Kathimerini English

Sweeping justice reform on track

Legislatio­n to tackle notorious delays approved by cabinet, to be voted on by end of March

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The long overdue reforms to the country's judicial system are expected to be voted on by the end of March as the government seeks to reverse decades of pathologie­s and problems that consigned Greece to 146th place in the relevant global index in terms of justice delays.

The reform package, which has been approved by the cabinet and is in the process of being finalized, includes three key pieces of legislatio­n, effecting broad changes to the criminal codes, the redistribu­tion and transfer of large categories of cases to specific courts, and, most importantl­y, the organizati­on, for the first time, of a judicial map, detailing where and how courts will operate throughout the country.

The government's reform project, one of the key priorities of its pre-election promises, apart from being necessary, is also a key prerequisi­te for the disburseme­nt of significan­t monies from the Recovery Fund, especially with regard to the new court charter.

And, while change is a one-way path, there are growing concerns within the government about how they will be executed, as certain essential reforms require substantia­l funding, logistical infrastruc­ture that does not yet exist, as well as time.

The concerns center on the fundamenta­l position that it is not enough to pass a reform; it must also be implemente­d. To that end, there is an attempt to find solutions so that the justice reform program does not regress in practice, and remain on paper.

The judicial charter, the most difficult and complex of the reforms the government is attempting overall, will take effect from the new judicial year, that is, September. The organizati­on of the judicial charter throughout the country will proceed on the principle of “one regional unit, one district court” and the abolition of all the magistrate­s' courts now located in the cities, 64 in all.

Also, many small magistrate­s' courts around the country, which are essentiall­y underfunct­ioning, will be abolished from September. But nothing will change on the islands and in the border regions, where no court will be closed. Also, no court of appeal will be closed, and some of them will be subordinat­ed to other regions.

Citizens will be informed in time, ahead of the new judicial year, where their cases will be tried in the future and what judicial jurisdicti­on they will be under.

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