Linda Rama: Between Family, Work and Albania’s Future The civil society published an alternative draft-law for investigating
the image of the public administration figures and those elected by the
people.
One of the Investigation Commission members, the former Prime Minister Aleksander Meksi, declared that now is time for transparency, although he was skeptical that the law would pass in Parliament.
According to Meksi, this draft law could be amended by the lawmakers, since they would not like it, insinuating that he knew some of them who had been part of the communist informative network, collaborators and directors of the State Security Service or lawmakers in the dictatorship past.
“It will be difficult for this law to pass in Parliament. The people have the right to know what has happened. We have created an institution with handpicked scientists, same as in the communist time”, Meksi declared.
According to the former Prime Minister, even those who have been forced to sign or that have not sentenced anyone, must submit to the lustration law, because they are people that can be easily blackmailed.
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