Friday, December 14, 2007

Restoring rule of law in Afghanistan

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The University of Utah's law mental faculty will assist reconstruct the regulation of law in war-ravaged Islamic State Of Afghanistan under an enterprise to convey public prosecutors to the S.J. Quinney College of Law for training. On Thursday in Washington, D.C., Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice announced the formal launch of a programme called the Public-Private Partnership for Justice Reform in Afghanistan, an attempt that encompasses the U.'s participation. This bigger attempt is designed to reconstruct judicial substructure that was dismantled during the five old age of Taliban misgovernment that came to an end with the 2001 U.S.-led invasion. "We are asking American law houses and law schools to assist the Afghani judicial system in a assortment of ways. By providing lawyer-to-lawyer support through this Public-Private Partnership, we trust to convey Afghani practicians into the bigger international community of legal professionals," said Rice at Thursday's State Department assemblage that included Afghani Lawyer General Abdul Jabar Sabit and U. law school dean Hiram Chodosh. "This is an exciting minute for the law school," Chodosh said. "We are increasingly known for having assembled an unparalleled degree of expertness with an ability to ran into this sort of challenge."
In the program's first year, 15 key Afghani public prosecutors will come up to Beehive State for three to four hebdomads of intensive preparation this summer. "The long-term Advertisement

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