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Hashim Thaçi took office as president on 7 April 2016, [1] but resigned on 5 November 2020 after the Hague-based Specialist Chambers confirmed a war crime indictment against him. [2] Thaçi had been eligible for re-election for a second and final five-year term in 2021. [3] Speaker of the Assembly Vjosa Osmani replaced Thaçi in an acting ...
In comparison to 35,087 in the 2019 election, 102,100 non-resident citizens gained the right to vote via postal voting in the 2021 election. [5] The counting of the locally cast ballots was completed within a week, while the diaspora vote count was finished on by 3 March.
As a result of increasing political polarization, Sözcü became one of the country's top-selling newspapers through its anti-government (Justice and Development Party or AKP) stance. [4] It is the highest-selling Turkish paper that openly criticizes the ruling party and Recep Tayyip Erdoğan .
The Gazette includes proclamations by the President as well as both general and government notices made by its various departments. It publishes regulations and notices in terms of acts, changes of names, company registrations and de-registrations, financial statements, land restitution notices, liquor licence applications and transport permits.
[4] [5] On 22 February 2011, Behgjet Pacolli was elected as a president of Kosovo, [6] which was quickly evaluated as an unconstitutional move. [7] On 4 April 2011, Behgjet Pacolli stepped down [8] and it was decided that another candidate would be elected to serve for up to a year. A constitutional reform will be undertaken to allow for a ...
Local elections were held in Kosovo on 17 October 2021. [1] Only 17 municipalities elected a mayor in the first round, and 21 will vote again on 14 November 2021. [2] In Hani i Elezit, the election was seriously hampered by election fraud, and a second ballot planned to be held in October/November 2021. [3]
His government, approved by the assembly and installed on March 22, 2021, consists of Albanians, as well as ministers from Kosovo's ethnic minorities, which include Bosniaks, Romani, Turks and Serbs. Although the government includes representatives of ethnic minorities, it is dominated by the Albanian majority, who have most influence on the ...
Turkish Justice Party of Kosovo (Kosova Türk Adalet Partisi) [citation needed]Ashkali Party for Integration (Partia e Ashkalinjëve për Integrim); Bosniak Party of Democratic Action of Kosovo (Bošnjačka Stranka Demokratske Akcije Kosova)