UP missing trial, 4 hectares of land belong to Serbian Orthodox Church

The second-instance court has entitled the Orthodox Church to the claim of land it owns in Pristina University campus “As a result of the lack of representatives of the University of Pristina on trial for ownership of land in the UPP campus, this land has remained owned [...]
The second-instance court has entitled the Orthodox Church to the claim of land it owns in Pristina University campus “
As a result of the lack of representatives of the University of Pristina on trial for land ownership in the UPI campus, this land has remained owned by the Orthodox Church.
The land about 4 hectares in which the Serbian Orthodox Church is found at Pristina University's Kampusi will meet the Orthodox Church, Sveti Nikolay.
The Court of Appeals in Pristina has taken the decision to dismiss the University of Pristina complaint, éhasan Pristina, as unfunctioned to the Pristina Constitutional Court's decision to consider withdrawing the UP's suit of ownership of land where the unfunctioned church is located.
In the decision of the Court of Appeals on September 27, this year, which he has secured KALLXO.com reportedly the Constitutional Court's decision in 2015 was based because the prosecution side, respectively. The UP was not presented at the main session regarding this dispute.
According to the Court, reasoning UP's for failure to do so in 2015 was the fact that there were numerous protests before the church mentioned above.
<x0.2015 before the building that the reactor has staged protests by several dozen workers, this court saw as groundless because it was not an obstacle for them not to participate in the session. Therefore, in the concrete situation of all the debitors' complaints, the Court of Appeals considers them unfounded and unstable because there is no basis for concrete evidence”, the ruling says.
After that decision, the University of Pristina has the right to launch procedures from the start and exercise new indictments on the same issue.
The unfunctioned church, which was built at the time of Slobodan Milosevic's regime in the 1990s, became a trigger for some protests and frustrations, mainly from students at Pristina University.












