Sejdiu criticises the Constitutional deadline: Such decisions cannot wait weeks

Kosovo's Constitutional Court on Monday has imposed temporary measures on President Vjosa Osmani's decree to distribute the Kosovo Assembly. The decision was made following the complaint filed by Prime Minister Albin Kurti on behalf of the Kosovo Government. Under the decision, the provisional measure takes effect on March 9th and will remain [...]
The decision was made following the complaint filed by Prime Minister Albin Kurti on behalf of the Kosovo Government.
Under the decision, the provisional measure takes effect on 9 March and will remain in force until 31 March 2026.
In this regard, lawyer Korab Sejdiu has reacted, saying that for an issue that directly affects the functioning of two branches of power and, in fact, the third one this is an extremely long time.
Sejdiu further says that while serious decisions await the state, at a time when the whole world seems to be on fire, maybe this is one of those situations where constitutional justice should come within days, not weeks.
Full Posting:
The fact that the provisional measure is in effect until March 31st suggests that the merit decision could take weeks. For an issue that directly affects the functioning of two branches of power and, in fact, the third one is a terrible time.
When there is this serious danger of an institutional vacuum, while serious decisions await the state, at a time when the whole world seems to be on fire, maybe this is one of those situations where constitutional justice should come within days, not weeks.
Because such cases require not only the right interpretation of the Constitution but also efficiency in decision making.












