Competent authorities have an obligation to determine who and for what purpose misused and altered the transcripts from the Sky application, i.e. the documentation from the prosecutor's files, said Andrija Nikolić, a member of the presidency of the Democratic Party of Socialists (DPS).
He said that the authorities have an obligation to do this after, as he stated, evidence of falsification of transcripts from Sky communication appeared.
Nikolić assessed that in this way they are trying to create an affair for political purposes.
He stated that the clear political intention of fabricating the "Sky Affair" is to affix the label of a man above the law to the former President of Montenegro, Milo Đukanović, for the umpteenth time.
"In order to eliminate DPS from future political processes, especially in the context of negotiations on a future government in which, in all likelihood, there will be no place for URA", added Nikolić.
As he said, it is clear that we are witnessing a desperate attempt by outgoing Prime Minister Dritan Abazović to be in the next government at any cost.
"The path that Abazović traveled in just a few days, from the launch of the affair, the drawing up of the indictment, the verdict in public and the pompous organization of the National Security Council, until yesterday's call to the prosecutor's office to subsequently determine the credibility of the falsified transcripts, is the best confirmation that he was caught in a short time in deception," said Nikolić.
According to him, by threatening that "if the Special State Prosecutor's Office does nothing, the evidence will remain safe", the outgoing Prime Minister is actually saying that he sees himself as the owner of truth and justice.
Nikolić said that Abazović tried to replace the institution of the state with his own strong ego from his first day as prime minister.
"The authoritarian tendencies he displayed towards political dissidents, the media and the non-governmental sector completely destroyed the imposed image of him as a pro-European politician who is tolerant and respects differences," Nikolić said.
As he stated, even the attempt to impose Abazović as an endangered fighter against crime did not pass, because he would deserve more than four parliamentary mandates.
"Instead, he acquired the image of a person associated with criminals. He is even so established in certain criminal circles that he is affectionately called "brother Abaz". That's why the outgoing prime minister is nervous. He fell into the living political mire. Up to the head," Nikolić concluded.
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