Persons conducting security of the building shall wear in a visible position symbols of the Assembly of the Republic of Macedonia. The immediate organisation and provision of the security of the building is done by the Ministry of the Interior, and in part by the Ministry of Defense, in accordance with this Rulebook and the Guidelines on the manner of providing security of the building of the Assembly. The maintenance of the order in the building of the Assembly and the premises in which the Assembly works is provided by a special service.Īpart from the cases determined by Article 5 of the Rulebook, the authorised official persons of the state administration bodies may not, without the approval of the President of the Assembly of the Republic of Macedonia, have access in the premises of paragraph 1 of this Article, nor take measures against Members, employees in the Staff and other citizens. The provisions of the Rulebook apply to all persons who use the working and other premises of the Assembly, as well as all the other persons who enter the building of the Assembly on any grounds. The Rulebook regulates the internal order in the Assembly of the Republic of Macedonia (hereinafter: the Assembly), and in particular entering the building, use of the working premises, receiving of visitors, presence at the sessions of the Assembly and the working bodies, archiving of official materials and acts, anti fire security, as well as the security of the Assembly building. On the basis of Article 60 of the Rules of Procedure of the Assembly of the Republic of Macedonia, I hereby issue the following On the internal order in the Assembly of the Republic of Macedonia Sabine Leutheusser-Schnarrenberger, a former justice minister in Germany, said: “I tried, but unfortunately without success, to pass a Magnitsky Act also in Germany.” Authentic heroĬotler, who in the past gave legal advice to prominent prisoners of conscience, such as Nelson Mandela, gave tribute to Browder for popularising the cause of Magnitsky, whom he called “an authentic human rights hero - a person of uncommon courage, integrity, dignity.”Ĭhris Bryant, an MP from the Labour Party, the main opposition party in the UK, noted that London and Washington are, following the Paris attack, more open to working with Moscow against Islamic State.īut he “pledged” to hold British PM David Cameron “to account” on his promise to take a tough line with Russia over its invasion of Ukraine.English to Macedonian: Rolebook on the internal order in the Assembly of the Republic of Macedonia "Sometimes you have to act just because it's the right thing to do." Sign up for EUobserver’s daily newsletterĪll the stories we publish, sent at 7.30 AM.īy signing up, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. “There are too many people in government who think their job is just to keep things calm: ‘We have a relationship with Putin, let’s not rock the boat’,” he said. Meanwhile, McGovern, who was instrumental in passing the Magnitsky Act in the US, urged European governments to follow suit. Navalny's associates describe the move as a “new policy of hostage-taking against the opposition.” Oleg Navalnyįor his part, Verhofstadt promised to put pressure on the EU to “take action” on Oleg Navalny, the brother of Russian anti-corruption activist Alexei Navalny, who was jailed last year on dubious charges. Other guests included Vladimir Kara-Murza, one of Nemtsov’s associates, who is recovering after being poisoned in July, and Mikheil Khodorkovsky, an oligarch-turned-reformer, who spent 10 years in prison in Russia before moving to London. The event was attended by Magnitsky’s son and widow, as well as by Nemtsov’s daughter, Zhanna, who collected the prize in her late father’s name. The other eight winners of the 2015 awards include: Guy Verhofstadt, the leader of the Liberal group in the EU Parliament Jim McGovern, a US Congressman Irwin Cotler, a Canadian former attorney general investigative journalist group OCCRP and, posthumously, Russian opposition leader Boris Nemtsov, who was shot in Moscow in March. “Countries like Russia need honest judges as much as, if not more than, they need revolutionaries.” “The message of the Magnitsky story is that no country can ever be great, or a responsible neighbour, or a credible partner in a common cause, if it tramples its own people’s fundamental rights.”
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