LDK: In 100 days of government, Kosovo isolated as never before

The Democratic League of Kosovo through a communique has commented on the government's 100-day work. According to the LDK for only 100 days, the government, formally led by Ramush Haradinaj, has seriously damaged political, economically and morally any aspect related to state governance. “After 100 days of chaotic governance, Kosovo today is the most [...]
The Democratic League of Kosovo through a communique has commented on the government's 100-day work.
According to the LDK for only 100 days, the government, formally led by Ramush Haradinaj, has seriously damaged political, economically and morally any aspect related to state governance.
“After 100 days of chaotic governance, Kosovo today is more isolated, poorer, with greater unemployment, without perspective, with extreme nepotism, with excessive budgets, with abuses of endors, with government threatening independent institutions, with people incriminating at all levels of governance”, said in the communique.
According to the LDK for 100 days, the Haradinaj government was distinguished by taking decisions outside the government's competencies, contrary to the Constitution and Law, creating dangerous constitutional and legal precedents for the country's future. Examples of these decisions are:
Absolution of debts contrary to government competencies and damage to the Kosovo Republic budget of about 60m euros (just for two months);
) sharing tools for the Kumanovo case against the Law that prohibits joining conflicts abroad;
The downloading of boards that are in the competence of the Republic of Kosovo's Assembly to put his/her people in these positions;
The separation of resources from budgetary reserves without criteria and without responsibility for public money;
In Kosovo, unemployment has increased by 2.9 percent during this period, as the Kosovo Statistics Agency confirms.
Kosovo's prime minister and government failed that instead of the Constitution and laws, behavior and decisions, they base their lives on the Kanun and Ottoman relics. In the twentieth century!











