Following the appointment of Glauk Konjufca as prime minister-designate for the formation of the government by the President of Kosovo, the constitutional deadline of 15 days for calling a session of the Assembly to vote on the new governing cabinet is approaching.

The deadline ends on Wednesday, and so far it has not been announced whether a session will be called to vote on the government, which creates uncertainty about the future of the political process.


The situation has sparked reactions from political parties, including the Social Democratic Initiative.

Albert Maxhuni from this entity, in a statement for Telegrafi, emphasized that the leader of this party, Fatmir Limaj, has not been invited to any meeting by the representative Glauk Konjufca to discuss the formation of the government.

He said that NISMA has made its position clear that the country should go to elections.

"We were not invited, we have made our position clear in time: it is time to go to the elections. There was also an agreement in the meeting with the president from all Albanian political entities, except for LVV which requested time, but there was no will from other political entities to have a second mandate and I think that there was no need for a second mandate at all because there is no majority," said Maxhuni.

Regarding the possibility of calling a session of the Assembly these days, Maxhuni said that they have not yet received an invitation from the Assembly administration.

"As you know, the time set for the session ends on Wednesday, we have not yet received an invitation from the Parliament administration, so it remains to be seen what will happen in these days," he said.

Otherwise, the only party that said it was contacted by Vetëvendosje at this stage was the Alliance for the Future of Kosovo, an attempt to coordinate meetings regarding the government vote.

AAK Chairman Ramush Haradinaj said that he has refused to meet with Vetëvendosje officials, just as he would refuse even if he received concrete proposals for cooperation in governance.

Haradinaj considers that "early elections are the only way out of the political impasse."

The other two parties, the Democratic Party of Kosovo (PDK) and the Democratic League of Kosovo (LDK), say they have not been contacted at all by Vetëvendosje and do not want to cooperate with this party.

Just as they have demanded that the country go to new elections.

Given these statements, the political process remains unclear. It now remains to be seen whether the Assembly will convene the voting session within the constitutional deadline, or whether the country will face new elections. /Telegraph/