
Life in Kosovo discusses about emergency situations
Tonight, Life in Kosovo will broadcast a debate on the emergency situations in our country.
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Every Thursday starting from 20:30, Radio Television Kosovo, RTK, broadcasts the TV debate show "Life in Kosovo", a joint production of BIRN and RTK.
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17 December 2009 Life in Kosovo broadcast a debate about the future of local governance for the next four years, following the elections in November.
The questions asked included: how will municipalities function over the next four years? How transparent is local governance in Kosovo? To what extent do citizens have access to municipal documents?
How transparent are municipal prosecution offices and the procedures for awarding tenders? Do local administrations function efficiently, and how successfully have they been reformed? Is there an efficient mechanism for monitoring and evaluating the quality of services provided by municipal governments? What role do citizens have in decision-making?
To discuss these and similar issues, host Muhamet Hajrullahu was joined in the studio by
Shpen Trdevaj - Deputy Minister of Local Power Administration
Sazan Ibrahimi – Executive Director of Kosovo Association of Municipalities
Hajrulla Çeku – academic expert on local development
Valdete Idrizi – Director of ‘Community Building’, an NGO based in Mitrovica
Petrit Zogaj – from the FOL Movement
To begin the debate, Hajrullahu asked Deputy Minister of Local Power Administration Shpen Trdevaj about the Ministry’s evaluation of the previous mayors’ two-year terms, and what is expected from the next set of local officials.
In response, Trdevaj claimed that the municipalities have developed judicial powers and the authority to approve policies and function independently over the past two years.
On the question of how efficient and democratic Kosovo’s municipalities are, Sazan Ibrahimi, the executive director of the Kosovo Association of Municipalities, added that his association is lobbying for citizens to have power at a local level, so that all doors must be open to their citizens.
Petri Zogaj, from the FOL Movement, claimed that municipalities have the highest level of trust from the public.
However, he went on to say that reports suggest that people from seven of the biggest municipalities in Kosovo are not satisfied with local governance, since more than 70% of interviewees believed that local administrations are not doing their work correctly.
In addition, Zogaj said that none of the municipalities have a committee before which citizens can give their opinions and comments on any draft policies, which would obviously give more power to citizens in the local decision-making process.
Valdete Idrizi agreed with Zogaj, and added that everyone knows what should be done and what is written in numerous policies and regulations.
However, she added, local administrations are not concerned with citizens’ opinions, as evidence by the removal of action plans from many municipalities’ websites, meaning that their respective citizens do not know what is happening in their area.
Hajrulla Çeku, an expert on local development, added that municipal authorities need to be transparent, and legislation should be implemented, not only kept on paper. He added that municipalities need to know clearly what their responsibilities are, in order to properly fulfil their citizens’ needs and requests.
Until now, only the municipal assemblies have been monitored, but now the participation of citizens in drafting policies and various regulations affecting their daily life must be encouraged, he concluded.
The debate continued with participants arguing that such faults are not only at the municipal level, but also at the central level, from where orders are handed down.
The participants from civil society organisations added that, in order to solve infrastructural problems such as water supply and sewage, it would be good for municipal governments to take the initiative to solve the issues by themselves, rather than waiting for instructions and doing nothing in the meantime.
Also, as part of Life in Kosovo, a report by Fatmire Haliti on the shortage of clean water in Pristina municipality was broadcast. The blurred division of competencies between the municipality and Pristina’s regional water supplier reportedly makes it difficult for citizens to know to whom to address their worries and concerns on the water shortage.
In response to this response, Trdevaj claimed that the municipalities do not have sufficient budgets to cover all the projects, but stated that he believes more funds will be available for infrastructural projects in the future.
Mr. Çeku claimed that each mayor has an obligation to respond to each need and request from their citizens, since they had gained their confidence, as shown by their winning democratic elections.
Furthermore, Çeku said that there is no excuse for lacking the budget to implement projects, since there is the possibility of inter-municipality cooperation, through which the cost for each municipality could be reduced.
Following the debate, satirical magazine Lamjet was broadcast to close the show.
Life in Kosovo is a co-production between Kosovo Public Television, RTK and the Balkan Investigative Reporting Network, BIRN. It is broadcast every Thursday, starting at 20:20.
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The report on the process of judicial appointments and reappointments analysis the flow of this process, specifically focusing on the bright and dark sides that have marred the process to its final stages.
COURT MONITORING ANNUAL REPORT APRIL 2010 - FEBRUARY 2011
Court monitoring report is published as a result of a continuous monitoring of all municipal and districts courts of Kosovo. The findings of this report are based on the monitoring of 2,147 court hearings, by BIRN monitors.
THE PROCESS OF JUDICIAL APPOINTMENTS
This report presents the results of part of BIRN's court monitoring project, specifically on the process for the appointment and reappointment of judges and prosecutors.
Follow the Paper Trail
\"Follow the Paper Trail\", a guide to document-based journalism in Kosovo, explains relevant laws, access to public documents, how to publish safely, where to find databases on investigative journalism, and how to locate documents online through various search engines.
Courts Monitoring Report 2010
A detailed analytical report about the work and administration of the courts in Prishtina, Peja, Prizren, Gjilan, Mitrovica, Ferizaj, Gjakova, Decan, Vushtrri, Poduleva, Lipjan, Klina and Istog. The report contains important information, collected by the network of monitors, placed in the major municipalities of Kosovo and aims to identify the key problems and issues that the justice system in Kosovo is facing.
REPORT: Monitoring the Courts 2009
Monitoring the work and administration of courts in Prishtina, Peja, Mitrovica, Gjilan, Ferizaj, Vushtrri and Skenderaj.
DIRECTLY ELECTED MAYOR SYSTEM IN LOCAL GOVERNANCE
The report on Directly Elected mayor System in Local Governance aims to provide a critical overview of the rationale and feasibility of the implementation of a municipal governance system that places the mayor as the central executive figure, during the third year of its application. The efficiency of this system was assessed based on the following pillars: the relationship between local government bodies, accountability of the municipal executive, respect for the law, the link between the mayor and the citizens, provision of public services (water supply and waste management, capital investments (in school and road projects)), level of transparency, public consultation and citizen participation in decision-making.
BIRN Report on Monitoring the Education System
Report on monitoring the elementary and high schools in Prishtina: Mitrovica, Ferizaj, Peja and Gjilan
Analytical report of the situation and the problems in the University of Prishtina
Report on Kosovo`s Healthcare System
Monitoring report on all primary, secondary and tertiary (University Clinical Center of Kosovo, UCCK) healthcare institutions in Pristina, Prizren, Peja, Mitrovica, Gjilan, Ferizaj, Gjakova, Klina, Decan, Istog and Vushtrri.
Situation and the Problems at the University of Prishtina
Analytical report of research into the standards and problems at the University of Prishtina. Ten years since the end of the war in Kosovo, the University of Prishtina (UP) continues to suffer from a variety of problems, resulting in persistently low quality courses being offered. For this reason, BIRN conducted research into the problems faced by UP students. The data gathered suggests that, out of the many issues reported, the most significant are: the non-implementation of contemporary teaching and assessment methods, the lack of practical work for students, the lack of appropriate academic literature, arbitrary assessments by
professors and generally poor relationships between students and their professors.
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"Life in Kosovo" debates also available on DVDs now!
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