
The parliamentarian noted that only a few of the many adopted laws have been analyzed
At a meeting of the Jogorku Kenesh, deputy Ulukbek Karybek uulu pointed out that the parliament practically does not monitor the effectiveness of laws, despite existing legislative obligations.
According to him, deputies play the role of "engineers" in the law-making process, but after their adoption, no one conducts a systematic check of their quality. Karybek uulu emphasized that after adoption, laws are transferred to the Cabinet of Ministers of the Kyrgyz Republic, and the further fate and effectiveness of these norms remain out of the lawmakers' sight.
He provided specific data: there are 158,111 regulatory legal acts registered in the country, of which 135,567 are still in effect.
According to the deputy, the parliament has adopted a total of 5,755 laws and 23,347 resolutions, of which currently 3,825 laws and 22,553 resolutions are in effect.
“What happened to the remaining 1,930 laws and 794 resolutions? They were canceled due to contradictions with previous regulatory acts,” he added.
Karybek uulu noted that in the last three years, 677 laws have been adopted, but monitoring and analysis were conducted for only eight of them.
He reminded that legislation on regulatory legal acts obliges law-making bodies to regularly conduct monitoring and evaluate the effectiveness of adopted acts.
In the deputy's opinion, the lack of analysis leads to the adoption of contradictory and ineffective laws, which ultimately negatively affects the state.
“We create laws but do not care about their quality and impact on society. Every law requires monitoring,” concluded Karybek uulu, addressing his colleagues.
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