Categories: News

Verkhovna Rada passes the law on The High Council of Justice

The legislation No.5068 got a go-ahead  by 259 votes  bringing updates for election (appointment) of High Court of Justice  (HCJ) members and activities of disciplinary inspectors of HCJ. The policy was put forward by Volodymyr Zelensky who earlier called for it urgent adoption.

The law is seen as part of big overhaul of the judiciary system and aims to ensure that candidates seeking  HCJ positions  meet ‘criteria of professional ethics and integrity’, which will help ‘increase public trust to judicial bodies and judiciary system of Ukraine’.

Верховна Рада 14 липня 2021Верховна Рада 14 липня 2021

New law on High Council of Justice. Key takeaways

The High Council of Justice is a powerful judicial establishment that claims a right to appoint, dismiss, punish, and persecute judges. The new law amends several key procedures of HCJ functioning.

Establishment  of  Ethics Council

It will include six, active and retired, judges appointed by the Council of Judges and three appointed by international organizations with experience of working with Ukraine on anti-corruption and judicial reform issues.

Vetting procedure

HCJ current members and new candidates are set to be ‘vetted’ by Ethics Council

Tighter eligibility criteria

To be eligible for the election (appointment) to the High Council of Justice, a candidate must be a citizen of Ukraine who has attained the age of thirty five, has command of the state language, has a university degree in law and not less than fifteen years of working experience in the area of law, belongs to the legal profession and meets the criteria of political neutrality.

Introduction of Inspectorate Service of the High Council of Justice

Its inspectors will be tasked with preliminary assessment of HCJ members’ competence, disciplinary cases, collecting information, drafting  proposals and decisions.

The updated law drew criticism of MPs from different parties. The ‘European Solidarity’ MP Ruslan Knyazevych argued that by disbanding the patronage service of disciplinary inspectors the law ‘deprives  HCJ members of an opportunity to look into appeals to hold judges and prosecutors accountable’. With appeals coming through the Secretariat of High Council of Justice,  HCJ members will  have only ‘ceremonial duties’ being unable to investigate cases beyond that, said Knyazevych.

‘Batkivshchyna’ MPs claimed that the new policy will allow the government to ‘exercise control over the judiciary system in a manual mode’.

 

 

 

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