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Denisa Kele recounts meeting with Edi Rama: It was a distant energy, it didn't have the warmth I expected

Denisa Kele recounts meeting with Edi Rama: It was a distant energy, it

Denisa Kele, the renowned IT expert, spoke for the first time in detail about her meeting with Prime Minister Edi Rama on Alfred Lela's 'Pasvon' podcast, where she was invited to discuss technology and artificial intelligence.

Kele also focused on the reactions she received after an interview she gave with Rama a few years ago, where some commentators had identified her as a character close to the Socialist Party.

Kela said that that conversation took place at a time when her focus was on technology and the use of artificial intelligence, while today her critical stances are related to the way this technology has been applied in areas such as public procurement.

"I have not held the seal of a party and apart from not holding the seal, I have definitely been in the opposition. I have always expressed my opinion openly, on everything related to technology and on every matter that I have thought was done unfairly to citizens," said Kele.

But what he remembered most from that interview was the Prime Minister's behavior during the meeting.

"I was expecting maybe something a little warmer, or a little more comfortable, because after all, you're in an interview with the prime minister of the country. It's the part where the prime minister does that thing for you to flow, for you to feel a little comfortable," she said.

According to Kele, this energy was not what he had expected.

"Rama had a kind of... he didn't have this intention, or maybe that interview was unimportant to him, but it didn't have the energy that I was really expecting. It was a distant energy," she said.

She added that even after the interview ended, there was no further approach or communication.

"The interview ended, the prime minister simply got up and left. It was a very cold greeting, goodbye and let's go. It was the same thing, the end, the opening, and the middle," the expert confessed.

Speaking about Rama's way of communicating in interviews with other women, Kele said that she does not prefer comments related to physical appearance in a professional report.

"I usually don't like compliments based on physical or feminine characteristics. When I'm invited for professional things, I don't like these kinds of compliments," she said.

 

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