The main partners and beneficiaries Ukrainian Parliament, Ministry of Justice of Ukraine (MoJ); Supreme Court (SC), Office of the Prosecutor General of Ukraine (GPO), National School of Justice (NSJ), National Academy of Prosecutors of Ukraine (NAPU). Other partners: Council of Public Prosecutors (CPP), Qualification and Disciplinary Commission of Prosecutors of Ukraine (QDCP), Office of the President of Ukraine; Ministry of Interior/National Police, State Bureau of Investigations (SBI), Coordination Center for the Legal Aid Provision (CCLAP), National Bar Association (NBA), and human rights NGOs.

The main aim is to ensure effective functioning of the criminal justice system in Ukraine aligned with European human rights standards with a large focus on practical implementation of reforms in the criminal justice area, specifically with regard to the following components:

Criminal justice legislation and practice comply with the CoE standards and best practices (outcome/objective 1);

Consolidation of independence, effectiveness and transparency of the public prosecution service (outcome/objective 2).

The following results are expected:

To ensure legislation and/or internal regulations in place address CoE recommendations enabling the effective implementation of regulatory framework;

To consolidate professional and operational capacities of criminal justice actors to enable the implementation of legislation in line with CoE standards and best practices;

To promote institutional independence of the prosecution service and individual procedural autonomy of prosecutors;

To facilitate institutional and operational efficiency and professionalism of the prosecution service, with focus on its new self-governance and qualification/disciplinary bodies;

To enhance awareness of prosecutorial community and public on the PPS reforms developments.

Project information

  • Duration: 30 months (Phase I: July 2019 – December 2020; Phase II: January - December 2021)
  • Place/ country: Ukraine
  • Budget: Phase I: 1 000 000 €; Total estimated: 2 000 000 €
  • Funding: Action Plan level funding

Project documentation

Publications / Expert opinions / reviews

PROJECT NEWS

Back Roundtable discussions on the admissibility of open-source information and electronic evidence in criminal proceedings

Roundtable discussions on the admissibility of open-source information and electronic evidence in criminal proceedings

On 2 June 2022, the Council of Europe, in cooperation with the Supreme Court, the Office of the Prosecutor General, and the Prosecutor’s Training Centre of Ukraine organised an online roundtable on the admissibility of open-source information and electronic evidence in the national criminal proceedings concerning gross human rights violations resulting from the Russian aggression against Ukraine. The event brought together all key national criminal justice actors who work with open-source electronic evidence during investigation and prosecution of the gross human rights violations, including judges of the Criminal Court of Cassation of the Supreme Court and courts of general jurisdiction, prosecutors of the War Crimes Department of the Office of the Prosecutor General and regional prosecutor’s offices, representatives of the Prosecutors’ Training Centre of Ukraine, the National Police of Ukraine, the Security Service of Ukraine, international and national experts. The participants discussed the national legal framework and practice as well as the applicable international standards and best practices regarding open-source information and electronic evidence.

The roundtable was organised within the framework of the Council of Europe Project “Human Rights Compliant Criminal Justice System in Ukraine,” which is part of the Council of Europe Action Plan for Ukraine 2018-2022, in cooperation with the Council of Europe Cybercrime Programme Office.

Kyiv, Ukraine 3 June 2022
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