KSF has not become army yet, constitutional mandate remains the same

The three bills adopted in the Kosovo Assembly do not define the KSF as a military force. Consequently, according to connoisseurs of the Constitution, not even the function and constitutional mandate of this force have changed, writes Koha Ditore today. The legislature institution last week adopted in principle the package of bills envisioning the transformation of the Kosovo Security Force [...]
Consequently, according to connoisseurs of the Constitution, not even the function and constitutional mandate of this force have changed, writes Koha Ditore today.
The lawmaker institution last week adopted in principle the package of bills envisioning the transformation of the Kosovo Security Force into the Army, giving up constitutional changes due to Serb List opposition, without two-thirds of which cannot be made.
Judged by what is said in the package of three laws rating the position and role of KSF in Kosovo society, former Constitutional Court Chairman Enver Hasani has listed six characteristics of this constitutional institution. The first, according to him, is the legal infrastructure for gradual transformation of KSF into the military, as a whole, which, as Hasan has said, resembles the Japanese case, both in shape and in content.












