For Immediate Release
Bajram Curri, ALBANIA The Tropoja District Court in northern Albania today presented the first results of the OSCE- and USAID-initiated Justice without delays project, which reveal significant improvements to the efficiency of the trial sessions.
A year into this project, the Court reduced the number of non-productive sessions from 40 to 8 percent in civil disputes, and from 38 to 23 percent in criminal cases. Such results were achieved thanks to an active case management-approach by judges and court staff, despite infrastructural constraints, and without any amendments to the law or additional equipment and budget.
“Citizens deserve an efficient, independent and trustful court system, which guarantees correct and timely justice,” the Head of the OSCE Presence in Albania Florian Raunig, said at the event, which brought together Albanian senior officials, judges, prosecutors and lawyers. Addressing the participants were also General Prosecutor Adriatik Llalla, Tropoja Court Chair Artan Hajredinaj, and USAID director for Albania Marcus Johnson.
Justice without delays first started as a pilot project in Kruja court in February 2014, and was soon after embraced by courts in Korça, Puka and Tropoja. The OSCEPresence in Albania and the USAID’s Albanian Justice Sector Strengthening Project (JuST) developed this project after a study conducted by the Presence showed that almost half of the sessions in Albanian courts were non-productive – no argument was put forward, no documents circulated, no evidence taken and no requests made. The project received the strong support of the High Council of Justice and the Ministry of Justice.
The OSCE Presence and USAID look forward to assisting other courts throughout Albania to integrate active case management techniques in their operations, to ensure justice without delays for all citizens.
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