Sali Berisha’s long-announced protests will be held tomorrow, and according to media, they are expected to be massive. The resignation of current Prime Minister Edi Rama will be demanded at the protests. The catastrophic earthquake in Turkiye and Syria is a topic of interest both in the media and in the Albanian society, while a student from Albania is donating her scholarship to those affected by the earthquake in Turkiye. Below are the topics selected by the Editorial Office of CIVIL Media from Albanian media.
TOP CHANNEL: Tomorrow’s protest under Berisha’s leadership will be massive
“On Saturday, Sali Berisha has convened the fourth national protest since the day he took over the leadership of the blue headquarters. At this protest, the Democrats are directly articulating Edi Rama’s resignation, unlike previous protests where it was said that the departure of the Prime Minister for the Democrats comes only through voting.
Journalist Juxhin Mustafaraj shared several details about the protests that the Democratic party will hold on Saturday.
He revealed that the protest is expected to be massive, as Sali Berisha and his leaders have held meetings during these days.
Mustafaraj stressed that Berisha, through the protests, will show that his demand for the change of Rama as Prime Minister is serious”, reports Albanian media outlet TOP CHANNEL.
GAZETA EXPRESS: Student from Albania donates money from scholarship to those affected by the earthquake in Turkiye
Ambre Ceka from Tirana, who studies medicine at the University of Health Sciences in Ankara, donated her money from the scholarship that she receives from the Turkish state.
“I sent the money from my scholarship to my friends who have been affected by the earthquake. We as classmates have made a small contribution. I sent them to the region of Hatay in Turkey”, said Ceka, reports Gazeta Express.
DW –Borrell invites Kurti and Vucic for a meeting in Brussels soon
“The High Representative for Foreign Policy of the European Union, Josep Borrell, has invited to Brussels also the leaders of Kosovo and Serbia, Prime Minister Albin Kurti and President Aleksandar Vucic. The goal: promoting the progress of the Kosovo-Serbia dialogue. Immediately after Borrell’s invitation, Kurti and Vucic shared remarks from a distance and thus made the close meeting more difficult”, reports Deutsche Welle in Albanian.
ZERI -Marty: The goal of those who threatened me was not to kill me, but to shift the blame to the Albanians
Former Council of Europe Rapporteur Dick Marty, who has been under special protection for two years due to the death threats he had been receiving, says that he is disappointed with the Swiss authorities.
“As for the police, they have taken measures to protect me, but I’m disappointed and don’t understand the investigation methods of the Swiss authorities in my case, I have been an investigator for a long time and I don’t want to share lessons, but it seems to me that the methods used in my case are not common”, stressed Marty.
Then there were threats, and Marty says that the goal of those who threatened him was not to kill him, “but to shift the responsibility onto the Albanians from Kosovo”, reports Kosovo daily Zeri.
BOTA SOT: Liberalism of permanent minorities
“Our societies are more diverse than ever, and we will never reach consensus on how to live life and what values to follow. But this pluralism of values – so characteristic for liberal theories – isn’t resulting in a moral vacuum for Shklar. As diverse we are in our concept of the good, we are as much united in our fear and revulsion of physical and psychological cruelty”, an excerpt of the analysis “Liberalism of permanent minorities”, by Ali Hertica, published in BOTA SOT.
D.Tahiri
Translation: N. Cvetkovska