Religöse Streitigkeiten in TUZI, zwischen den Albanern in Montenegro
Viele radikale Kriminelle kamen aus dem Kosovo und den USA, und heizen seit Jahren die Stimmung zwischen den Albanern auch in Tuzi an.
Es geht ebenso um ein Referendum in Tuzi, ob man weiter zu Podgorica gehören will, oder eine eigen Stadt Verwaltung haben will.
Auf jeden Fall, bringen die überwiegend Albanische Bevölkerung auch dort Nichts zustande, nur beim illegalen Bauen auch für die Geldwäsche der Kosovo Mafia ist man dort ebenso Spitze. Viel wurde dort gebaut, aber keine produktiven Arbeits Plätze geschaffen.
Interfaith disputes linked to Montenegrin politics, official says<
25/06/2013
The status of a Montenegrin municipality may be at the heart of recent incidents between Muslim and Catholic Albanians.
http://setimes.com/cocoon/setimes/xhtml/en_GB/features/setimes/features/2013/06/25/feature-02
By Katica Djurovic for Southeast European Times in Podgorica -- 25/06/13
Ten kilometres from Podgorica is Tuzi, a small town mostly inhabited
by ethnic Albanians, and home to a mix of Roman Catholics and Muslims.
Tuzi and the Malesija region of southeastern Montenegro have long
enjoyed a reputation for religious tolerance. The town experienced urban
development in the 1990s, including renovations to the local mosque and
Catholic church. Most residents of the Malesija region are Albanians.
But recently the interfaith harmony has been disrupted by several
incidents that some said are linked to questions about Tuzi's political
future.
Among the disturbances was a massive dispute between Muslim and
Catholic high school students that resulted in injuries to three
students and 50 arrests. The brawl was followed days later by a
disagreement over a graveyard in a village near Tuzi. The Muslim
population claimed their Catholic neighbors were forbidden from burying
their deceased in the graveyard.
While church and mosque leaders debate the role of religion in these
disputes, a member of Montenegro's opposition said the incidents were
politically motivated, coming prior to a decision on whether Tuzi will
remain an urban municipality within Podgorica or become independent.
During the election campaign in 2012, the ruling Democratic Party of
Socialists (DPS) promised Tuzi citizens they would have an independent
municipality by 2014. However, there is still no sign of a referendum on
the issue.
Vaselj Sinistaj, an Albanian member of Montenegro's parliament, said DPS wants Tuzi to remain an urban municipality.
"This is a political issue. I am more than ever assured that the
ruling party wants to divide us. Tuzi wants its own municipality and
that wouldn't be good for the ruling party since most of the votes in
Podgorica for DPS come from this region," Sinistaj told
SETimes, echoing an opinion that has been expressed by others in Tuzi.
Many people
SETimes spoke with in Malesija agree that religion is being used as a political tool.
"This region was always a symbol of interfaith harmony and tolerance.
Not many places in Montenegro are like Tuzi, and we are trying to keep
that peace," Fadilj Ivezaj, a resident of Tuzi, told
SETimes.
Mirko Blagojevic, sociologist and visiting professor at the
University of Sociology in Niksic, said this issue should be taken
seriously.
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