According to a statement released by the Civil House of the President of the Republic, “it is necessary to revive the work of reforming Justice and Law, within the scope of State reform”.
For this reason, the head of state formed the Justice and Law Reform Commission (CRJD), which will be coordinated by Francisco de Queiroz and integrate three full professors from the Agostinho Neto University, in Luanda.
The note adds that this body will also have representation from the Constitutional, Supreme and Audit Courts, the Civil House of the President of the Republic, the Attorney General's Office and the Bar Association.
This commission will be responsible for monitoring the “implementation process of the new judicial organization, ensuring and facilitating the articulation of the various sectoral programs”, and for giving “continuity and elaborating the process of elaborating the legal diplomas linked” to the reform of this system.
The CRJD will also have to propose “the relevant changes for the implementation of the training model and continuous improvement of judicial operators” and “guarantee the harmonization of the reform of Justice and Law”.