ZAGREB, May 28 (Hina) - The majority of deputies in the Croatian parliament on Wednesday adopted changes to the parliament's Rule Book regulating the electronic voting system. They also endorsed amendments by the parliament's
Committee on the Constitution binding the parliament presidency to adopt a decision regulating how MPs who want to have their identification keys for electronic voting kept in parliament will take them over and keep them.
ZAGREB, May 28 (Hina) - The majority of deputies in the Croatian
parliament on Wednesday adopted changes to the parliament's Rule
Book regulating the electronic voting system. They also endorsed
amendments by the parliament's Committee on the Constitution
binding the parliament presidency to adopt a decision regulating
how MPs who want to have their identification keys for electronic
voting kept in parliament will take them over and keep them. #L#
Explaining the amendment, the committee's chairman, Mato Arlovic,
said that MPs who cannot or do not want to keep their identification
keys with them would be able to keep them in parliament.
This was decided after the committee adopted a proposal by Jadranka
Kosor of the Croatian Democratic Union that parliament remove from
its Rule Book articles under which MPs would take over their
identification keys from the competent parliament service before a
vote and return them afterwards.
The majority of MPs also adopted the committee's amendment under
which parliament can allow, at whips' request, that MPs vote by
raising their hands, as they used to do before the introduction of
electronic voting.
The parliament also endorsed a proposal by the Social Liberals that
its presidency order, within three months, from the supplier of the
electronic voting equipment a special display showing how each MP
voted.
Most deputies adopted a conclusion suggesting that the government
pass a decision on the participation of Croatian military observers
in the U.N. peace mission in India and Pakistan.
According to an earlier proposal, the decision was to be passed by
parliament, but since its adoption requires the votes of two thirds
or 101 MPs, who have failed to convene in that number for two weeks,
it was decided that the decision be adopted by the government.
(hina) rml