Road to the Vetting process opens, challenge considered in Parliament vote

After the Constitution gave the green light to the majority amendments to the veto process, the challenge is considered their vote in the Assembly, as they demand the vote of two MPs. The Constitutional decision is considered to have paved the way for one of the biggest processes in the field of justice nearly 10 [...]
After the Constitution gave the green light to the majority amendments to the veto process, the challenge is considered their vote in the Assembly, as they demand the vote of two MPs. Constitutional decision is considered to have paved the way for the start of one of the biggest processes in the field of justice
Nearly 10 months it took the Constitution to come up with a decision concerning the constitutionality of amendments to the Vetting process.
Despite the expectation, the green light was given, where in the decision of the day before the Constitutional Court, it found no violations in most of the veto amendments to the high levels of judges and prosecutors.
Justice Minister Albulen Haxhiu welcomed this, declaring deep reform in justice will take place.
But the challenge will be to pass these amendments to the Assembly, says lawyer Ylli Zekiaj, as the votes of 2/3 of MPs are needed for their approval.
While Gezim Shala from the IKD says the way has been opened for one of the biggest processes in justice, it shows why one of the amendments was rejected by the Constitution.
The amendments to justice, the Constitutional amendments, had been sent to Parliament Speaker Glauk Konjufca, while the indictment in the end stresses that it is not controversial that independence of judicial power and the prosecutorial system are fundamental principles of Kosovo's constitutional order, which is based on values of rule of law and democracy. /Dukagini.












