The government did not punish deputy ministers for their inconsistencies

Visiting restaurants, participating in meetings, at holiday dinners at the end of the year, stories about Kosovo's pasture, radio conversations, and photos from meetings and television appearances are some of the content of reports the deputy ministers have delivered to the Government of Kosovo. Such quarterly reports they handed over twice to Prime Minister in resignation Ramush Haradinaj, [...]
Such quarterly reports they handed over twice to the prime minister in resignation Ramush Haradinaj, Koha Ditore writes today.
But although he had warned of punishment for their inconsistencies, he did not.
Even from the government report, they were asked to report these state officials directly to each minister.
This practice, according to government officials, had been made for the purpose of better conveying their jobs.
National Co-ordinator for state reform, Besnik Tahiri, acknowledges that not all reports of deputy ministers have been content, but, according to him, “the Haradinaj government has for the first time installed the culture of written accounting of deputy ministers”.
However, representatives of civil society, who have often opposed the large number of deputy ministers and the burden they have created to the state, estimate that their reports have spread their work and ignorance of government.











