"They don't get tired of stealing from us, how can we get tired of 22 days?"/ Journalist Osman Stafa gives a strong speech before the Prime Minister's Office: We have ruined their sleep and shopping!

2026-06-21 21:06:53 / AKTUALITET ALFA PRESS

"They don't get tired of stealing from us, how can we get tired of 22

News24 journalist Osman Stafa briefly left his role as a reporter and climbed the protest podium in front of the Prime Minister's Office, where he delivered a very strong and emotional speech. Stafa described the civic resistance as the most beautiful image of the country and as an "algorithm" that has disrupted the peace and bargaining of those who have held the fate of Albanians in their hands for these 35 years.

He called on citizens not to give up, drawing a comparison with the willingness of officials to abuse power.

"This is the most beautiful Albania of my 33 years of life. This is the most beautiful nation in the world, this is the craziest algorithm of Albania in 35 years that has ruined the sleep, dreams, and shopping of all those who have had our lives and our future in their hands for these years. They don't get tired of stealing from us for so many years, how can we get tired of 22 days of protests?" said Stafa.

The journalist further denounced the alarming situation in the public health system with figures and concrete cases, drawing attention to the messages he receives every day from the white shirts about the lack of vital treatments for cancer patients and those with neurological problems. He contrasted this reality with the luxurious life that those in power lead.

"Nurses still write to me that there is a shortage of medical equipment, medicines for those suffering from cancer. In Neurology, there are no treatments to save the lives of those who have problems. There are no medicines, no equipment! These people spend money on luxury, they pay for the most expensive wines, they pay 10 thousand euros a month to wash cars!" he declared.

At the end of his speech, Stafa addressed the younger generation, emphasizing that the fate of this civic movement depends entirely on their massive engagement on the boulevard.

"Youth is the engine of this protest and if it wants to go all the way, it must be in the square every day and more!" the journalist concluded.

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