Mobilni B92
 
           
   
  Insight | Gallery | Travel | Blog | Music
 
 
Politics | Business & Economy | Crime & War crimes | Society | Region | World B92 live TV | Radio
Follow us on
 
           
 
All news
Latest news
Comments
Newsletter

SUBTOPICS
Headlines
Politics
Business & Economy
Crime & War crimes
Society
Region
World

Dictionary and Translation software by Babylon

 
B92 News Politics

“81 percent of EU integration plan fulfilled”

19 February 2011 | 10:31 | Source: FoNet
BELGRADE -- Serbian Deputy PM Božidar Đelić has stated that 81 percent of Serbia’s National EU Integration Program for the period from October until December was fulfilled.

Božidar Đelić (Beta, file)
Božidar Đelić (Beta, file)

According to him, 74 percent of the plan was fulfilled from July 2008 until December 2010.

“Serbia is on the right path to achieve the ambitious goal if it keeps this pace. We have two more calendar years to establish harmonization with European legislation,“ the deputy prime minister pointed out.

At a parliament's EU Integration Committee meeting Đelić presented a report on the implementation of the amended National EU Integration Program and said that both the government and parliament had contributed to the result.

He explained that the most important thing was to finish the judicial reform and regulate property issues which included legislation on restitution and public property.

“It is also important to regulate the issues that refer to political system, to legally repeal blank resignation letters, to govern financing of political parties and to amend the election law so it would be clear in which order MPs can enter the parliament if those ahead of them on the list decide not to,“ Đelić stressed.

For European Serbia parliamentary group MP Gordana Čomić pointed out that many ministries had not adopted bylaws as planned.

Liberal Democratic Party MP Ivan Andrić said that it had been envisaged by the National EU Integration Program that the government would pass 16 draft laws last year but that it had only passed two, while parliament adopted 12 of those laws.

Serbian Radical Party (SRS) MP Momir Marković stressed that MPs' mandates would be traded even more, that the “MPs will become goods“ and that those who had economic power would have a political power as well if the blank resignation letters were repealed.
Politics - Most relevant news Saturday, 19 February 2011

PDK, AKR to sign coalition agreement
10:02 | Source:Beta

Thaci named PM-designate
09:30 | Source:Beta

“KFOR to stay in contact with citizens”
09:03 | Source:Tanjug

All news


 
Saturday, 19 February 2011
Print page Send page


Archive

 In focus
Euro-Atlantic integration
EU Integrations Committee meets
Deputy PM: No political crisis in Serbia
“Both region and Kosovo to move toward EU”
"No political crisis at present"
DSS: Early elections only solution
“Croatia must help neighbors join EU”
“U.S. not pushing Serbia into NATO”
“Army reform still ahead”
1,700 false asylum seekers returned to Serbia
Germany ratifies EU-Serbia SAA
   
 More...
Kosovo status
Ruling coalition crisis
Economic crisis in Serbia
Hague cooperation
Corruption & organized crime
Tensions in Sandžak
WikiLeaks
Poll

Are Kosovo organ trafficking allegations true?





The Arab street - in Europe
Timothy Garton Ash
"I thought I should see for myself the impact of these revolutions on the Arab street. The Arab street in Europe, that is. So I have come back to the Calle del Tribulete in Madrid."...


Kovač
Restaurants
This famous restaurant in the Belgrade district of Voždovac with a long tradition is known for its excellent food and good entertainment....


Post 2 – rugby league explanatory
17. 02. 2011.
Bloger Prompted by popular demand, this is an explanatory post aimed at shedding light, as succinctly as possible, on the differences between the various types of rugby, but principally ‘Union’ and ‘League’.You may want ...




 
© 1995 - 2011, B92 | Contact | About us | Impressum | Rules of use

 

Write us B92 Wap RSS news service

B92 Android
Radovan Karadzic on Trial: Follow news and in-depth coverage on