AAK: Constitutional ruling confirmed that through laws, the government aims to capture independent institutions

The Alliance for the Future of Kosovo (AAK) has presented two concerns against the government. AAK parliamentary group chairman Besnik Tahiri has said the first concern is for the Constitutional Court's recent ruling on the Law for the Prosecutorial Council, which, according to him, has proved that this government as the governing rate has “constitutionality” and that [...]
The head of the AAK parliamentary group, Besnik Tahiri, has said the first concern is the Constitutional Court's recent decision on the Law for the Prosecutorial Council, which, according to him, has proved that this government as the governing rate has “constitutionality” and that it is trying to make “ka “of all independent institutions.
We have two major concerns. The first concerns the Constitutional Court's recent ruling on the Law for the Prosecutorial Council. The second is for the serious economic situation, for the major crisis that is in the basic economic institutions, in the CEC, the Trust Board and the decision to expensive the energy”.
“The Constitutional Court's recent decision of the Law for the Prosecutorial Council proves that anti-unconstitutional in this government is standard and standard government. This government postpones laws which the Venice Commission has rejected and nonpolitical and local and international-level institutions. The aim is to capture independent institutions through laws. This logic must be broken. The powers are divided”, Tahiri said, at the media conference.
While the party's deputy, Fatmir Gashi, has said it is meaningless to leave 2.5 million euros in the pension fund without management.
He has said he has expected reformation of this system, as has happened in the countries of the region.
Looking at the economic downturn worldwide, not forming the Trust Board is unintelligible by this government. The pension fund manages 2.5m euros, and they are left without supervision. If we look at the countries in the region, they've all reformed their pension system”.
Gashi has also expressed concerns about the work of the Central Bank and the expensive electricity.











