The 12-member commission on the possible impeachment of Lithuanian President held its first meeting
Published:
4 January 2004 y., Sunday
The 12-member commission on the possible impeachment of Lithuanian President Rolandas Paksas held its first meeting on 29 December.
Commission Deputy Chairman Julius Sabatauskas said that the first session did not resolve any of the issues on its agenda, which include determining who should be called as witnesses. The closed-door session was attended by Paksas's legal counsel, which has increased from the three lawyers who represented him at an earlier meeting of the Constitutional Court to six.
The new additions are Kestutis Stungys, Vytautas Sviderskis, and Rimas Andrikis, three of Vilnius's most sought-after criminal-defense lawyers. Sabatauskas said the president's lawyers may present proposals to the commission, but are prevented from protracting its work since all decisions are made collectively by the commission itself. The commission will seek security clearance from the State Security Department to receive classified information, Sabatauskas added.
Šaltinis:
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Since 9/11, and with the terrorist attacks in Madrid in 2004 and in London in 2005, security has become a top priority for the EU.
more »
Obama made a "joke" about his bowling skills being bad, comparing it to the Special Olympics.
more »
Energy policy and climate change have raced up the political agenda in the last few years.
more »
A desolate planet where the most prized asset is water - that is the scenario in Frank Herbert's science fiction novel “Dune”.
more »
More than 600 people turned out for London's first verticle rush. Winner took just four minutes and 57 seconds to get from bottom to top – 920 steps.
more »
In an ideal world, the consumer would be king. Today's consumer is alas often a victim - left feeling helpless and frustrated.
more »
China arrested fifteen people for selling pigs fed with banned growth chemicals, which sickened 70 people in the country's southern Guangdong province.
more »
China offers Magnificent white tigers to a city in Taiwan as an act of goodwill.
more »
Europe's estimated 10-12 million Roma are its largest minority and most of them live in abject poverty.
more »
To boost sales, the Czech Republic lunar embassy has cut prices down by 20 percent, offering land patches for 799 Czech Crowns (39 U.S. dollars).
more »