Donnerstag, 10. Juni 2010

Der US Botschafter Chr. Dell, ist der Schutzherr für die Korruptions Geschäfte im Kosovo

Der US Botschafter im Kosovo der erfahrene Diplomat Christopher Dell, unterstützt die Regierung Thaci gegen die Korruption und OK! Das ist dummes Geschwätz, denn er ist der Schutzherr des Super Betrugs Geschäftes mit Bechtel und verdient wohl selber damit.

Kommentar:

A) was soll er denn auch sonst Sagen
B) Bechtel hat gerade ja wieder einen Auftrag erhalten und andere Super korrupte US Firmen und Gestalten wie Wesley Clark und die Georg Soros Banden werden folgen.
C) Dell ist in Wirklichkeit am Ende und labbert herum weil er keine Lösung hat!
D) Man hoffst dann so: "Inshallla, Marshalla" Prost Mahlzeit

Die Fakten zeigen, das Christopher Dell, der Schutzherr der Kosovo Verbrecher Clans ist und direkt Partner und Sprachrohr (wie auch der Britsche Botschafter) der korrupten Regierungs Spitze ist.

Dell ist ein Nonsens Botschafter, wenn er EULEX Aktionen sogar noch kritisiert, das sowas den Kosovo destabilisiert. Er arbeitet gegen das Kosovaren Volk und dürfte wie Andere direkt an der Bechtel Story mitverdienen.

Die Fakten zeigen, das Christopher Dell, der Schutzherr der Kosovo Verbrecher Clans ist und direkt Partner und Sprachrohr (wie auch der Britsche Botschafter) der korrupten Regierungs Spitze ist.

Dell ist ein Nonsens Botschafter, wenn er EULEX Aktionen sogar noch kritisiert, das sowas den Kosovo destabilisiert. Er arbeitet gegen das Kosovaren Volk und dürfte wie Andere direkt an der Bechtel Story mitverdienen.

Mixed Messages Undermine War on Kosovo Corruption
Pristina | 10 June 2010 | By Avni Zogiani

Fears are growing that powerful international actors in Kosovo do not fully support to the EU rule-of-law mission’s bid to tackle corruption in high places.

At one point, May appeared likely to be a milestone month for the rule of law in Kosovo. Finally it seemed that long-rumoured suspicions of corruption in the highest levels of government would be tackled by the EU’s rule-of-law mission, EULEX.

In a spectacular action, EULEX police raided the premises of the Ministry of Transport and Communications, Fatmir Limaj, acting on suspicions that top Kosovo government officials had siphoned off millions of euros.

EULEX’s popularity revived sharply following a protracted period of disappointment felt with the mission because of its failure to extend control over the northern part of Kosovo that Serbia effectively controls - and because of EULEX’s unpopular prosecution of a case against the leader of the nationalist “Self-determination” movement, Albin Kurti.

Most experts rank official corruption as one of the principal obstacles to the rule of law in Kosovo - and until May many people perceived EULEX as yet another international failed mission that was fast going the way of the discredited UN mission, UNMIK.

For almost ten years the UN mission’s police and judiciary did not process a single significant case of corruption and organized crime in Kosovo. After a decade of yearning for tougher action against corrupt politicians, therefore, Kosovars felt enthusiastic about the EULEX raids and support for the mission rose.

The Prime Minister, Hashim Thaci, immediately qualified the police actions as an attempt to humiliate Kosovo’s own institutions. That statement caught the international community in Kosovo by surprise, as they had become used to getting a smooth ride with Thaci.

But, despite the aggressive reaction of the Prime Minister, EULEX and the international community appeared determined to pursue their actions. This bolstered enthusiasm among Kosovo citizens for EULEX to such a degree that one night someone even put up plate in a Prishtina street, naming it after a EULEX prosecutor.

Since the end of May, however, these high hopes have fallen back. In a ceremonial signing of a billion-dollar contract for a highway to be built by the American company, Bechtel, the main target of the EULEX raid, Transport Minister Limaj, was shown on national television, side by side with the key international actor in Kosovo, the US ambassador, Christopher Dell.

A few weeks after the contract was signed, the US ambassador made it clear that he did not favour any significant arrests in a lecture given at Kosovo American University.

During his talk, he said that Kosovo needed to diminish the government’s access to the economy, meaning that public companies should be handed over to the private sector.

Less than a week later Dell wrote an article, which all Kosovo newspapers published, in which “in the name of American people” he congratulated the government on the concession for the airport.

This was his response to critics of the controversial contract signed by the Transport Ministry, which practically handed over Prishtina International Airport to an international consortium for free.
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http://www.balkaninsight.com/en/main/comment/28682/

Interessant in diesem Zusammenhang ist auch, dass die internationale Entwicklungshilfe zwischen 2004 und 2008 lediglich 2 Milliarden ausmachte, während die albanischen Emigranten insgesamt 2,4 Milliarden Euro nach Kosova überwiesen.
Kosovo aktuell  

Kommentar: Wo sind nur die 2 Milliarden unter Joachim Rückers geblieben? Die Geschäfte des US Botschafters Dell, Methoden erinnern an Rezzo Schlauch in Albanien. Es wird Zeit das die SEC in den USA, ein Verfahren gegen Bechtel eröffnet.

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