ArabianBusiness.com - Middle East Business News
Sunday, 22 November 2009 08:48 UAE time

YOUR DIRECTORY /

| Share |

Legal shake-up to revolutionise Saudi justice

by Andrew Hammond on Wednesday, 03 October 2007

A royal decree this week reorganising the Saudi legal system is set to revolutionise Saudi justice, improving human rights and the business environment in the conservative Islamic state, experts say.

Commentators have long said the legal system, established decades ago when the desert country was largely closed to the outside world, was ill-equipped to deal with the modern world.

Judges are trained in Islamic law, lack specialisation in modern legal areas and have wide discretion to issue verdicts in the absence of codified law. Defendants lack recourse to appeal or even rights to proper legal representation.

Story continues below
advertisement

Much of that will change with reforms outlined on Monday in a decree by King Abdullah that sets aside seven billion riyals ($1.87 billion) to build new court houses and train judges.

The decree sets up two Supreme Courts for the general courts and administrative courts which each are the final recourse after courts of first instance and appeals courts, said Hassan Al-Mulla, who heads Saudi Arabia's nascent Bar Association.

"The Supreme Courts are both new. In the normal use of wording, they are courts of cassation," he said.

They replace the Supreme Judicial Council, headed by hardline cleric Saleh Al-Lohaidan, which will now only review administrative issues like judges' salaries and appointees.

Al-Mulla said the decree also sets up specialised court circuits within the general court system for commercial, labour and personal status cases - a move which has been expected since Saudi Arabia joined the World Trade Organisation (WTO) in 2005.

Labour disputes were previously dealt with through ministerial tribunals and the legal system did not allow for internationally-recognised processes of appeal.

"Anything which helps to clarify and codify the application of law in Saudi Arabia is positive and welcome," said Bernard Savage, the EU representative in Riyadh.

"It goes in the general direction of improving how easy it is to do business and how well reforms are going."

Currently only some commercial law is codified, but commentator Zoheir Al-Harithy, who works with the official Human Rights Commission, said the government was due soon to finish a major project to codify Islamic law and create a penal code.

He said the 7 billion riyals set aside for the reforms showed the government was serious about implementation and that judges are already involved in preparatory training. The government has not said how long implementation could take.

"This is a major turning point in the Saudi criminal justice system. There are more guarantees for offenders and it creates specialisation [of courts]," Harithy said. "We've been asking for this, and now it's been done."

The reforms could mean a reduction in the influence of clerics of Saudi Arabia's hardline Wahhabi Islam in the legal system. At present all judges are graduates of Islamic law colleges, but the reforms imply a need for new types of training. - Reuters

| Share |


READERS' COMMENTS

Disclaimer: The views expressed here by our readers are not necessarily shared by ArabianBusiness.com or its employees.

Click here to post a comment


Add your Comment
All posts are sent to the administrator for review and are published only after approval. ArabianBusiness.com reserves the right to remove any comment at any time for any reason. Please keep your responses appropriate and on topic.
Arabian Business would like to point out that only comments relevant to the story will be published. Any containing personal insults or inappropriate language will not be approved.
Name *
Remember me on this computer
Email *
(Your email address will not be published)
City
Country
Subject *
Comment *
Notify me of further comments


Please click post only once - your comment will not be published immediately.


MORE FROM ARABIANBUSINESS.COM

SHARE PRICE CHECK

 EMAIL ALERTS

  1. Politics & Economics


Tell us your story

READER COMMENTS

  1. UAE announces Eid and National Day holidays 03
    21 Nov ' 09 at 21:55
    For all the weepers out there,have a lollipop it will cheer you up,since you all are acting like a kid, praying for holidays,   More  »
  2. The Roubini Vs Rogers debate 02
    22 Nov ' 09 at 06:30
    What's not to understand.It's 1930s Hoover-Roosevelt liquidation.Are you really naive enough to believe that Andrew Mellon's...   More  »
  3. RTA to lease last batch of retail outlets on Red Line 02
    21 Nov ' 09 at 22:46
    Raj, actually they withdraw their bid, 5 weeks before 09/09/09, and have been sold out to Bakemart...just a month ago...   More  »

Read all user comments >

Gitex 2009

MORE FROM ARABIANBUSINESS.COM