The President of the Assembly Aleksa Bečić, although he found the strength to emphasize that his opponents are those who despise all the symbols of sovereign and independent Montenegro, will never again court people who advocate a civil state, said the Democratic Party of Socialists (DPS).
Bečić said earlier today that he will strongly oppose anyone who, as he said, dares to challenge Montenegrin sovereignty and independence.
The President of the DPS Committee of the Capital City, Časlav Vešović, said that they are glad that Bečić finally found the strength to emphasize that his opponents are those who despise all the symbols of sovereign and independent Montenegro, respecting other people's symbols, humiliating the majority of Montenegrins and calling them the worst names. .
"The only problem is that, for the umpteenth time, he was among them last night," said Vešović.
As he said, they are glad that Bečić finally started talking about Montenegro as a state of all its citizens.
"Perhaps he is beginning to understand how problematic it is when his political and spiritual allies deny the most represented nation in the country, when they pretend that half of the citizens do not exist," said Vešović.
The only problem, he adds, is that it is Bečić who gives legitimacy to all of this.
Vešović said that they were glad that Bečić started talking about a European Montenegro, where there is no illegal monitoring and eavesdropping of journalists, where parties do not use inadmissible terms like "imbecile" in their speeches, where there is no calculating relationship in relation to topics such as the genocide in Srebrenica or documents against the ban on fascist symbols.
"The only problem is that he forgot that it is his party that is doing all this," said Vešović.
He said that it is in vain and that Bečić will never again court people who advocate a civil Montenegro, "and they abhor your constant flirtation with the right, as you did last night."
"It's humiliating the citizens and their intelligence and the fact that you even thought that the next morning you would be able to talk to them about the state of all citizens, European values and the defense of independence," concluded Vešović.
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