Préuves numériques

The Internet and new technologies have an impact on rules of evidence and modes of proof before the courts. A comparative study on this issue (primarily in areas of civil and administrative law proceedings) was undertaken.

As a follow-up action to the study, the CDCJ has prepared draft guidelines aiming at providing practical guidance for the handling of electronic evidence in civil and administrative proceedings to courts and other competent authorities with adjudicative functions; professionals, including legal practitioners; and parties to proceedings. CDCJ approved the text at its 93rd plenary meeting (14-16 November 2018) before submitting it to the Committee of Ministers for adoption. The guidelines on electronic evidence in civil and administrative proceedings were adopted on 30 January 2019.

Now the CDCJ is working to raise awareness of these guidelines and support their implementation in member States.

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Back Seminar on electronic evidence

Supporting the civil justice reforms – strengthening the judicial system in the Republic of Belarus
Seminar on electronic evidence © CoE

Seminar on electronic evidence © CoE

Thirty judges of the Supreme Court of Belarus participated in a seminar on electronic evidence in Minsk (Belarus) on 13 December 2019.

Council of Europe standards on electronic evidence as well as law and practice relating to electronic evidence in Lithuania, France and the United Kingdom were covered during the seminar. Representatives of the Supreme Court of Belarus provided an overview of challenges which the judges face when dealing with electronic evidence that are not explicitly mentioned in the legislation of Belarus as a separate type of evidence.

The event was organised within the framework of the project “Supporting the civil justice reforms – strengthening the judicial system in the Republic of Belarus” under the “European Union/Council of Europe Partnership for Good Governance”.

Minsk, Belarus 13 December 2019
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