Administrative Implementation Court in Riyadh was inaugurated on Monday at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Riyadh

23 Jan 2024

News
Administrative Implementation Court in Riyadh was inaugurated on Monday at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Riyadh

The Administrative Implementation Court was opened in Riyadh on Monday by Dr. Khalid Al-Yousef, the head of the Administrative Judicial Council and president of the Board of Grievances. The event took place at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Riyadh, and several ministries and officials of the judiciary were in attendance.

The Kingdom's first administrative judicial enforcement court would have the authority to uphold court rulings made even against ministries and government organisations. Numerous interactive and visual parts of the programme went over the specifics of launching the first court and bringing the Implementation Law to the Board of Grievances.

A digital exhibition, a series of creative awareness-raising techniques to explain the nature of the administrative judiciary, the Implementation Law, its digital platforms and services, and an assessment of the Board of Grievances' goals to leverage artificial intelligence software and emerging technologies to support its operations and enhance and expedite its outputs were also included.

The Implementation Law, according to Dr. Al-Yousef, guarantees judicial security and helps to support the components of the investment environment, social and tourism development, and the means of attracting these sectors. It also activates on judicial rulings and administrative documents.

According to Dr. Al-Yousef, the Implementation Law before the Board of Grievances serves as a testament to the astute leadership's direction and its eagerness to codify its laws and modernise the judicial systems in order to protect the welfare and well-being of the Kingdom's population.

He said that the Enforcement Law in front of the Board of Grievances gives the Board of Grievances the authority to enforce the law's norms and procedures against administrative entities using force. These included fines for infractions including not putting the verdict into effect and abusing power or influence to stop it from being put into effect. Penalties included jail time, fines, and classification as serious offences including corruption that called for the arrest of the perpetrators.

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