Democratic Party MP Jorida Tabaku has reacted harshly to Prime Minister Edi Rama, after the latter published on Facebook the photo of Edviol Kulluri, one of the 13 initiators who signed the letter addressed to embassies with five demands for the government, accompanied by a list of criminal proceedings against him.
In a reaction titled "Brown Stains" on Facebook, Tabaku accuses Rama of launching a campaign of persecution against citizens protesting against the government, using, according to her, methods she compares to those of the former State Security.
According to the Democratic MP, the prime minister is collecting and publishing data on his political opponents to publicly expose them, while claiming that state institutions are being used for political purposes and to protect power.
Tabaku states that Rama has remained silent in the face of corruption scandals and cases where senior government officials have been investigated or arrested, while, according to her, he has chosen to attack citizens who are protesting.
The DP MP describes the protesters as citizens who demand dignity, justice and a functional state, adding that "digital red tape" and public lynching will not save the government, but show its fear in the face of opponents.
Tabaku's full post:
Dark Stains!
For days, the key man of an autocratic system, linked to dirty money and a captive economy, has launched a campaign of persecution against citizens who protest against him.
Following point by point the methods of the Security Service, the Prime Minister collects biographies of those he does not like and, with a huge magnifying glass, seeks to find stains in their lives and CVs.
This is not simply shameful personal behavior. It is the method of a captive state: institutions collect citizens' data, while the government uses them to protect the man-system. Data from the civil registry, administration and institutions are turned into political weapons. Then come the threats against relatives and the public exposure of the citizen as a shooting target on the Prime Minister's page.
This is the same man-system who pretends to know nothing about corruption in the country. When a former deputy prime minister was declared wanted, he knew nothing. When a former minister was arrested, he knew nothing. When a mayor was arrested, he still knew nothing.
For every scandal, he kept his mask on. The system had to hide, while the next individual was declared a victim.
Today, when the very head of the system is at risk, the mask has fallen. The Prime Minister is bringing back the scenarios of the Brown Spots: biography, persecution, public shaming and threats against anyone who dares to raise their voice.
Meanwhile, SPAK is investigating officials involved in the property trade. The government has approved property decisions in favor of incriminated persons, changed laws for certain interests and turned construction into one of the main channels for money laundering, poisoning the economy and devaluing honest work.
But the Prime Minister does not ask for their biographies. He does not publish their files. He does not turn them into targets.
The witch hunt is reserved for the protesters: for the brave citizens of these hot weeks, who demand dignity, justice and a state that works for the majority.
They are not the enemies of Albania. They are its civic heroes.
Digital leaflets, modern dazibaos, and public lynching will not save the system. They only show the fear of the man who built it and who now understands that Albanians are no longer afraid of him.
Lini një Përgjigje