
Well-groomed, with makeup and a smile, Belinda Balluku made a statement about the action to free up public spaces, saying that now it is the turn of the IKMT's fadroma to take action.
As Prime Minister Rama had warned, yesterday was the deadline for voluntary evacuation from areas near national highways.
Balluku announced that from now on, IKMT, with the support of the Police, will take concrete measures to respect legal distances.
In language that allows no misunderstandings, she emphasized that this is not about an action against tents, but about a "deep reform" that includes everything: tents, occupied palace courtyards, and illegally built TECs, which, according to her, exist despite "ridiculous" denials and their protection by "segments paid to attack the public good."
The calm of Balluk is actually a storm for hundreds of thousands of citizens whose businesses or homes will be destroyed. And this is not only for the violation of the law they have committed, but also for the sleep of the state leaders, who instead of preventing them before they start, left them free to invest their sweat.
It's easy for Balluku and her boss to remember when they want to issue orders to show the force of the law, but it would be more fair for them to enforce the law every day and not every year that they secure another mandate in power.