In short, NO. You shouldn't.
The Prime Minister may have reservations about the actions of SPAK or BKH, this is right and legitimate. But rhetoric of the type "brave men with patllake" is inappropriate and not serious. Above all, it is harmful.
Position speaks louder than words. When the Prime Minister opens his mouth, we don't expect to hear Fevziu or Shakohoxha. If there was haste, immaturity or a violation of protocol by the BKH, the only way is the institutional one. Official communication, formal internal reactions between institutions.
The state has no need for public sarcasm. It speaks little, speaks coldly, and speaks responsibly. Irony is the luxury of those who have no power.
So, even if Rama is right about the security rules, the protocol is neither announced nor defended with public ridicule. This does not regulate anything. On the contrary, it reduces the authority of Justice, that is, of the State. Consequently, also of the Prime Minister himself.
A protocol error is quickly fixed. Damage to the authority of the state, no. Let's say that the BKH was wrong in not handing over the "patllaket" inside the lobby of the Prime Minister's Office. The Prime Minister is even more wrong when he speaks in this language outside in public.
He said he wants them to be corrected. This language does not correct, it delegitimizes. This is also what Berisha's language against justice does. The direction changes, the "style" changes, but the function is the same. Rama uses irony, contempt, Berisha uses insults, blackmail. He distorts the names of institutions, judges, prosecutors.
The distortion of names is not a slip of the tongue, it is a technique. The aim is to strip the personal dignity of their investigators and consequently their credibility. This is an old populist method.
Of course, Rama speaks from the government, Berisha as the accused. But the public damage is the same. The "party's SKAP" and the "brave men with patllake" do the same thing. Both attack justice not in argument, but in authority.
This reform was designed to make investigations independent of politics. The message we have received recently is that the system should only work to the extent that future "senators" for life are not affected.
In a country with statesmen, neither the Prime Minister nor the former Prime Minister would allow themselves to speak in this language. It is not a sign of strength, it is a sign of fear. But also the slow murder of the rule of law.
If ever the latter has mattered to them./ Gazeta DITA