Murati: Supreme abolished PDK-LDK guidelines for veterans, not Kurti Government

The incumbent Finance Minister, Iron Murati, has clarified the decision of the Supreme Court of Kosovo, which has abolished the article of Administrative Guidance that limited veterans' right to financial compensation. The Supreme Guidance, according to Murati, was adopted in 2015 at the time of the coalition government P DK-LDK. “So do not [...]
The incumbent Finance Minister, Iron Murati, has clarified the decision of the Supreme Court of Kosovo, which has abolished the article of Administrative Guidance that limited veterans' right to financial compensation.
The Supreme Guidance, according to Murati, was adopted in 2015 at the time of the coalition government P DK-LDK.
So it's not about abolishing any Administrative Guide approved during Kurti Government's mandate. So I also invite the media to refrain from biased reports that wrongly try to present this as the Court's decision abolishing any sublegal act of government Kurti”, he wrote on the social platform, Facebook.
Murati has made it known that the ministry he is running will analyse today's Supreme Court act.
“We will analyse with the MPT legal office whether today's Supreme Act is sufficient to enable the benefit of the benefit even KLA veterans who work outside the public sector, even though the pre-predestination under Article 16A has not been made so far, or if there is a need for additional legal changes that have been planned. Whatever the case, Prime Minister Kurti has already given the public pledge, and we will work to live up to that pledge as soon as we have asked for it, he added.
The Association of Veterans in the Kosovo Liberation Army on Tuesday has welcomed the decision of the Supreme Court of Kosovo, which has abolished the Administrative Guidance Article restricting veterans' right to financial compensation.
According to the OVL KLA, this decision constitutes “a victory of justice and law”, after it restores an injustice done to many veterans working in the private sector who were denied legal benefits from the compensation scheme.
The Supreme Court has found that veterans' right cannot depend on whether they are in working relations or not, but on the nature of employers by excluding only those paid from the state budget, while guaranteeing the right to compensation to those employed in the private sector./Periscopi/












