Excerpt from an interview with
Branko Stamenković, President of the High Prosecutorial Council and Public
Prosecutor of the Supreme Public Prosecution Office, published in full in the
weekly "Vreme" on 11.12.2025:
Branko Stamenković, President of
the High Prosecutorial Council, says that the prosecution office and the Council
have not received any draft of possible amendments to the law that would
abolish the Prosecution Office for Organized Crime as autonomous.
However, Stamenković tells
"Vreme" that the announcements made by the holders of executive power
are disturbing. "It is indicative that, judging by these statements, both
the Public Prosecution Office for Organized Crime and the Public Prosecution
Office for War Crimes, as well as the Special Public Prosecution Office for
High-Tech Crime, should become only departments within the Higher Public
Prosecution Office in Belgrade," he says.
"This means that the chief
public prosecutor of that prosecution office, regardless of whether it is Nenad
Stefanović as now or someone else, would be authorized to autonomously, without
any choices, opinions, etc. in the selection of personnel, by adopting an
annual work plan, assign prosecutors whom he thinks at his discretion should
work in those departments, as is currently the case with other departments of
that prosecution office," Stamenković added in an interview for the new
issue of "Vreme" which is on newsstands this Thursday (December 11).
Stamenković is considered one of
the closest associates of the Supreme Prosecutor Zagorka Dolovac. Both Dolovac
and Stamenković and Mladen Nenadić, as the head of the Prosecution Office for
Organized Crime, but also some other prosecutors, are under fierce attack by
the regime and its pit bull media.
Why? The answer is simple: because
they dared to launch investigations against high-ranking state officials in the
case of the Canopy and the General Staff, which until recently seemed like
science fiction.
Stamenković says that subordinating
several prosecution offices under the Higher Public Prosecution Office would be
"an unprecedented concentration of power in the hands of one chief
prosecutor, who would have, in addition to his regular jurisdiction, specialist
jurisdiction over the entire territory of the Republic of Serbia in relation to
organized crime, war crimes and high-tech crime, which he does not have
now".
The full text of the interview will
be published when it is available on the website of the weekly
"Vreme".
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