For 66 days, the Parliament has held only four sessions.

Four sessions have been held so far, although the new Assembly has been scheduled for 66 days. Opposition representatives are blaming Kosovo Parliament Speaker Kadri Veselin for this, as he has sided with the Assembly and is being run by election campaigns for the second round of elections, which he wants [...]
Four sessions have been held so far, although the new Assembly has been scheduled for 66 days. Representatives of the opposition are blaming Kosovo Assembly Speaker Kadri Veselin for this, as he has sided with the Assembly and is being run by election campaigns for the second round of elections, which will be held on November 19th4 sessions remain the number of sessions held by the Assembly of Kosovo since its 66 days.
Despite the fact that internationals have criticised this thing, local elections to be held next week have again prevented holding the Assembly sessions, which are expected to continue working only after these elections.
Parliament deputies -- both those in position and the country's opposition -- consider this <x0mos work” of the Parliament is being done because the incumbent parties are trying to hide real political forces in the Assembly.
The other reason the Assembly is not meeting -- according to them -- is the chairman of the Parliament, who, as they estimate, is being campaigned and elected, thus forgetting his affairs as speaker of the Parliament. While the country's analysts say the failure to observe the Parliament's plenary sessions is causing the country delays, which are undermining laws they are waiting for to proceed to the Assembly.
Halil Matoshi, the government's spokesman, says the government is working with its dynamics and it is normal for the Government to determine its action in the interest of citizens. The government works with its dynamics and the bills proceed according to this defined dynamic and governing programme.
It is natural that the Government will determine its reform and program action and the interest of the country and its citizens.
Pantina: The ruling coalition is trying to hide the real political forces in the Albanian Parliament of Pantina, MP from the movement “Vestevendosje”, in a proposal for “Zrin” says this problem of the Parliament's non-employment is the same as that during the Kosovo legislature, which is happening because the country's position parties are trying to hide the real political forces in the Parliament.
The “is repeating the same problem as in the past legislature, when the Assembly met very rarely and then sessions were preoccupied with the points of the agenda, once at 20 or 30 points and that I think it was done for two reasons: first, to avoid as much of the time the statements where the MPs are calling for an account by the Government and responsibility for the non-price and second jobs are done to hide the real political forces that are in the Kudux1>, Pantina said.












