Judiciary of Angola

The Judiciary of Angola is defined by the Constitution of Angola, which outlines the structure of a Unified Justice System (Sistema Unificado de Justica). The courts are intended to be independent sovereign bodies administering impartial justice on behalf of the people. Their duty is to guarantee and ensure compliance with the Constitutional and other laws in force, to protect the rights and interests of citizens and institutions and to decide on the legality of administrative acts.[1]

At the lowest level the system involves Municipal Courts, trial courts whose judges are usually laymen. Appeals in civil matters are heard by the Provincial Court and in criminal matters by the Supreme Court.

Provincial Courts administered by the Ministry of Justice and located in each of the 18 provincial capitals (two in Benguela Province) ae trial courts whose judges are nominated by the Supreme Court. Judges of the Provincial Courts, along with two laymen, act as a jury.

The Supreme Court (Tribunal Supremo), founded in 1985 and based in Luanda, hears appeals from the lower courts. It is divided into three chambers, namely the Criminal, Civil and Administration and Working Chambers and is composed of the President of the court, a vice-President and 16 judges, all appointed by the President of Angola. The President of the Supreme Court is known as the Chief Justice.

A Constitutional Court was founded in 2008 to act as the guardian of the Constitution. It is composed of 11 judges, four appointed by the President, four by the National Assembly, two by the Superior Council of the Judiciary, and one by the public.[2]

Other specialised courts are the Supreme Military Court (Supremo Tribunal Militar) and the Auditing Court (Tribunal de Contas).

List of Chief Justices

Incumbent Tenure Notes
Took office Left office
João Felizado Muvimba 1990 1997 First Chief Justice
Cristiano André 1997 2004
Manuel Miguel da Costa Aragão 2004 incumbent
gollark: Not particularly; our societies just don't accept randomly murdering people now.
gollark: Different cultural contexts?
gollark: Quite possibly.
gollark: I don't know. You postulated that long term memory had, so maybe.
gollark: Your undercooked pork example, as I said, does not work now because we can cook things.

References

  1. "Republic of Angola - Legal System and Research". Hauser Global Law. Retrieved 27 February 2016.
  2. "Tribunal Constitucional de Angola - Tribunal". www.tribunalconstitucional.ao (in Portuguese). Retrieved 2017-07-10.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.