ALGIERS -The Ministry of Justice will soon begin the preparation of two bills relating to the protection of personal data and the use of DNA fingerprinting, Minister of Justice Tayeb Louh announced Thursday in Algiers.
The pulic authorities will operate a reform in the criminal court and the ministry prepares a bill on the protection of personal data as well as a bill on the use of DNA fingerprinting, the Minister said on the occasion of the graduation ceremony of the 23rd promotion of student magistrates at the Supreme Court.
This is part of "strengthening, consolidate and preserve the judiciary to protect the rights, freedoms, public and private property, security and stability and the building of trust and tranquility in society (...)."
"The preservation of social cohesion and protection of citizens against any threat to its security and stability" are the cause of opening other sites able to consolidate achievements and deepen reforms," added Louh.
The revision of certain laws, including those related to integration and tracking methods aims to "improve the working prosecutors, strengthen the right of defense and consolidate the principle of the presumption of innocence to strengthen the protection of rights and freedoms."
For the minister, the aspect relating to the modernization of Justice will experience the expansion of remote trial system, the use of videoconferencing and extension of signing electronic documents issued by the court in order to improve the "quality of services for the benefit of the citizen and the litigant."
A national conference will be organized in the second quarter of 2016 on reforms in the sector of Justice and the assessment of "achievements made" under the President of the Republic's program.
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