VV with “myd”: We expect the Assembly to be called a constitutionalised

The Vetevendosje movement expects the Constitutional Court to consider Kosovo's Constitutional Assembly constitutionalised, as they say, Chief Parliamentary Dimal Basha has respected and followed all procedures envisioned in the process of voting of vice-presidents from the ranks of communities not majority. Six days before the end of the provisional measure imposed by the Constitution, the LVV say [...]
Six days before the end of the provisional move imposed by the Constitution, Kosovo institutions should not be blocked in LVV because of the Serbian List's actions, since they declare it to be formation against Kosovo citizenship.
We expect the Assembly to be called a constitutionalised, because the Speaker of the Parliament has respected and followed all procedures envisioned with the Constitutions, the judges' jurisdiction and regulation. We do not expect Kosovo institutions to be blocked because of the actions of the Serbian List, which is defined as formation against the citizenship of Kosovo,” says Vetevendosje Movement spokesman Arlind Manjuika for Kosovo Press.
The Constitutional Court has imposed temporary measures on September 5th until September 30th, through which it forbids elected MPs to take action or proceed to form the new government, following the Serbian List's complaint over the vote for the Serbian deputy chairman in the Kosovo Assembly.
The Constitution imposed temporary measures on the basis of the Serbian List's complaint, which came after the chief parliament, Dimal Basha, put the coalition's deputy chairmanship candidates from the non-Serb minority community to the polls.
Representatives from non-Serb communities, Emilia Rexhepi, were elected deputy speaker of the Parliament, meanwhile, ten MPs from the Serb community failed to secure the 61 votes needed to get the post, including MP Nenad Raspic.
Kosovo has not established new institutions even eight months after the end of the February 9th parliamentary elections.
The Kosovo Parliament's Constituent Assembly session was closed on August 30th by Prime Minister Dimal Basha, even though MPs failed to elect the deputy leader from the Serb community, in addition to the election of the president and four other deputy speaker of the legislature.
Basha, in his reasoning, has said he has taken this move not to be blocked by the state and to continue the Parliament work, therefore to form the government after the February 9th parliamentary elections. /Periscope/












