For 18 years, the medical staff has been recruited illegally

For 18 years, the QKUK and later the SKKKUK has recruited medical staff in opposition to the law. Tens of nurses' candidates were listed on waiting lists in the last competition announced last December, but some failed to be employed because these lists have already been cancelled, KTV reports. In [...]
For 18 years, the QKUK and later the SKKKUK has recruited medical staff in opposition to the law.
Tens of nurses' candidates were listed on waiting lists in the last competition announced last December, but some failed to be employed because these lists have already been cancelled, KTV reports.
In March of this year, the Labour Inspectorate had asked SSKUK to devalue the reserve lists, because such a way of recruiting staff through the reserve lists has no legal basis.
But the Hospital Service and the University Clinic of Kosovo had filed complaints, rationalising the process with a strong need for nurses.
After accepting this decision, USKUK has filed complaints, but has been rejected by the Labour Inspectorate. QKUK, due to the huge specifics and needs of nurses of various profiles, through public competition, along with regular positions, has also published reserve lists”, the SKKUK directorate has said.
But the working Inspectorate's second-degree commission has left this complaint groundless, specifying this time that the Labour Law imposes the employer in the public sector to announce public competition whenever an employee accepts.
Labour Chief Inspector Basri Ibrahimi, who is in a worker outside Kosovo, has told KTV that in no law does the term “reserve workspace”.
On May 10th, this institution partially cancelled the competition for completing free jobs with agreements. But some of the candidates on this list have started working, even this week.
The SKKKUK directorate says that although it has implemented the Labour Inspectorate's decision, due to urgent needs for general nurses, it has been contracting with long-term work with some nurses from the reserve list.
Some of the candidates who have been on the reserve lists have met with SKKKUK Director Basri Sejdiu, but the same have refused to talk to cameras claiming to work in private institutions and risk being out of work.
However, in terms of the competition in question, Kosovo police had made investigations months ago, after some of the candidates had presented to KTV facts about how jobs were sold, but the subject was prosecuted further at the Pristina Constitutional Prosecutor, arguing that police had not found enough evidence.











