Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
1. By sentencing to death penalty, the society hoped to recompense the bereaved victim. Fetha Negest provided: [17] They shall be put (to death) in the place they sinned, so that they may serve as a lesson to others who desire to be (involved) in this deed, and so that the relatives of the person murdered may be pleased. [17] 2.
The Ethiopian Criminal Code is the criminal code of Ethiopia. Stemmed from the 1957 Penal Code of the Ethiopian Empire, the FDRE regime repealed both the Ethiopian Empire and the Derg revised Proclamation in 1982 from 9 May 2005 and has 865 Articles. Furthermore, the Code obligated to ensure order, peace and security of the country, its people ...
Canon iR-ADV 4225 PDF: Conversion program: Adobe PSL 1.2e for Canon; modified using iText® 5.5.9 ©2000-2015 iText Group NV (AGPL-version) Encrypted: no: Page size: 612 x 792 pts (letter) Version of PDF format: 1.4
The Ethiopian Federal Prison Commission (Amharic: የኢትዮጵያ ፈድራል እስር ቤት ኮሚሽን, EFP) is the Ethiopian Federal Police subordinate authority that is responsible for the custody, reformation, and rehabilitation of prisoners in Ethiopia as well as implementing judicial decision.
They bureaus similar powers and function to MoJ. The Head of a State Justice Bureau has similar powers with the Federal Minister of Justice. [1]The Ethiopian judicial system consists of dual judicial system, [2] [3] [4] state legislature, [5] state council [6] and state Police and Prison Commissions. [3]
The authority of these laws stem from traditional and local customs, evolved from traditional elder councils, which do not have legal authority. However, they can still carry out moral duty and observed in rural areas of Ethiopia such as Shemagelle in Amhara, the Bayito and Abo Gereb in Tigray, the Luba Basa in Oromia. [24]
The Federal Supreme Court of Ethiopia was created by the 1995 constitution. [2] The constitution was able to successfully establish a dual court system. [4] In the constitution, the Federal Supreme Court was given "supreme federal judicial authority". [2] Over federal issues and matters, the Federal Supreme Court is given the final word. [8]
The Federal High Court of Ethiopia (Amharic: የፌድራል ከፍተኛ ፍርድ ቤት) is the second-level court division in Ethiopia. The FDRE Constitution delegates judicial jurisdiction to the Federal High Court, along with the First Instance and State Courts. It has its headquarters in Addis Ababa's Lideta district. [3]