The public prosecutor should act on a tip-off and immediately investigate all the actions that in some way literally disintegrated the state, security expert and analyst Milan Stefanoski said in an interview with Ljupcho Cvetanovski’s political show regarding the actions and work of the former Special Prosecutor’s Office (SPO) headed by Katica Janeva, who ended up behind bars due to racketeering.
“The SPO did their dirty work, there was a witch-hunt. They pressured people with false statements, staged trials and in general, that model that was compromised, what turned out to be with the racketeering affair, they literally tied it to the Public Prosecutor’s Office, because that’s what they needed there to be able to continue with the crime,” Stefanoski said.
The SPO had completely untied hands to decide on human destinies without any legal evidence, the Public Prosecutor’s Office (PPO) should act on a tip-off, claims Stefanoski.
“What is most irritating is literally, they had free hands and could decide on human destinies, without any legal evidence, without any legal element and now it is coming to the surface. We owe it to the country and to all the people who, maybe someone got sick, someone died etc., we owe it to the legal order of the international community and to all the families who suffered from this monstrous project called the SPO, linked to SDSM and the Public Prosecutor’s Office. The recklessness of that government has gone so far, to be a subcontractor of criminal structures that today is very difficult, but the dismantling of this entire process is to be welcomed and it is happening simultaneously. Now the criminal acts are being revealed and now it is time to pay the price and finally make the rule of law work, without a rule of law there is no strong state, without a strong state there is no economy. The public prosecutor should act on a tip-off and immediately clear up all the acts that in some way were literally to disintegrate the state to the extent that we entered a depression and the state did not function at that time, the people were in complete apathy,” noted Stefanoski.



