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

PARLIAMENT WRAPS UP SPRING SESSIONS

ZAGREB, July 18 (Hina) - Parliamentary benches of the ruling coalition and the Istrian Democratic Assembly on Friday endorsed a government report on the privatisation of the oil company INA, commending the successful sale of its shares to Hungary's MOL and slamming the opposition benches for refusing to participate in today's debate.
ZAGREB, July 18 (Hina) - Parliamentary benches of the ruling coalition and the Istrian Democratic Assembly on Friday endorsed a government report on the privatisation of the oil company INA, commending the successful sale of its shares to Hungary's MOL and slamming the opposition benches for refusing to participate in today's debate. #L# Parliament thus wrapped the 35th extraordinary session. President Zlatko Tomcic announced the autumn sitting was very likely to begin before the deadline set by the Constitution -- 15 September. Debating the INA report, all ruling coalition benches congratulated the government on selling 25 percent plus one share in the company at what they said was the best moment and at the best price it could negotiate. The sale will enable Croatia's biggest company to develop further, they said. Goranko Fizulic of Libra congratulated the government on the political courage to privatise the country's largest firm just before elections. Ante Markov of the Croatian Peasant Party said the strategic goal had not been to sell INA but further Croatia's economy, consolidate it and make it export-oriented. Markov said the law had been fully complied with in the INA privatisation and hoped the legal obligation to allocate shares to INA workers would also be acted on. The ruling benches criticised the opposition -- Croatian Democratic Union, Social Liberals, Party of Rights/Christian Democrats, Democratic Centre -- for deciding to boycott parliament's work today because their demand, to debate the privatisation of INA before the government decided to sell, was turned down. Mato Arlovic of the Social Democrats said this party did not accept the "opposition's imputations" that the government had been selling the INA shares "behind (parliament's) back". The whole venture was transparent and in line with the law, he said. Vesna Pusic of the Croatian People's Party pointed the finger at the opposition for being absent from today's session. "Every time Croatia makes a step towards developed Europe and the free market you are not here. That's why we shall do it alone." The only opposition MP present was Milan Kovac of the Croatian Bloc who said the government, by selling stock in INA, had broken the Constitution and the law because it did not first privatise shares that belonged to war veterans and INA workers. (hina) ha

VEZANE OBJAVE

An unhandled error has occurred. Reload 🗙