Although they accepted the report, opposition deputies said that it was incomplete in the part referring to the fight against corruption and organised crime.
The Public Prosecutor's Office last year received 41 reports of bribery, 128 reports of corruption and 258 reports of organised crime.
Public Prosecutor Mladen Bajic said that results in this area were "actually not good", but he underlined that the Office for the Suppression of Corruption and Organised Crime had in the meantime been additionally staffed and that its results this year were much better.
Opposition parties warned that Croatia had moved 20 places down on the international anti-corruption scale, that high-profile corruption remained unpunished, and that the Public Prosecutor's Office did not have a responsible approach to this problem.
The Party of Rights (HSP) warned that the report lacked information on measures taken in cases of unlawful privatisation.
The 2005 report of the Public Prosecutor's Office notes a two-percent drop in the number of criminal charges filed and more than a six-percent drop in crimes with unidentified perpetrators.
The number of criminal charges filed against known perpetrators increased by nine percent in relation to 2004.
The number of crimes against the life and physical integrity went down as well, with 233 cases of manslaughter and murder reported in relation to 267 such cases in 2004.
With 2,134 crimes committed per 100,000 inhabitants Croatia has the lowest crime rate in this part of Europe.