Chief Justice of Pakistan Asif Saeed Khan Khosa on Saturday said establishing model courts, judicial academies, research centers and mechanism of complaint redressal introduced in the police will bring revolution in the judicial system. Speaking at the concluding ceremony of a three-day workshop on gender based violence in collaboration with Asian Development Bank The Chief Justice said the steps taken by the judiciary would help to reduce significantly burden on courts in terms of cases against non-registration of FIRs or police excessive.
This is a silent revolution that is taking place, and it is all because of the hard work of judges, lawyers and other departments involved in justice system," he added. He pointed out that during the last three months the police department itself decided 71,000 complaints of the citizens and redressed their grievances with respect to registration of FIRs.
He further said that the mechanism of complaint redressal introduced in the police had reduced fresh institution of cases in the district judiciary by 11 percent and in all high courts by 20 percent. He said the senior judiciary had fine tuned the system to control possibilities of adjournments and delays in cases.
The CJ said it was first decided that there could be no justice in a court of law unless the testimony or the evidence produced in such courts was based on truth and nothing but the truth. The CJ said the judicial academies in the country initially designed for the training of judges but their scope had been expanded and now these academies have started training investigators, prosecutors and even lawyers," he added.
The art research centers had been established with the appointment of three judges of the Supreme Court and eight civil judges as research officers for the facilitation of judges. The judges even sitting in districts like Dharki or Zhob can get maximum information available in the entire world on a click of a button.