The new Vice-President of Vada and the Minister of Capital Investments and the former member of the Parliament of Montenegro, Ervin Ibrahimović, violated the Law on Prevention of Corruption, the Agency for the Prevention of Corruption found.
In the decision, the Agency stated that Ibrahimović did not report the income received from January to December 2020 with the Municipality of Rožaje in the amount of 1.800 euros and two passenger vehicles, one of which is owned by him and the other by his wife.
The law stipulates that a public official is obliged to report accurate and complete data on income and assets. A fine of 500 to 2.000 euros is prescribed for those who do not do so.
Ibrahimović said that the allegations that the municipality's income is 1.800 euros and that both vehicles were sold in 2011 and that no vehicle is used for them are unfounded.
As stated in the decision, the Agency determined that he had violated the Law after controlling the income at the Directorate of Revenue and Customs and vehicles at the Ministry of Internal Affairs.
The Agency also made a decision that his former parliamentary colleagues Srđan Pavićević and Ivan Mitrović violated the Law.
In the case of Pavićević, the Agency determined that he violated the Law because he reported less than his and his wife's income of less than 200 and a little more than 900 euros. Pavićević said that he "declared the income for himself and his wife on the basis of a certificate from the Clinical Center of Montenegro - Accounting Service and submitted these certificates to the Parliament of Montenegro".
According to the Agency, Mitrović violated the law because he did not report 353 euros of income from the Democratic Party of Socialists, 50 euros according to the contract of work from the Institute for Textbooks and Teaching Aids and a little more than 1.500 euros in fees and the name of membership in the Board of Directors of CEDIS for September and October 2020.
The MP stated that "it leaves the possibility that incomplete data was entered, and that it could have happened due to insufficient attention, and certainly without the intention to conceal the data".

The Agency for the Prevention of Corruption found that MPs Ivan Brajović, Simonida Kordić and Albin Ćeman also violated the Law.
Brajović did not report the "Unique" weapon.
The MP pointed out that his co-worker received information from the Agency that the gun does not have to be re-entered in the property register.
According to the Agency's decision, Ćeman violated the Law because he reported a lower annual income for his wife by 123 euros.
The MP pointed out that he reported his wife's income based on the bank statement, as well as that he is obliged to report the income on the account, not the salary calculation, because there is a difference between the calculated and paid net salary for the amount due to the union.
In the case of Kordić, the Agency found that she violated the law because she incorrectly reported that she earned 12 euros each in the Committee for Planning and Spatial Planning, the Committee for Tourism and Economic Development, and the Committee for Status and Regulations in all 22,5 months.
Kordić stated that she "reported accurate and complete data to the card and that she did not report membership income in the total amount of 810 euros, but in the total amount of 90 euros."
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