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Anti-Mafia2024-10-16 15:56:00

Where have the vetting millions ended up? KLSH enters the 'bunker' of the KPK, opens the financial files

Shkruar nga Pamfleti

Where have the vetting millions ended up? KLSH enters the 'bunker' of

KLSH has decided to shed light on whether the funds provided by citizens' taxes have gone where they should or have gone into someone else's pockets...

The Supreme State Audit Office has decided to shed light on the financial cost of justice reform. Undoubtedly, one of the most expensive processes is that of vetting, a process that started in 2017 and ends at the end of this year.

KPK has always been the subject of debate, as it is the first level of vetting and in many cases the decisions have been debatable. Scandals have also not stopped.

The freshest case is how the members of the KPK escaped for a picnic in a luxury resort in the South and kept secret for years the name of the entity that had financed them.

There have also been many tenders, both on the infrastructural side and for the luxury of KPK members. But KLSH has decided to shed light on whether the funds provided by citizens' taxes have gone where they should or have gone into someone else's pockets.

According to the information, a group of KLSH auditors were stationed today in the premises of the former Union of Writers, where the KPK offices are, and have received all the financial files from 2017 until today. According to the information, every financial movement and every penny taken from the budget will be scrutinized.

According to statistics from February 18, 2018 to July 31, 2024, the Independent Qualification Commission has given 783 decisions for judges, prosecutors and legal assistants, while 17 subjects remain to pass this filter in the first instance.

358 magistrates have successfully passed the vetting, of which 165 judges, 163 prosecutors, 2 former inspectors in KLD, 2 inspectors in KLJ and 26 assistants/legal advisors.

Meanwhile, 261 dismissal decisions have been issued for 145 judges, 1 former judge in the Supreme Court, 110 prosecutors, 1 inspector in the Supreme Court and 4 legal assistants. The vetting process was stopped for 103 judges and prosecutors after their request to resign from office, of which 61 judges, 27 prosecutors, 1 ex-prosecutor, 13 legal assistants, 1 ex-inspector in KLD.

50 decisions are for the termination of the process without a final decision. The vetting process in the KPK, which started about 6 years ago, was divided into three phases where dozens of judges and prosecutors, considered the elite of the judiciary, who aspired to be part of the new judiciary, did not pass the exam vetting. Unjustified assets and connections with exponents of organized crime were the reasons for their dismissal from office. / Pamphlet

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