A trial for Berisha
The March events, Fino and Imami will also be questioned
Page 2
Post-trauma
BY ENTON ABILEKAJ
The predicament of the Albanian government seems unable to govern the country for a second time, even before it has finished its first term. Albania's enigma did not end with Berisha's departure; it has begun to appear to the timid public in another government. Perhaps the president is not so publicly experiencing some reason to govern without a government.
The article text is largely illegible in the image, but the visible portions suggest a commentary on the government's crisis, the March events, the role of mobilization, the police, the opposition, and the political consequences for Berisha. During the government's rule, a governing government and the language of crisis continue. Reliable sources indicate that the government's alarm has grown over how the worst kind of governing could be handled through police records that are not very desirable for the opposition. When the general mobilization was declared and the government raised the alarm, the police and the failures it produced also created instability in a country burdened by the unfair process of the day. Time did not play any role in publicly clarifying matters, and the government was also involved in the March events, which probably helped the government the most, and may help it again in expanding the precedent for a government that has long established peace through an inexplicable connection.
The March era could have been brought into government; did the Albanian state overthrow the government of revolution? Why can the government not govern the country without that which sent it into civil service? Has it begun the great thing that has the republican son from the sea for a government matter? Perhaps history would be linked to Skopje? Or the government with fish? The House will say that the blow to Albanian governance in March helped and escalated the governance into a search for completion, detached from the periphery of privatization, transformed society and ruined the economy.
In part for this reason, the government may hang a reward around the neck of the opposition president, but now in this direction. Berisha, as far as governance is concerned, will also have the chance to receive a hug. This case file being prepared for the March events also ties him to the president's political future. The next accused will not be the only one. On the list of suspects of the parliamentary commission on the March events there will also be 14 politicians and 10 generals with different positions and weight.