Justice Support Foundation

legal paper named as: “Commodification of Justice: Violating the right of Citizens’ to Resort to Justice”

 Justice Support Foundation (JSF) affiliated with the Arab Center for the Independence of the Judiciary and Legal Profession (ACIJLP) issued a legal paper named as: “Commodification of Justice: Violating the right of Citizens’ to Resort to Justice “.The paper addressed the concept of judicial fees and the human rights references of the right to access justice. It also discussed constitutional as well as legal rules for judicial fees.

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Full Judicial Supervision on Presidential Elections Between concept and application

Introduction:

The upcoming presidential election of 2023 is the last electoral process to be conducted under full judicial supervision in accordance with the 2014 Constitution. The new constitution adopted a system of independent management of elections, ten years after its issuance, as a transitional phase ending in mid-January 2024.

Judiciary being responsible for election supervision has been the only solution proposed to confront popular distrust in the elections in Egypt, with widespread fraud in most of the electoral processes, to which people responded with widespread reluctance to exercise their right to vote. Judicial rulings have accumulated to partially invalidate the elections in some circuits, or completely in some other cases. For decades, the Parliament has protected itself from judicial rulings with the rule: “the Council is the master of its own decisions”, since its law gave it the right not to enforce judicial rulings invalidating the membership of representatives whose elections were ruled invalid in their circuits. However, assigning the judiciary to supervise the elections was not easy, and rather surrounded by ambiguity, where the judiciary intervened more than once to set legal controls for that supervision.

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Full Judicial Supervision on Presidential Elections Between concept and application

Full Judicial Supervision on Presidential Elections Between concept and application

The Justice Support foundation affiliated with The Arab Center for the Independence of the Judiciary and Legal Profession (ACIJLP) issued a legal paper addressing “Full Judicial Supervision on Presidential Election between Concept and Application”. The paper approached the upcoming presidential election of 2023, being the last electoral process to be conducted under full judicial supervision in accordance with the 2014 Constitution, while the new constitution adopted an independent management system for elections, ten years after its issuance, as a transitional phase ending in mid-January 2024.

Judiciary being responsible for election supervision has been the only solution proposed to confront popular distrust in elections in Egypt, with widespread fraud cases in most of the electoral processes, to which people responded with a widespread reluctance to exercise their right to vote. Judicial rulings have accumulated to partially invalidate the elections in some circuits, or completely in some other cases. For decades, the Parliament has protected itself from judicial rulings with the rule: “the Council is the Master of Its Own Decisions”.

To read the legal paper, follow the below link:

 Full Judicial Supervision on Presidential Elections Between concept and application

Undermining the independence of the judiciary in EgyptTen years of targeting (2013-2023)

The Justice Support Foundation at the Arab Center for Judicial Independence issued a legal paper that addressed attempts to undermine judicial independence during the past ten years 2013-2023.

The paper reviewed previous attempts to issue a draft law guaranteeing judicial independence in Egypt. The paper also addressed the status of the judiciary in the 2014 Constitution, which included the minimum standards for judicial independence, as it addressed the judicial authority in Articles 185 to 191. It recognized the independence of the judiciary, the autonomy of judges, and their inability to be dismissed. It also stipulated that the Supreme Judicial Council should assume judicial affairs. The constitution did not include the judges’ demand to stop secondment and loan to non-judicial bodies, as this opens the door to interference in judicial affairs.

The paper then reviewed the attempts of the executive authority to control the judiciary, especially the deprivation of the authority to appoint the heads of the supreme courts (the Court of Cassation – the Supreme Administrative Court), especially since the Court of Cassation invalidated mass death sentences for their conflict with the standards of a fair trial, and ruled that police investigations were insufficient as evidence of conviction. On the other hand, the Supreme Administrative Court issued many rulings supporting freedoms, the most important of which was the ruling invalidating the concession of the islands of Tiran and Sanafir.

Also, the appointment of the Public Prosecutor, who heads the Public Prosecution, from the Supreme Judicial Council, so that their appointment is the authority of the President of the Republic.

The paper discussed the state’s issuance of Law 13 of 2017, which granted the President of the Republic the right to appoint the heads of the supreme courts from among the three most senior vice presidents of the court, a law that was widely opposed by judges.

