The vice-chairman of the Democratic Party of Kosovo and number two on this party's list for the June 7 snap parliamentary elections, Uran Ismaili, has said that the divisive language of the acting Prime Minister, Albin Kurti, is directly affecting society and within families in Kosovo.
According to Ismail, political division does not remain only in public statements, but translates into tensions between people. He said that Kurti is producing negative emotions and teaching citizens to hate those who think differently, instead of directing society's energy against the country's real problems.
"He finds someone to hate. He teaches you to hate someone, but he's not teaching you to hate poverty. He's not teaching you to hate unemployment. He's not teaching you to hate social degradation," Ismaili said.
In his post, Ismaili wrote that Kosovo needs normality, stability and a government that deals with the lives of its citizens, not with creating new enemies. “Kosovo needs a prime minister who works and unites, for families who live more easily and for a government that deals with its citizens, not with imagined enemies,” he wrote.