Speaking to the press in Petrinja, Plenković said he had not seen the interpellation but that “when someone loses so badly in local elections, when they have a 13% rating, they have to pretend they are doing something.” He added that parliament would reject it.
Plenković visited Petrinja to see the demolition of buildings damaged in December’s earthquake and meet with the task force dealing with its consequences.
He said that when the reconstruction law was being passed, he said he wished to incorporate in it all constructive ideas and that no prior law included so many proposals from the opposition.
He said interpellations like the SDP’s one did not serve to improve something but to show distrust in the government.
In the interpellation filed today, the SDP asks for urgently amending the reconstruction law, including local government in discussions about it, and informing the public more transparently, among other things.
Asked who was responsible for the fact that 150 damaged buildings had been torn down in the Banija region since the December 2020 earthquake and only three in Zagreb since the March 2020 quake, Plenković said the goal in Zagreb had been to first provide institutions that would be in charge of the whole process, then financing, and cooperation between the state, the city and the quake-affected counties around Zagreb.
He said the processing of reconstruction applications in Zagreb was “somewhat slower” than expected but that property-rights relations in the capital were “even more complex” than in Banija. “We tasked (Construction) Minister Horvat with accelerating all processes and I expect all who should help him in that to contribute.”
He said Reconstruction Fund head Damir Vanđelić must be propulsive, notably regarding the reconstruction of private houses and buildings.
Citizens should be responsible and contribute by getting vaccinated
Asked if Croatia would have to resort to COVID-19 vaccination incentives, like some countries that have announced financial rewards, Plenković asked whether that meant “bribing people to be vaccinated?”
“What will we give to the 44% who have been vaccinated? If we give HRK 100 to someone who hasn’t been vaccinated but is waiting and calculating, what about the million and a half who have been vaccinated? Give them money retroactively?”
Plenković said people were “fully informed” about all key matters and that every citizen had the responsibility to contribute to society by getting vaccinated.
Recalling the number of COVID deaths, he said everything should be done to motivate people to be vaccinated, adding that Croatia had 670,000 doses available.
If they were administered, he said, “we would practically solve all problems” and stop the virus from spreading. He said it was a matter of common sense and that, perhaps, young people should be motivated to attend concerts and big events with COVID certificates.
Asked what message inconsistencies in enforcing COVID restrictions sent to those undecided on vaccination, Plenković said that “everyone who is responsible will contribute, who isn’t, won’t.”
He said Croatia had been applying mild restrictions out of respect for its citizens, considering them smart and responsible. He said the Croatian mentality would not accept tough restrictions. “We didn’t decide in vain that we would not be a country with a curfew. That wouldn’t have been well-accepted and I think we did the right thing.”
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