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تصویر بندانگشتی

Ministry of Justice: No Decree for Establishing a Constitution Received Yet

The Ministry of Justice said that they have not yet received a decree from the leader of the Islamic Emirate to establish a constitution.

Abdul Karim Haidar, the Deputy Minister of Justice, said in a program reporting the one-year performance of government departments that after the re-establishment of the Islamic Emirate, they have worked on subsidiary laws and that the constitution is a major issue.

Haidar said: "The constitution is not an ordinary matter for the Ministry of Justice; it requires a decree from Amir al-Mu'minin, and until now, the Ministry of Justice is occupied with subsidiary laws and nothing has been said to us about the constitution."

At the same time, Sayed Habib-ul-Habib, the head of finance and administration of the Ministry of Justice, said in this program that in the past year, they have drafted and revised over a hundred documents including charters, decrees, orders, regulations, statutes, procedures, and bylaws.

He reported that in the past year, they have managed to identify and reclaim from land-grabbers nearly 44,000 acres of land, houses, shops, clinics, and other properties that were state-owned.

The head of finance and administration of the Ministry of Justice said: "To defend the public properties of the government, movable and immovable assets, 7,928 cases have been resolved, and through the government's cases, 43,945.66 acres of land, twenty-three houses, twenty-five shops, one clinic, two inns, and one water reservoir have been liberated."

Meanwhile, the head of litigation of the Ministry of Justice stressed that the land-grab cases of Hindu citizens have also been handed over from the Commission for Prevention of Land Usurpation to the courts.

Ehsanullah Wasiq, the general director of legal affairs of the Ministry of Justice, said: "The issue of Hindu citizens has currently been separated from the Commission for Prevention of Land Usurpation and handed over to the country's courts for processing."

Officials of this ministry also said that in the past year they have evaluated the activities of more than four hundred aid organizations, issued permits for petition writing to more than two thousand people, and distributed activity permits to nearly 1,600 defense lawyers.

The technical deputy of the Ministry of Finance said that forty-seven laws have been sent to Kandahar for endorsement.

Ministry of Justice: No Decree for Establishing a Constitution Received Yet

The land-grab cases of Hindu citizens have also been handed over from the Commission for Prevention of Land Usurpation to the courts.

تصویر بندانگشتی

The Ministry of Justice said that they have not yet received a decree from the leader of the Islamic Emirate to establish a constitution.

Abdul Karim Haidar, the Deputy Minister of Justice, said in a program reporting the one-year performance of government departments that after the re-establishment of the Islamic Emirate, they have worked on subsidiary laws and that the constitution is a major issue.

Haidar said: "The constitution is not an ordinary matter for the Ministry of Justice; it requires a decree from Amir al-Mu'minin, and until now, the Ministry of Justice is occupied with subsidiary laws and nothing has been said to us about the constitution."

At the same time, Sayed Habib-ul-Habib, the head of finance and administration of the Ministry of Justice, said in this program that in the past year, they have drafted and revised over a hundred documents including charters, decrees, orders, regulations, statutes, procedures, and bylaws.

He reported that in the past year, they have managed to identify and reclaim from land-grabbers nearly 44,000 acres of land, houses, shops, clinics, and other properties that were state-owned.

The head of finance and administration of the Ministry of Justice said: "To defend the public properties of the government, movable and immovable assets, 7,928 cases have been resolved, and through the government's cases, 43,945.66 acres of land, twenty-three houses, twenty-five shops, one clinic, two inns, and one water reservoir have been liberated."

Meanwhile, the head of litigation of the Ministry of Justice stressed that the land-grab cases of Hindu citizens have also been handed over from the Commission for Prevention of Land Usurpation to the courts.

Ehsanullah Wasiq, the general director of legal affairs of the Ministry of Justice, said: "The issue of Hindu citizens has currently been separated from the Commission for Prevention of Land Usurpation and handed over to the country's courts for processing."

Officials of this ministry also said that in the past year they have evaluated the activities of more than four hundred aid organizations, issued permits for petition writing to more than two thousand people, and distributed activity permits to nearly 1,600 defense lawyers.

The technical deputy of the Ministry of Finance said that forty-seven laws have been sent to Kandahar for endorsement.

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