Adžić: Legalizing revanchism, stalking and spying will return like a boomerang to the outgoing majority

"The new law allows more space for party indoctrination of obedient people in so-called 'dark places' without public announcement and without any standard procedures that are followed when establishing an employment relationship," believes a GP URA official.

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Adžić, Photo: Boris Pejović
Adžić, Photo: Boris Pejović
Disclaimer: The translations are mostly done through AI translator and might not be 100% accurate.

The laws on internal affairs and the National Security Agency are not a tool for fighting crime, but for party-based discipline of the security sector and hiring suitable people. None of the new articles of the law imply a crackdown on criminal structures or their associates within institutions, because such articles already exist in the law, said Filip Adžić, an official of the Civic Movement URA.

He pointed out that the new legal solutions allow "the unfit and the party disobedient to be discredited and stopped from advancing, or in worse cases, lose their jobs, based on backroom stories."

"Also, the new law allows more space for party indoctrination of obedient people in so-called 'dark places' without public advertising and without any standard procedures that are followed when establishing an employment relationship," said Adžić.

"Everything for which the former director of the ANB was prosecuted, the current majority has legalized and confirmed that their thinking does not differ in the slightest from how the thirty-year regime perceived the ANB and its role in society," Adžić stated.

He added that he is certain that the proponents of "these anti-civilization laws" will be their biggest victims the day they lose power.

"I believed that on August 30th, they at least learned that no government is eternal and that revenge, stalking and spying are not a guarantee of preserving power," Adžić said.

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