PDK won't attend Assembly of Assembly Headship

The Democratic Party of Kosovo has declared it will not participate in the assembly of the Parliament's Headship, which was invited for Monday. Through an official announcement, The PDK says the Assembly is not yet constitutional, so its invitation to the meeting makes it meaningless, writes IndexOnline. “PDK estimates [...] dragbacks
Through an official announcement, The PDK says the Assembly is not yet constitutional, so its invitation to the meeting makes it meaningless, writes IndexOnline.
“The PDK estimates that deliberate stallions in the process of establishing state institutions, caused by the first party, are extremely dangerous for the Republic of Kosovo.
Even though there was no constitutional or political obligation, the Democratic Party of Kosovo took over institutional responsibility by voting for the Speaker of the Parliament, with the sole aim of unlocking the highest citizen institution” representatives reported among others in the party's official announcement.
This is the full announcement:
Today, the Speaker of the Parliament announced the completion of the constitution of the Republic of Kosovo, without the total implementation of Article 67 of the Kosovo Constitution. For the Democratic Party of Kosovo, the Assembly is not yet constitutionalised, because its headship has not been elected in full constitutional composition.
Under these circumstances, The PDK considers the invitation to meet the non-constitutiond Assembly Headship meaningless and does not participate in such meetings, which serve only party agendas, not the interest of the state.
The PDK estimates that deliberate stallions in the process of establishing state institutions, caused by the first party, are extremely dangerous for the Republic of Kosovo.
Even though there was no constitutional or political obligation, the Democratic Party of Kosovo took over institutional responsibility by voting for the Speaker of the Parliament, with the sole aim of unlocking the highest representative institution of citizens.
However, further actions and the populist schemes of Vetevendosje are clearly testifying to its fears of legal entry into constitutional terms to prove the creation of the new government. This approach, at their fault, is pushing Kosovo towards a new institutional crisis, the consequences of which the state and our citizens will bear.












