PSD reacts to Kemal Ismaili's sentence, calls the decision on parole absurd

The Social Democratic Party has reacted to the Constitutional Court's decision in Pristina, with deputies Ismailimeni sentenced him to six months in prison on bail, over the tear-making gas he had thrown into the Parliament. The PSD has said that powers who are firing weapons are being punished with fines, while for tear gas yes [...]
The PSD has said authorities who are firing weapons are being punished with fines, while for tear gas they are being sentenced to prison.
Their full response:
6 MONTH BURG WITH WHO DEPUTITY OPOSITAR FOR GAZ'S POSEDIA HOTSILE, GJOB FOR THE POSSIBES That's right.
The Constitutional Court in Pristina has today sentenced the associate MP Ismaili to six months in prison on bail for the work “ownership, control or unauthorized possession of weapons”.
As known, Ismaili is sentenced to charges of possession of tear gas in the Kosovo Assembly in 2015, in his political opposition to the ratification of the Demarcing Agreement with Montenegro and the agreement on the municipality of Serb majority.
This despite the fact that the Constitutional Court of Kosovo has already concluded that some of the provisions of the agreement for the Serb majority municipalities are not in accordance with the Constitution of the Republic of Kosovo.
Until on the other side, the president of the Republic of Kosovo, Mr. Hashim Thaci and Montenegro's president, Mr. Filip Vujanovic, have agreed to the possibility of redressing the Agreement on Demarketing between Kosovo and Montenegro, what evidenced even allegations of errors based on the agreement to set the border line between the two states.
The Constitutional Court's decision to Mufti Ismaili expresses judicial and political primacy against the Constitutional Court's act and the will of 205 thousand citizens who expressed their opposition to the petition against agreements that violated the existence of the Republic.
This sentence is unstable, as the prosecution's inability to testify to the charge of “obstructing the official person” has proved. But it is especially absurd and unlegitive, when taken into account that the same basic court has recently pronounced penalties for gun shooting, in the case of Deputy Prime Minister Dardan Gashi, Minister of Trade and Industry Endriit Shala and former head of Sqahelaj Sami Lushtaku.
This lack of consistency and unintelligible practices confirm once again the injustice of justice system decisions in the Republic of Kosovo.