The paper monitored the constitutional amendments of 2019, which changed the nature of the judiciary, as it gave the President of the Republic the authority to appoint the heads of the Supreme Courts from among the seven most senior vice presidents of the court, and stripped the authority to appoint the Public Prosecutor from the Judicial Council, and his appointment became the authority of the President of the Republic from among three candidates.

The constitution also stipulated the formation of an institutional entity, the Supreme Judicial Council, which brings together the judicial bodies and authorities, and is headed by the President of the Republic, and this entity has broad powers that dominate the affairs of the judiciary.

The paper addressed the legal amendments that followed the constitutional amendments to put those amendments into effect, including Law 77 of 2019, which gave the President of the Republic the authority to appoint the heads of the Supreme Courts and the Public Prosecutor.

The paper concluded with recommendations that it deems necessary for the independence of the judiciary in Egypt.

To view the full paper, please open the link upload/Introduction2.pdf

Egyptian Criminal Procedure Law Bill A Violation of Criminal Justice Standards

Introduction:

The government has submitted a draft law to amend the Criminal Procedure Code, which includes making fundamental amendments to the law and adding new provisions that were not present. The government attributed the aim of the draft to several reasons, the most important of which are the constitutional entitlements that require litigation in two degrees, and the protection of witnesses, informants, and victims of crimes, in addition to achieving prompt justice through speedy resolution of cases, in addition to other reasons, including activating the positive role of the criminal judge, and benefiting from the development of communication methods.

The truth is that the current Criminal Procedure Code 150 of 1950 has undergone many amendments over the past decades, and there is an objective necessity to issue a new law, especially after the issuance of the new constitution of 2014. Which included new entitlements that are not present in the current law, the most important of which is litigation in two degrees in felonies, and compensation for pretrial detention. In fact, the delay throughout the past years from 2014 until now represents a flagrant violation of the constitution and the rights it includes for citizens accused. But this does not mean rushing to make amendments that disrupt the stable conditions in litigation or reduce the procedural guarantees for a fair trial.

To view the full paper, please open the link

Egyptian Criminal Procedure Law Bill A Violation of Criminal Justice Standards

Roundtable on the Requirements of Judicial Reform in Egypt (to discuss the proposed amendments to the Criminal Procedure Code) – Cairo, January 10, 2023

  • Mr. Essam El-Islambouli – Constitutional Jurist and Lawyer at the Court of Cassation and the Supreme Constitutional Court
  • Mr. Negad El-Borai – Lawyer at the Court of Cassation and Member of the Board of Trustees of the National Dialogue
  • Mr. Malek Adly, Director of the Egyptian Center for Economic and Social Rights
  • Mr. Nasser Amin – Lawyer and Secretary General of the Arab Center for the Independence of the Judiciary and the Legal Profession and Coordinator of the Arab Coalition of NGOs for the International Criminal Court
  • Ms. Hoda Abdel Wahab – Lawyer at the Court of Cassation and Executive Director of the Arab Center for the Independence of the Judiciary and the Legal Profession and Director of the Justice Support Foundation

Justice Support Foundation affiliated to ACIJLP (The Arab Center for the Independence of the Judiciary and Legal Profession) has organized a round table, Tuesday evening, the 10th of January, 2023, to discuss the amendments to be made to the Egyptian Criminal Procedure Law while concurrently being discussed at the parliament. Thirty people, including members of the National Dialogue Committee, former ministers, members of the Senate, and a number of independent lawyers and workers in civil society institutions, as well as some legal researchers have attended the round table.

Initiating the round table, Mr. Nasser Amin has welcomed the participants and reviewed the draft law of the new Criminal Procedures Law regarding its most important provisions. He explained that the project is being considered in the Parliament since 2017, and that circumstances has been changed a lot since then which demands a new approach in the philosophy and principles of law so that it precisely and strictly balances between the requirements of society’s right and the rights and freedoms of individuals, without overriding each other.


Recommendations Requirements for Judicial Reform in Egypt (Amending Criminal Procedure Law)
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Arab Center for Independence of the Judiciary Law Firm