fbpx
Log in

Login to your account

Username *
Password *
Remember Me

Create an account

Fields marked with an asterisk (*) are required.
Name *
Username *
Password *
Verify password *
Email *
Verify email *
Captcha *

New Commercial Court in Lagoa won't open until September

justiceministerThe Minister of Justice braved the Algarve on Tuesday to inaugurate a new Commercial Court in Lagoa, paid for by the Council’s ratepayers in an attempt at least to to get somnething moving in the region's stalled justice system.

The Minister in charge, Francisca van Dunen, visited the converted school building which soon will function as a Court and noted that it wiill start operating in September, to tie in to something called the ‘judicial calendar.’

The new Court is aimed at "issues of economic justice," said Lagoa mayor, Francisco Martins, with a rare insight that belies his tender years.

Lagoa ratepayers unwittinglky have had to shell out 380 thousand euros on this project - for something that should be paid for by central government.

Francisca van Dunen stressed "the joint work and the commitment between the Council and the government," and noted the, "outstanding importance of the Council executive in addressing and identifying local issues."

The Lagoa Court will take its caseload from the massive backlog at the Olhão Commercial Court, also dedicated to ‘economic justice’ and failing to cope.

Whether the minister is aware or even cares abont the appalling delays at Loule Administrative Court is anyone’s guess. With cases being delayed for five years and more before even being called, this single example of Portugal’s ‘don’t really care – no money anyway’ justice system successfully has been airbrushed from public view but remains shamefully inefficient and overloaded.

 

Pin It

Comments  

0 #2 Ed 2019-04-27 09:56
Quoting Peter Booker:
Courts all over the world have notoriously long holidays. You refer, Ed, to the judicial calendar. Are you able to show when the courts work, and when they take holidays?


Sure, with slackness like this, its no wonder the system has failed:

All Saints 28.10.2019 > 03.11.2019
Christmas 23.12.2019 > 12.01.2020
Carnival 17.02.2020 > 23.02.2020
Easter 06.04.2020 > 19.04.2020
Ascension 18.05.2020 > 24.05.202

and the big SIX WEEK SUMMER BREAK where the courts shut for 32 working days

Summertime 16.07.2020 > 31.08.2020
+1 #1 Peter Booker 2019-04-27 08:38
Courts all over the world have notoriously long holidays. You refer, Ed, to the judicial calendar. Are you able to show when the courts work, and when they take holidays?

You must be a registered user to make comments.
Please register here to post your comments.