed a lot. So did Pandeli Majko, one of the figures close to the dismissed prime minister, who was calmly drinking and not paying [?] to everything happening around him. At another table, around 22:00, the chairman of PBDNJ, Vasil Melo, appeared calm. He was seated at the table with the state police in the company of a female chief from police station no. 4. At that time, near the main entrance of Hotel Tirana, Bardhyl Mahmuti entered the main hall. Behind him, senior officials of the Democratic Party entered straight through the back door. Abdyl Baleta, who stood out more than everyone else, went out for a few minutes and spoke with Mhill Furtuna, the supreme leader of the Albanian Right Party, beside whom Ardian Klosi was standing. After him, a former head of SHIK from the Gazidede period also went out, who, with a certain importance, was leafing through several blank notebooks that he probably had to consult before an operation. Later, the three entered a table where the Minister of Economy and Trade, Ylli Bufi, dominated, accompanied by two bodyguards. Against the backdrop of the lights display of the New Year Tree, everywhere sparkling and decorated, a short boy, but with sharp eyes, was putting on a gala with the short music. And everyone’s attention was wonderfully drawn by three women, who after the prime minister left, later in an armored car, blocked the view in every direction. They were television presenters, singers and dancers who were often seen in “kisses” with Berisha, the lady Mjoko shko [?], and only one detail is important and indisputable: late last night, in the prime minister’s office, it was decided, not far from the table with his colleagues, to invite the chief of staff for a discussion and seek broader cooperation. It was called Majko’s second “kiss,” but it is not known whether this time too Gili was the one who played her role.