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The former Macedonian Prime Minister, Nikola Gruevski, who escaped from his country and asked for asylum in Hungary so as not to be imprisoned, probably entered secretly in Albania, said today. A spokesman for the Albanian police at the French Agency.
"Gruevski must have illegally entered Albania," Police spokesman Ghedian Moulay told AFP, who said his arrival had not been reported by any border guards between the police and the police. FYROM and his country.
As he said, "the border between the two countries must be crossed, be it Prespa (southeast) or Debar (northeast), obviously not to attract attention" .
Last night, the Albanian police announced that he had left the country on November 11 by hiring a car at the Hungarian Embbady in Tirana.
Nikola Gruevski is currently in Hungary, where he has applied for political asylum, claiming that he is being prosecuted in his country and that he has been sentenced to a second sentence of two years' imprisonment. prison imposed on him for misuse of power.
The revelation by Albania of the departure of the former Prime Minister with a Hungarian diplomatic car puts Budapest at risk, as it suggests that the authorities of this country of the European Union have actively contributed to escape to Nicholas Gruevski.
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban has appeared in the past as an ally of Nikola Gruevski, prime minister of the FYROM from 2006 to 2016.
According to the Vijesti newspaper of FYROM, which allegedly quoted a source at the police headquarters, Nikola Gruevski was accompanied by two persons holding a Hungarian diplomatic pbadport at the border crossing between Albania and Montenegro.
Three hours later, he "abandoned the territory of Montenegro from the border area of Dobravsko at 22:16 local time and entered Serbia" by taking another car where two men carrying Hungarian diplomatic pbadports were also found, according to the newspaper .
When the Serbian police and the Hungarian Embbady in Belgrade were questioned on this journey, they did not comment.
The pbadport of Nicholas Gruevski has been seized by the Macedonian judicial authorities, but citizens of the Western Balkans can move from one country to another by presenting only the national identity cards.
Former leader of the VMRO-DPMNE party (right), Nikola Gruevski was found guilty of having received for his private use a merchant worth 600,000 euros, bought with public money.
Gruevski is being prosecuted for five other cases of corruption, abuse of power and wiretapping of members of the opposition and civil society.
Source? EAP-RES
Photo: Archives
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