Here are how many laws passed in Kosovo Assembly legislature

Kosovo's country's long legislation this year has adopted 28 laws, while if it manages to approve the IPA funding agreement on August 22nd, when the Assembly is expected to be distributed, it would have met close to 20 per cent of the legislative agenda envisioned for 2019. And until the legislature in question is expected to be distributed [...]
Kosovo's country's long legislation this year has adopted 28 laws, while if it manages to approve the IPA funding agreement on August 22nd, when the Assembly is expected to be distributed, it would have met close to 20 per cent of the legislative agenda envisioned for 2019.
And while the legislature in question is expected to be distributed Thursday, the Kosovo Democratic Institute (KDI) estimates the lack of seriousness on the part of MPs was a syndrome that has affected all Kosovo parliamentary groups.
Artan Murati from KDI, says this legislature has failed to meet the planned agenda.
He says it is a relatively small number of bills that have been adopted and transformed into laws during these eight months.
And in the event of the legislature's distribution, which is expected to happen, Murati stresses that the laws left in the procedure return to zero point, as it is their largest sponsor executive and priorities of new governance may be other.
The sixth legislature, composed in September 2017, had managed to pass only five laws that year.
Murati also speaks of problems that characterized the legislature. Until, according to him, the lack of quorum turns out to be the biggest problem, not a few problems say they have caused calls of unplanned sessions in time from the head of the Assembly.
No less problematic were the extraordinary sessions, which were recently quite frequent and not marked for well - being.
According to Murati, the main problem of extraordinary sessions has been the lack of agreement among parliamentary groups on what they want to achieve with extraordinary sessions. Even calling on extraordinary sessions in response to those who happen, he says, does not produce results. To that end, the Assembly must precede problems rather than gather after things happen.
The other problem, for him, turned out to have been the inability of MPs to get answers on the executive side.
All in the end, speaking of the demonstration of MPs' work, Murati says it is opposition deputies who have been more active in questioning and calling for interference, but adds that even some opposition deputies have been prepared. And yet, according to him, a syndrome that has affected all parliamentary groups was the lack of seriousness by the majority of MPs for their work.
This year, out of 143 bills were passed only 28 of them, 44 are in procedure and 71 of them pending.
While on August 22nd, Kosovo's Assembly will meet at an extraordinary session for the distribution of the 6th legislature, but initially it is expected that IPA funds that the country will bring about 100,000 euros.












