Ministry of Justice (Qatar)

The Ministry of Justice of Qatar is responsible for the following duties:[1]

  • Supervising the practice of law in Qatar
  • Defending the federal government in cases that are filed against it
  • Overseeing the registration of legal processes
  • Reviewing contracts undertaken by other governmental bodies
  • Increasing awareness of the law, providing legal training for government employees, and monitoring any law-related professions

List of ministers (Post-1971 upon achieving independence)

  • 'Abd al-Rahman ibn Sa'ud al-Thani[2][3][4] (1971-1975)*
  • Ahmad bin Sayf Al Thani[5] (1989-1994)
  • Nayib Muhammad al-Nuaymi[6] (1995-1997)
  • Ahmad bin Muhammad Ali al-Subayi[7] (1997-1999) [Acting]
  • Hasan bin Abdallah al-Ghanim[8] (2000-2012)
  • Hassan Lahdan Saqr Al Mohannadi[1] (2013–present)

*The ministry post appears to have been vacant from 1975-1989, based on various sources.

gollark: And a quota for "10 tons of nails", so they made a single 10-ton nail.
gollark: There were things with Soviet truck depots driving trucks in circles pointlessly because they had a quota of "40000 miles driven".
gollark: If your factory is told to make 100K units of winter clothing of any kind they will probably just go for the simplest/easiest one, even if it isn't very useful to have 100K winter coats (extra small) (plain white). Now, you could say "but in capitalism they'll just make the cheapest one", but companies are directly subservient to what consumers actually want and can't get away with that.
gollark: That is why we have the "legal system"./
gollark: With a government.

See also

References

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