Macedonia MPs Approve Amnesty for Parliament Attackers
All 95 MPs who were present at Tuesday's session in Macedonia's 120-seat parliament voted in favour of the controversial amnesty legislation.
The opposition VMRO DPMNE MPs joined the majority led by the Social Democrats in supporting the law, despite the fact that there amendment aimed at expanding the scope of the amnesty to all participants was rejected earlier in the day.
The law will offer an amnesty to people who were not personally involved in violence during last April's rampage in parliament and who did not organise the storming of the legislature.
The law says that those not eligible include "the organisers and those who prepared the events of April 27 [2017], persons who committed physical violence, persons who were wearing masks to cover their faces and who committed violence, persons who were carrying weapons and official persons who overstepped their professional authorization", said deputy parliamentary speaker Frosina Remenski on Tuesday.
The law stipulates those who are eligible for amnesty will have to apply for it and that the prosecution and the court will be in charge of granting it.
Currently 33 people, including former senior police officials and opposition VMRO DPMNE MPs and supporters, are on trial charged with "terrorist endangerment of national security" for their involvement in the violence in parliament last April, when some 100 people were injured.
The prosecution is investigating the case further and has not excluded bringing further charges against more people who might be implicated in organising the violence.
The amnesty was the initiative of eight opposition MPs who in October provided Zoran Zaev's government with crucial support at the start of the parliamentary procedure to approve...
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