Parliament Speaker Andrija Mandić appealed to the authorities to introduce compulsory administration in Šavnik or to enable voting at two polling stations.
At the session of the first regular spring session of parliament, which is not attended by the opposition, he said that the citizens of Šavnik have been protesting for 20 days because the government in that municipality is not functioning in accordance with the Constitution and laws of the state.
"I appeal to the authorities to introduce compulsory administration in that city, or to enable the conduct of elections at the remaining two polling stations in that municipality. No one needs the blockade of the Nikšić - Žabljak main road," said Mandić.
The MPs adopted the proposal that Andrija Nikolić will head the Inquiry Committee, his deputy will be Milan Knežević, and the members will be Gordan Stojović, Andrija Mandić, Momčilo Leković, Bogdan Božović, Oskar Huter, Nikola Zirojević, Filip Adžić and Vladimir Dobričanin.
The Committee is expected to collect information on the actions of state bodies and other entities in cases of politically motivated murders since the introduction of multi-party politics, as well as the circumstances of physical attacks and beatings of journalists and other free intellectuals by police officers known as the "black three".
Mandić said they had done a great thing.
"We will have the opportunity to talk not only with the victims, but perhaps also with those who participated in these actions. Montenegro needs to get the truth," said Mandić.
He called on those who view certain personnel decisions in the Inquiry Committee with suspicion to closely monitor its work, because, as he added, the members of the Committee want to get to the truth.
"The Inquiry Committee is not a court or a prosecutor's office, but it is a powerful tool for those who were tasked with solving these cases to solve them now. Many people have gone through hardship and suffering, we even have them here in parliament, I expect a lot from this Committee," Mandić said.
MPs re-voted the Law on the Representative of Montenegro before the European Court of Human Rights, which President Jakov Milatović returned for reconsideration.
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