The chairman of the commission of inquiry into the bank fraud Alexandru Slusari said the declaration on state captivity adopted by Parliament should have legal consequences. According to the Deputy Speaker of Parliament, some of the legislative acts are adopted taking this declaration into account and if the state had been in a normal state, such acts wouldn’t have been probably necessary, IPN reports.
In the talk show “Important” on TVC21 channel, the politician said the state institutions will be considered fully free when the staff there is employed in accordance with the law, when genuine contests are held there and when these people serve the Moldovan citizens, not a particular clan or party. “For me, an important moment is for the people who held posts should not only resign and receive compensation,” stated Alexadru Slusari, making it clear that these should be also held accountable.
“I wonder why the solving of the problem of usurpation of power in the case of the Constitutional Court is delayed. Those six judges annulled their decisions and resigned. There is the verdict of the Venice Commission. These decisions served as a reason for taking the subsequent steps: protests at institutions, refusal to concede the power, pressure, demonstrations, turkeys and all the other events resulted from the CC judgements. I, as a citizen and as an MP, have a question – why weren’t criminal proceedings brought against these six judges? Why are they still on the outside.”
The declaration on state captivity was adopted by the new Parliament of Moldova on June 8 this year.