There won't be any Shari'a in Kosovo since the Albos are probably the worst Muslims around. They had no time for the Wahhabis who showed up to help them.
Code of Lek is more like it, Albanians make a "bad" anything.
In Kosovo, Albert Haziri-Zejdi, from Gnjilan, a 29-year-old graduate from a Jordanian university, is considered one of the leaders of the province's Wahhabis. They are early in their development and do not yet have a well-organized structure.
"In the past this group did not exist in Kosovo," Resul Rexhepi from the Islamic Community told local media, "they appeared in the past 20 years, but for the major part after the [199899] war in Kosovo."
Rexhepi said that Wahhabism came to Kosovo via the regular route: through graduates from foreign universities and Islamic charities. He doesn't consider them a threat to the established Islamic Community and thinks they would be stopped if they tried to set up parallel structures.
Zejdi, on the other hand, hopes for precisely that. "For the time being we are independent but we hope to be able to give life to an organization [of our own]," he said, according to local media.
"Due to the legal and religious doctrine it adheres to we do not have any relations with the Islamic Community in Kosovo," he added.
Kosovo's leading daily, Koha Ditore, wrote in November, "The phenomenon of 'Wahhabism' has assumed big and alarming proportions in all Albanian lands and in the Albanian diaspora in the West." The paper condemned recent acts of vandalism and desecration of graves aimed to eliminate inscriptions of names and photographic images, which is counter to Wahhabi religious doctrine.