Abstract
The article considers local self-government institutions of constitutional responsibility. The authors analyze conditions for the effectiveness of constitutional and legal liability of local government employees in sovereign Kyrgyzstan. One of the important conditions for the effective functioning of local self-government in the Kyrgyz Republic is the legally established commitment of local government officials to the government, the population of the municipality, legal entities, including independent constitutional liability and individuals. Research methods in this work are based on historical events analysis.
Highlights
Sovereignty establishment in Kyrgyzstan was initiated by constitutional legislation of Soviet Kyrgyzstan based on significant development and within the framework of the Soviet constitutional legislation as its component
The legal basis of local self-government in the sovereign Kyrgyz Republic is implemented by the following laws and by-law acts: on April 9, 1990, the law “On the general principles of local self-government and the local economy in the USSR” (Electronic Fund Legal and Regulatory Technical Documents, 2021)
On March 4, 1992, the Jogorku Kenesh adopted a new version of the Law “On Local Self-Government and Local Government Administration in the Kyrgyz Republic” (Kyrgyz Republic Ministry of Justice, 2002a)
Summary
The Presidential Decree of January 17, 2001, approved the Provisional Regulation “On Pilot Elections of Heads of Local Self-Government Bodies of Villages and Towns Subordinated to the Districts of the Republic”. Following this provision, elections of heads of several aiyl okmotu were held. The norms governing these issues are contained in the Law of the Kyrgyz Republic “On access to information held by state bodies and local self-government bodies” of December 28, 2006, No 213, the Government of the Kyrgyz Republic of February 10, 2012, No 85 On approval of the single register (list) of public services provided through structural subdivisions and subordinate institutions”. Kyrgyzstan does not have a basic law regulating the standards and administrative procedures for the provision of municipal including public services
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