The Central Election Commission has completed the counting of all votes for the December 28 snap parliamentary elections, which the Vetëvendosje Movement won with 51.11 percent of the vote.
Now, the CEC is ready to announce the final result, said the spokesperson for this institution, Valmir Elezi.
"However, according to the Law on General Elections, parties may file any complaint with the Electoral Panel for Complaints and Appeals regarding the administration of the count at the Counting and Results Center within 48 hours of the alleged violation occurring," Elezi emphasized.
The last batch of ballots to be counted were those by mail, the counting of which ended at 02:00 on January 9.
Precisely regarding postal votes, a complaint was sent to the ECAP by the Democratic Party of Kosovo, which requested the counting of thousands of diaspora votes that arrived in Kosovo by mail.
According to preliminary results, Albin Kurti's LVV has scored its best election result ever, winning 51.11 percent of the vote or translated into votes, this entity received 486,994 votes, which gives it 57 seats in the Assembly.
The leader of this party, Albin Kurti, is the most voted person in Kosovo, receiving 404,023 votes.
The second party was the Democratic Party of Kosovo with 20.19 percent of the vote or 22 seats in the 120-member Assembly.
The Democratic League of Kosovo won 13.23 percent of the vote, which gives it 15 seats in the legislature.
The Alliance for the Future of Kosovo has won 5.50 percent of the votes and this party will have six MPs.
The Serbian List – the main Serb party in Kosovo, close to official Belgrade – will have nine of the ten seats guaranteed for the Serb community. One MP from the ranks of the Serb community will be held by Nenad Raši?’s Party for Freedom, Justice and Survival. Meanwhile, the other ten seats guaranteed for non-Serb minority communities are distributed among several parties and coalitions.
45 percent of the electorate participated in the December 28 elections.
The LVV of the acting Prime Minister, Albin Kurti, has said that it aims for the rapid formation of new institutions, after the certification of the election results.
The early parliamentary elections of December 28 were the result of disagreements and clashes between political parties, which, after the February 9 elections, failed to constitute the Assembly until October 10.
Kurti then failed to get enough votes in the Assembly to form a Government, nor did Glauk Konjufca from LVV./REL