Analyst Edvin Kulluri compared Rama's speech today to the SP parliamentary group to that of dictator Enver Hoxha in 1961 at the meeting of 81 parties in Moscow.
Kulluri said that Rama indirectly said that he was not asking about the US and the EU, but about investors, adding that in many investments in the country, Russian businessmen are behind them.
"Albanian laws on national security state that unfriendly foreign investments are a priority for security agencies. Rama's crossroads is whether to go East or West," said Kulluri.
Edwin Kulluri: No one speaks in the SP group. Today the SP has been reduced to a wasteland. What is happening in the opposition is much more honest than a gang of Kim Young Un. In a democratic country, you don't say "shut up" to deputies elected by the people. But they are not elected by the people, but by them.
Today's Albania has no connection to the US and the EU, as far as the political model is concerned.
Rama has spoken today exactly like Enver Hoxha at the meeting of 81 parties in Moscow in 1961. I am not even talking about the US or the EU, but I am asking about investors who are mixed Russian, like the ones at the Vlora airport who are Russian, like the ones in Roskovec who are Russian investors. The Albanian laws on national security state that unfriendly foreign investments are a priority for the security organs. Rama's crossroads is whether to go East or West.
