Daka: If the mayors don't take an oath within the legal deadline, we go to the polls.

The former head of the Central Election Commission, Valdete Daka, spoke of the importance of the legal deadline and the procedure of swearing in to the heads of four municipalities in northern Kosovo. She explained that as long as there is legal information on the oath is 30 days, and if the mayors don't take an oath within that deadline, then they go to the elections [...]
She explained that as long as she has legal information on the oath is 30 days, and if the mayors don't take the oath within that deadline, then she'll go to a new election.
I looked at the Law on Local Self-Government before, and at Article 57 it is defined that this should happen in the 30-day term. So the deadline is not over. The moment the legal deadline is over whether it's 15 or 30 days, if the mayors don't take a vow at this time, then you go to the election”, aka stressed.
In the question of whether it is allowed in a municipality to take the mayor's oath, as it has happened today in the Northern Mitrovica municipality, and in others, it is expressed: “Yes, because each municipality has its own specifics and certainly that preparations are being made by the ministry and at the moment they consider there are conditions to make such an oath called the inaugural session”, it added, RTKlive broadcast.
During the interview, she also mentioned that there are no specifics in the law about where the oath should be taken by the elected mayors, although she stressed that she implied that he should be made at the Communist Assembly.
The law simply predicts that the oath should be taken before the asambrists and when it should be held and at any time, but does not determine the way it should be in the hall. The law or the lawgiver did not think there could be situations when a mayor should give his oath in private homes, on the street or wherever he is. It implies that the mayor gives his oath in the building of the Municipal Assembly and not anywhere. But anyway, the law or the lawgiver did not anticipate such details because he did not anticipate such situations”, Daka underlined.
Daka did not comment directly on what they wanted to say to the ambassadors of the QUINT states with their statement last night, which for elected mayors in northern municipalities stressed they would perform technical work. However, it noted that the law does not recognise such a term as technical chairman.
I don't know what they wanted to say, but they probably thought those mayors had no political but technical role. But in fact, this terminology I don't believe is known and there is no technical or non-technical chairman or anything. They are mayors elected by citizens of a municipality and are mayor of the municipality. So far I have not heard of any such term as technical chairman. They're mayors elected by the citizens of the municipality and they're president”, it's all over, Dhaka.












