The day before in the "Trotuar" column, in "E Diell", there was a discussion about sexual harassment, where some of the guests decided to tell their personal stories.
The former resident of the third edition of "Big Brother VIP", Dea Vieri, said that the forms of sexual harassment are endless.
"I think all girls have felt sexually harassed at least once, either by a guy on the street, or by someone who opens the car and says 'I ate this, I ate that', or when you have a colleague and he comes and hugs you even tighter than you. I think that the forms of sexual harassment are endless," said Dea first.
Afterwards, Vieri shared her personal story with the panel and the audience. She said that when she was 17 years old, she received her first sexual harassment.
Dea says that she went to a business meeting and the bar owner bluntly asked her for 'sex'. She added that she did not report the case in question and did not even tell her mother not to disturb her.
"I personally remember my first sexual harassment when I was 17 and a half years old. I was looking for a job as a waitress in one of the bars in my neighborhood there. I met the gentleman who was the owner. He left me a work schedule, he could be somewhere between 32-35 years old, he had a daughter-in-law and children that he told me.
It is one of the most traumatizing stories of my life because he told me bluntly: "Look, let's talk bluntly because I have no time to waste. I want quick sex."
I was 17 and naturally shocked. I had never had such confrontations. I shunned myself, and I don't know where I found the courage and started to behave. "You are a married man, you have children, how are you not ashamed?"
He was very revolted, he did not want to know that I was also a minor. I never filed a complaint and to be honest, I didn't even tell my mother about this story because I didn't want to worry her.
Albanian girls are being raped and they are hardly going to report them. Albanian girls are being killed and you have the comments 'she did something that killed her'.
If I go and report it, they start saying 'look at how she dresses, how she goes out, normal, what does this expect'. It's a bit difficult and it takes a lot of courage to go and denounce how powerful our state is to protect us" , concluded Dea.