FILTER
Prikaži samo sadržaje koji zadovoljavaju:
objavljeni u periodu:
na jeziku:
hrvatski engleski
sadrže pojam:

TWO PARLIAMENTARY COMMITTEES ENDORSE ANNUAL REPORT BY OMBUDSMAN KLARIC

ZAGREB, April 20 (Hina) - The Croatian Parliament's Human and Ethnic Minority Rights Committee on Tuesday endorsed a report by Ombudsman Ante Klaric for 2003, in which he warned that the number of citizens' complaints had risen by 50 percent from 2002.
ZAGREB, April 20 (Hina) - The Croatian Parliament's Human and Ethnic Minority Rights Committee on Tuesday endorsed a report by Ombudsman Ante Klaric for 2003, in which he warned that the number of citizens' complaints had risen by 50 percent from 2002.#L# The increase in the number of complaints can be partly ascribed to the fact that representatives of the Office of the Ombudsman visited more counties and met more people in the field. Klaric said that one of the biggest problems was failure to address or delays in addressing requests for the reconstruction of houses in former war-stricken areas. In this context Klaric called on the government to honour its earlier promise and cancel the deadline for the submission of requests. He also drew attention to the fact that several thousand state-owned flats in the formerly war-hit areas had not yet been registered as state-property and were unlawfully occupied by some people who owned flats elsewhere. "If order were restored to this segment, I believe that 80 percent of cases of homeless people would be solved, particularly those of Bosnian Croat settlers and (ethnic) Serbs who want to return to their homes," Klaric told the Committee. Milorad Pupovac of the Independent Democratic Serb Party (SDSS) criticised Klaric for failing to cite real reasons why many people had left their homes during the war. Pupovac said that people were forced to leave their homes and that they did not do so "in order not to take part in the defence of Croatia". Later they were stripped of their tenancy rights. "The policy of evicting people from their flats was at work in Croatia at the time, including verbal threats and forcible evictions, and nobody asked those people why they were leaving, but they were regarded as refugees or displaced persons," the SDSS deputy said. Pupovac said that in Bosnia-Herzegovina 93 percent of claims for restoration of property rights were solved and that Croatia was still lagging behind. "I know who in Croatia is withholding data on outstanding property claims and does not want to inform the parliament and the government of this. That person should be punished," Pupovac said without giving the name of the person in question. The parliamentary committee on the judiciary also endorsed the report. The report says that in 2003 the Office of Ombudsman received 286 complaints about the work of courts, mainly referring to procrastinated legal proceedings. The number of complaints of this kind is increasing by the year. The Office of the Ombudsman is not authorised to examine the regularity of the work of courts, and citizens have nobody else to send their complaints to, the report reads. (Hina) ms

VEZANE OBJAVE

An unhandled error has occurred. Reload 🗙