Tahiri: Today's three laws will hit democracy and free voice

The head of the Alliance for the Future of Kosovo's (AAK) Parliamentary Group, Besnik Tahiri, has said that the composition model of the Kosovo Prosecutorial Council is violated institutional independence, which is delegated by the Constitution of Kosovo. Tahiri has said that today's three laws in the country hit democracy and free voice. “Three laws [...]
Tahiri has said that today's three laws in the country hit democracy and free voice.
Today's “Trem laws will crack down on democracy and free voice, causing long-term damage to independent constitutional institutions, impacting the state administration on the foundation by creating judicial uncertainty and vigorously hurting the rule of law”, Tahiri has said.
Full response:
Stop State Destruction
Today's three laws will crack down on democracy and free voice, causing long-term damage to independent constitutional institutions, hitting the state administration's foundation by creating judicial uncertainty and by vigorously hurting the rule of law.
What are some of the problems of the three Laws:
1. The law for the Kosovo Prosecutorial Council:
The main problem in the Law for the Kosovo Prosecutorial Council is composition. With this model of KPK composition, it has violated institutional independence that is delegated by the Constitution of Kosovo.
This composition enables direct political influence by the government.
The point is simply that decision-making and political influence in decision-making will occur through members, not prosecutors.
2. The Law for Independent Media Commission (KPM):
The draft law changes the selection procedure of KPM members, enabling the VV to capture the institution for nearly 10 years and to dismiss it easily if they disobey the party.
online media are trying to record so he can punish first, if he doesn't like any media, so he shuts down.
Three. The Law has invented definitions that do not exist ( The EU has said so.
3. Public Officials Law:
A thousand and 600 leadership positions in the State Administration under this law are threatened by judicial security.
So this law, instead of reforming, turns it back, or correctly, destroys our state administration.
The proposal of this law is contrary to an act of law, which the Constitutional Court has already taken, is a new and negative moment in practicing law in Kosovo.
Politicalisation and party influence are becoming the norm that will then hardly be able to improve.
This has to stop, with these three laws democracy dies and the rule of law.












