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    HomeCrimeAlbanian PM seeks to stop judiciary from suspending ministers

    Albanian PM seeks to stop judiciary from suspending ministers

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    (Corrects headline to replace "dismissing" ‌with "suspending")

    TIRANA, Feb 16 (Reuters) - Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama said ​his government would change the law to protect ministers from suspension while they are under criminal ⁠investigation, prompting the opposition to accuse him of trying to protect himself and harming judicial independence.

    A court suspended Rama's deputy, Belinda Balluku, in November following ​her indictment by Albania's anti-graft prosecutors, known as SPAK, over alleged meddling in a tender ‌for infrastructure projects, which she denies.

    The case has sparked a dispute between SPAK, which has asked parliament to lift Balluku's immunity to allow her arrest, and ⁠Rama, who has complained about judicial overreach, especially with pre-trial detentions.

    Albania ⁠aims to join the European Union by 2030 but the bloc says the country must do more to fight crime and corruption.

    Rama's Socialist Party, which last year secured a fourth consecutive term, has a comfortable parliamentary majority and ‌it is unclear if and when the assembly will lift the immunity of ⁠Balluku, who also served as an infrastructure minister ‌and is a close ally of the prime ​minister.

    "The moment a minister is dismissed not only is one person dismissed but the whole work of that institution," Rama told his party lawmakers on Monday, ‌announcing the plan to change the law.

    The opposition has ​staged a series of protests ⁠in recent months in the capital Tirana to demand Balluku's resignation. ‌On Monday they said Rama was ⁠seeking to control judicial proceedings in his favour with the amendments.

    "This is nothing more than an attempt by Rama to protect himself, blowing up both the independence ​of the judiciary and ‌the separation of powers... because behind Balluku and her wrongdoings stands Rama," the ⁠main opposition Democratic Party said in a ​statement to Reuters.

    (Reporting by Florion Goga, writing by Fatos Bytyci; editing ​by Angeliki Koutantou and Gareth Jones)

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