On May 26, 2011, in the exercise of obligatory preliminary review the Constitutional Court of the Republic of Belarus considered the constitutionality of the following laws adopted by the House of Representatives and approved by the Council of the Republic of the National Assembly of the Republic of Belarus:
"On Making Addenda and Alterations to the Law of the Republic of Belarus "On State Registration of Real Estate, Rights To It and Transactions With It" (a reporting judge Valentina V. Podgrusha);
"On Making Addenda to the Law of the Republic of Belarus "On State Awards of the Republic of Belarus "(a reporting judge Vladimir P. Isotko);
"On Making Alterations to Certain Laws of the Republic of Belarus" (a reporting judge Alexander V. Maryskin);
"On Making Alterations to Certain Laws of the Republic of Belarus" (a reporting judge Stanislav E. Danilyuk);
"On Ratification of the Protocol Between the Government of the Republic of Belarus and the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine on Making Alterations and Addenda to the Agreement between the Government of the Republic of Belarus and the Government of Ukraine on the Employment and Social Protection of the Citizens of the Republic of Belarus and Ukraine, Working Outside Their Countries" (a reporting judge Sergei P. Chigrinov);
"On Ratification of the Agreement on the Establishment, Operation and Development of an Integrated Information System of Foreign and Mutual Trade of the Customs Union" (a reporting judge Stanislav E. Danyluk);
"On Ratification of the Agreement on the Application of Information Technologies in the Exchange of Electronic Documents in the Foreign and Mutual Trade in the Common Customs Territory of the Customs Union" (a reporting judge Tadeush V. Voronovich);
"On Ratification of the Agreement between the Government of the Republic of Belarus and the Eurasian Development Bank on the Conditions of Residence of the Eurasian Development Bank in the Republic of Belarus" (Judge-Rapporteur Valentina V. Podgrusha).
Based on the results of consideration all the laws were recognised to be conforming to the Constitution of the Republic of Belarus. At the same time the Constitutional Court stated its legal positions aimed to clarify the constitutional and legal meaning of certain provisions of the reviewed laws.