ZAGREB, April 1 (Hina) - Croatia's parliament on Tuesday morning resumed its session by endorsing the government-sponsored bill on health care, which was in the first reading, and continued the sitting with a debate on amendments to
the electoral law.
ZAGREB, April 1 (Hina) - Croatia's parliament on Tuesday morning
resumed its session by endorsing the government-sponsored bill on
health care, which was in the first reading, and continued the
sitting with a debate on amendments to the electoral law. #L#
The amendments are moved by the Committee on the Constitution, Rule
Book and Political System.
The committee's chairman and Social Democratic Party (SDP) whip,
Mato Arlovic, recalled previous parliamentary debates on a few
draft acts on elections.
Then parliament decided to entrust the said committee with the task
to draw up necessary changes to the valid law on the election of MPs,
passed in 1991, so that it could comply with the constitutional
deadline to change the relevant law a year before elections, i.e.
until 2 April.
The proposed amendments are technical, referring mainly to the
adjustment to alterations made to the Constitution under which the
House of Counties (upper house) was dissolved and to the new law on
national minorities' rights which provides for eight instead of the
previous five seats for their representatives in the Sabor.
The committee also proposed some changes aimed at adjusting the
electoral law to the altered law on the armed forces. Thus, military
active persons can stand the election, and in case they are elected
they must opt either for becoming deputies in parliament or
remaining to be active officers.
The parliamentary committee for human rights and rights of national
minorities has not supported the moved changes to the electoral
law, as it believes that rights of some minorities will be
restricted contrary to the Constitution, the committee's chairman,
Furio Radin said.
Minorities' MPs are also dissatisfied with the fact that the
electoral law does not provide for the possibility that minorities'
members can vote twice , i.e. for parties' slates and for their
minorities' slates.