Determined power to continue the work of Parliament, opposition accuses him of failure

The ruling party, the Vetevendosje Movement, is committed to continuing the work of the Kosovo Parliament, despite the physical clash at the latest session and warnings of war-ridden organisations that it would prevent MPs from entering the Assembly, following their expulsion from increasing the minimum wage. However, at the Democratic Party of Kosovo, [...]
The ruling party, the Vetevendosje Movement, is committed to continuing the work of the Kosovo Parliament, despite the physical clash at the latest session and warnings of war-ridden organisations that it would prevent MPs from entering the Assembly, following their expulsion from increasing the minimum wage. However, in the Democratic Party of Kosovo, the majority accuses that through extreme polarisation with the opposition, it is willing to cover the government's failures. On the other hand, the Parliament's working monitors say tensions in the Parliament have created a divisive climate within parliamentary groups in the legislature and that it could harm the regular prosperity of the plenary sessions.
Vetevendosje Movement MP Armend Muja tells Kosovo that the Kosovo Assembly will successfully wrap up the spring session and that no one can prevent the work of this institution.
He claims that due to the visit of Chief Parliamentary Glauk Konjufca to Strasbourg, France, the Assembly has not been gathered this week.
The majority MP accuses the opposition, in particular the PDK deputies, that they tend to use violence in the Assembly, as he says, due to the loss of financial privileges they had earlier.
However, the deputy says otherwise PDK, Ferat Shala. He claims to Kosovo that Kurti government is trying to cover up its failures by provoking and attacking the opposition.
On the other hand, researcher at the Kosovo Institute for Justice, Naim Jakaj, tells Kosovo that the coup between ministers and PDK deputies has created extreme polarisation between power and opposition.
That, according to him, could affect regular work at the plenary sessions, while assuming that the legislature has so far had poor performance.
Beating in the Assembly (July 13th) has started over the time Prime Minister Albin Kurti has been speaking. PDK MP Ganimette Musliu has placed a photograph in Kurti's folk room, in which he is viewed with a long nose like “pinocio”. That photograph has been removed and torn by Deputy Prime Minister Besnik Bislim.
After that, the MP The PDK, Mergim Lushtaku, has come near to water Prime Minister Kurti. Minister Iron Murati has been set up to protect him with a daisy and Lushtaku has returned to wet Besnik Bissim, who has shot Lushtaku with bottles of water. Then, some of the ministers, PDK and power deputies, have been approached, who are involved in the beatings.
After the tensions, opposition MPs have left the hall, while the majority has continued the plenary session, with which they have adopted a series of bills and decisions, among other things the Law on the minimum wage, without including categories released from the war. Adoption of the bill in question has prompted the reaction of these categories, which have warned that at the next session of the Parliament, they will protest and prevent MPs from entering the Assembly object.
Meanwhile, the Democratic Party of Kosovo has rejected the July 13th session, in which these bills have been adopted, at the Constitutional Court, after they claim it has been called incompatible with the Parliament's regulation.
And so, The AAK has submitted the Law for the minimum wage to the Constitutional Court. / KP












