Former commissioner for publicly important information attorney Rodoljub Sabic said on Feb. 18 that it was telling that two months after launching an investigation the authorities had nothing to show with regard to the wiretapping of Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic.
Sabic told BETA that the Interior Ministry's working group had finished its job and handed all of the material that it had gathered to the Prosecutor's Office for Organized Crime.
"The Prosecutor has an obligation to be more quicker than previously in shedding light on numerous 'vague' circumstances and give the public the information that it, without any doubt, has a right to know," he said.
Asked by BETA why after more than two months the prosecutor's office had not informed the public on why or who wiretapped the president of the country's conversations, Sabic replied that the public had a right to know how this "illegal wiretapping" was carried out allegedly for the purpose of preparing a "coup."
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