The Assembly has not been constituted since the deputy speaker has not yet been elected from among the Serbian MPs; MPs must vote; and the latter have 12 more days to constitute the parliament. These were the decisions of the Constitutional Court regarding the impasse created in the parliament for several months now. The same decisions came as a result of the third judgment of this court regarding the institutional blockade, a judgment which has not yet been fully published in the Official Gazette, writes Gazeta Express.
Besides the order to MPs to vote, the other two points were considered the most important.
The first was the declaration that the parliament without the election of the five vice-presidents is not recognized as constituted. Thus, this decision of the Constitutional Court rejected the declarations that came from the government for days and weeks. This is because Vetëvendosje declared this process completed. Although such a thing was rejected by experts in the field even before the decision of the Constitutional Court.
The second point was the deadline given to the deputies to complete the process of constituting the Assembly. As mentioned above, the court said that the deputies have 12 days after the full verdict is announced.
The political scene is still waiting on this issue. In addition to the fact that the full decision has not yet been published, it is not known when such a thing might happen.
In this regard, experts in this field have also declared themselves.
Gëzim Shala, from the Kosovo Law Institute, and Vullnet Bugaqku from the Kosovo Democratic Institute, are some of those who have provided their comments.
Both of them have stated that there is no specific deadline within which the decision can be made public.
"Regarding the time period between the notification and the verdict, there is no specific deadline as to how many days it must be published," said Shala.
Bugaqku also made the same assessment. The latter stated to REL that the Rules of Procedure of the Constitutional Court do not set any deadline or time limit.
"Considering the current practice of the Constitutional Court, although the Rules of Procedure of the Constitutional Court do not set any deadline or time limit as to when and within what period the notice must be published in the Official Gazette, the current practice of the Court's jurisprudence has had cases where, within five or up to seven days, it has taken the Court time to publish the full judgment in the Official Gazette and on its official website," he said.
Otherwise, the second judgment of the Constitutional Court, which was issued as a notification on August 8, was published in full after 10 days, more precisely on August 18. Meanwhile, the deputies who are still under the court's restrictive measure held their last session on August 30. /Express newspaper