Parliament: Old staff leaves offices

13/09/2013 00:00

The political rotation is starting in the administration of the Albanian
parliament. Directors and advisers of Jozefina Topalli have already
resigned. The next to resign today was the legal director of the
Albanian Parliament, Lulzim Lelcaj.

Sources from the Parliament say for Shqip that other resignations are expected in the days to comee, such as the General Secretary of the Parliament, Marlind Myftiu.

This will happen after the Parliamentary bureau will be established, which is composed of Parliament Parliament Members. Muftiu will officially resign.

The rotation has affected almost all of the Parliament’s administration, which now has a considerable number of employees, and many of them feel scared of changes.

This situation is felt in every environment and during the Parliamentary sessions. The new Parliament is establishing the new structures, such as the Bureau, the Conference of Leaders, the Parliament Commissions. Based on the usual formula, three commissions will be led by the opposition: the Integration, Health and Media Commissions. While the Commissions of Laws, Security, Economy, Productive Activity and Foreign Policy belong to the majority.

With the changed regulation, the Parliament will also offer more jobs, since the Parliament Members will have their own office and one secretary.

Prime Ministry’s computers cleaned

While the new government of the left majority is expected to receive the vote of confidence tomorrow by the Albanian Parliament, and while Rama is waiting to receive today all files of the Berisha government, sources say that the Prime Ministry’s computers and servers have been reformatted.

No one knows if there has been any copy of these computers. Two days before the Parliament held the first Parliamentary Session that would make way for the rotation process, their offices have been summoned to complete the official material certification process that will be made available today to the new cabinet led by Socialist leader Edi Rama.

Last Friday and Saturday, sources from the Prime Ministry said that all employees have been ordered to reformat their computers and servers. As regards the materials that these computers held, sources say that they don’t know if they have been saved or backed up anywhere.

This is the second time that the servers of the Prime Minister’s office are reformatted. The first time was on 2011, when the former IT of the Prime Minister’s office, Armando Kasaj, was accused of deleting the images of the protest by the Prime Minister’s server, which might have evidence for the killings of the four opposition protesters.

These servers and computers have documented all the work done by the Prime Minister’s office during eight years.

Top Channel

DIGITALB DIGITALB - OFERTA