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The Prime Minister-designate of Montenegro, Dritan Abazovic, formally proposed the structure and composition of the Government, which will be decided by the deputies at the session of the Assembly in Cetinje.
The new executive will have 18 ministries, four deputy prime ministers and two ministers without portfolios, as previously announced. The proposal for two Albanian ministers stands out, Fatmir Gjeka, who for two years has been the mayor of Ulcinj and will hold the post of Minister for Human and Minority Rights and Marash Dukaj as Minister of Public Administration.
Abazovic has said earlier that his government will have the support of 46 deputies, out of a total of 81 in the Montenegrin Parliament. Parliamentary support for this Government has also been announced by the Democratic Party of Socialists of the Montenegrin President, Milo Djukanovic, but without participation in it. The backbone of this executive, which is strongly opposed by the pro-Serbian and pro-Russian Democratic Front, as well as the Democrats – the two entities that have formed the current governing coalition, will be, according to Abazovic, the rule of law and economic development.
In the first quarter of the work of the new Government, a draft law is planned for the census, in accordance with European standards, a delicate issue, because the census causes tensions in Montenegro, because for a part of the public political it is not a statistical issue but a matter of national and religious census.
The new government is expected to be elected almost three months after the Montenegrin parliament voted a no-confidence motion against Prime Minister Zdravko Krivokapic’s government, formed in December 2020 by a coalition between the pro-Serb-Democrat Front and the URA Movement. Deep differences in attitudes, however, between the coalition partners – some pro-Serbs, some pro-Europeans – manifested themselves very quickly, influencing decision-making as well.
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