12-09-2020, 06:30 AM
The Constitutional Court of Moldova (KSM) has suspended the law on the Information and Security Service, which limits the powers of the elected President Maia Sandu, Interfax reports with reference to the press service of the KSM.
The KSM accepted for consideration a request on this issue, made on Friday by the deputy from the Party "Action and Solidarity" (PAS) (headed by President-elect Maia Sandu) Sergei Litvinenko. "The Constitutional Court suspends the law on amending the law on the Information and Security Service until the request is considered by the KSM and a final decision is made," the statement says.
Recall that the Moldovan parliament on December 3 limited the powers of the president, transferring the Information and Security Service (ISS) from the subordination of the president to the subordination of the parliament. The decision was taken on the initiative of the deputies from the Party of Socialists (headed by the incumbent President Igor Dodon) in two readings at once, without discussion in parliament.
The new parliamentary majority of the faction of the Party of Socialists and the faction of the Shor party - 51 out of 101 deputies - voted for the decision. The opposition did not participate in the voting, trying to disrupt the meeting.
The adopted law assumes that the Information and Security Service is transferred under parliamentary control, and the parliament gets the right to appoint the director of the Service and his two deputies. The bill drew strong criticism from right-wing parties and President-elect Maia Sandu, who called the initiative "an attempt to usurp power."
In 2016, when Igor Dodon took office, at the suggestion of the then oligarch Vladimir Plahotniuc, the parliament also transferred the NIB to its subordination, which then drew criticism from the socialists. In the summer of 2019, with the votes of the coalition of socialists and the right (Maya Sandu bloc), the NIB was returned to the control of the president, but now it again became accountable to the legislature.
Last Wednesday, Maia Sandu called her supporters to a protest against Dodon's usurpation of power. Several thousand people participated in the event, but after they dispersed, the parliamentary majority passed all the controversial laws in a matter of minutes and without discussion.
On Sunday, supporters of the elected president held a protest action on the Great National Assembly Square in the center of Chisinau. The protesters demanded the resignation of the government and the holding of early parliamentary elections.
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The KSM accepted for consideration a request on this issue, made on Friday by the deputy from the Party "Action and Solidarity" (PAS) (headed by President-elect Maia Sandu) Sergei Litvinenko. "The Constitutional Court suspends the law on amending the law on the Information and Security Service until the request is considered by the KSM and a final decision is made," the statement says.
Recall that the Moldovan parliament on December 3 limited the powers of the president, transferring the Information and Security Service (ISS) from the subordination of the president to the subordination of the parliament. The decision was taken on the initiative of the deputies from the Party of Socialists (headed by the incumbent President Igor Dodon) in two readings at once, without discussion in parliament.
The new parliamentary majority of the faction of the Party of Socialists and the faction of the Shor party - 51 out of 101 deputies - voted for the decision. The opposition did not participate in the voting, trying to disrupt the meeting.
The adopted law assumes that the Information and Security Service is transferred under parliamentary control, and the parliament gets the right to appoint the director of the Service and his two deputies. The bill drew strong criticism from right-wing parties and President-elect Maia Sandu, who called the initiative "an attempt to usurp power."
In 2016, when Igor Dodon took office, at the suggestion of the then oligarch Vladimir Plahotniuc, the parliament also transferred the NIB to its subordination, which then drew criticism from the socialists. In the summer of 2019, with the votes of the coalition of socialists and the right (Maya Sandu bloc), the NIB was returned to the control of the president, but now it again became accountable to the legislature.
Last Wednesday, Maia Sandu called her supporters to a protest against Dodon's usurpation of power. Several thousand people participated in the event, but after they dispersed, the parliamentary majority passed all the controversial laws in a matter of minutes and without discussion.
On Sunday, supporters of the elected president held a protest action on the Great National Assembly Square in the center of Chisinau. The protesters demanded the resignation of the government and the holding of early parliamentary elections.
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http://funrun.org/__media__/js/netsoltra...loans.com/
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