Justice Reform Tracker[1]
Reform
Area: Judiciary
Independence & Accountability
Last Updated: November 2025
Citizen Impact Summary
Dimension
Snapshot
Source
Who
Is Affected?
Victims of the 2020
Beirut Port explosion, depositors impacted by the 2019 financial meltdown,
and all Lebanese residents denied timely legal recourse due to a paralyzed
judiciary. With the August 2025 passage of the Judicial Independence Law and
signing of the judicial formations decree, judges gained operational
independence, partially restoring citizens’ hope for accountability.
Vulnerable litigants, particularly women, low-income families, and political
dissidents, remain most affected by prior delays.
HRW 2025; Amnesty 2025; World Bank Lebanon - Systematic country
diagnostic, Summer 2024; An‑Nahar 31 July 2025
Financial
Burden?
High: delays in accountability prolong corruption and
undermine fiscal justice.
World Bank Lebanon - Systematic country
diagnostic, Summer 2024
Public
Services?
The judiciary's
historic lack of independence hindered the delivery of justice and eroded
public trust, but passage of the Judicial Independence Law and activation of
judicial formations are expected to improve service delivery and enable
high-profile trials.
World Bank Lebanon - Systematic country
diagnostic, Summer 2024; L’Orient-Le Jour 1 Aug 2025
Mental Health Toll?
Prolonged delays in justice, especially concerning the
Beirut port explosion, have contributed to societal trauma and a sense of
impunity. Recent reforms may begin to
alleviate this public despair if investigations proceed without obstruction.
HRW 2025; Amnesty 2025; L’Orient-Le Jour April
2025
Overview
& Objectives
Goal
Establish a fully
independent, impartial, and effective judiciary that guarantees access to
justice and upholds the rule of law.
Strategic
Importance
Judicial reform is central to rebuilding public trust,
unlocking international financial support (e.g., IMF), and ending impunity
for major crimes including the Beirut Port explosion and financial
corruption. The EU, World Bank and UN have linked reconstruction aid to an
“independent and transparent judiciary.”
Key
Reform Priorities
·
Implement newly enacted
Judicial Independence Law (Aug 2025)
·
Activate judicial
formations and newly appointed Court of Cassation and HJC members.
·
Protection of judicial
investigations from political interference
·
Adoption of law on
administrative courts
·
Digitalization and capacity development of courts
·
Unblock and finalize
Beirut Port explosion investigation.
Reform
Actions & StatusSpecific
Reform Actions & Accountability
Reform Action Required
Current Status
Lead Authority
Implementing Body
Oversight / Supporting Actors
Primary Source
Return
law to Parliament under Article 57 for reconsideration
Pending scheduling
on the parliamentary agenda; no re-vote held by end-November, with
legislative sessions repeatedly disrupted by disputes over the electoral law.
Presidency
N.A.
Parliament
Asharq
Al-Awsat, 2 Oct 2025, on halted sessions due to boycotts.
Rebalance
Council of the Judiciary composition and voting
Council set at 4
elected, 4 ex officio, plus 2 selected by the eight; override of appointment
deadlock requires 7 of 10. Experts urge a majority of elected members and a
lower override threshold.
Parliament
N.A.
Venice Commission,
civil society
Human
Rights Watch, 7 Aug 2025; Nizar Saghieh, 7 Aug 2025
Address
Article 42 authority of Prosecutor General
Law allows the
Prosecutor General at Cassation to order lower prosecutors to halt
proceedings, creating a major risk of interference. Requires amendment or
strict safeguards.
Parliament
N.A.
HRW, legal experts,
Venice Commission
Human
Rights Watch, 7 Aug 2025; Nizar
Saghieh, 7 Aug 2025
Decide
on promulgation or return to Parliament
Judges Club formally
asked the President on 12 Aug 2025 not to publish and to return the law for
proper review. Reporting indicates possible return or a constitutional
challenge if published.
Presidency
N.A.
MPs intending
constitutional review
Judges
Club press conference, 25 Aug 2025; Malak
Aqil, 23 Aug 2025
Enact
law on judicial independence
Adopted 31 July 2025
as a single-article vote without article-by-article debate. Positive elements
on governance, evaluation, expression, and candidacy, but significant flaws
remain.
Parliament, Justice
& Administration Committee
Justice & Admin Committee
Justice Forum, Legal
Forum for Justice, Venice Commission
Human
Rights Watch, 7 Aug 2025; Nizar
Saghieh, 7 Aug 2025
Adopt
internal bylaws and transparency tools mandated by the law
Required by the new law to strengthen governance and
standardize procedures, to be prepared ahead of entry into force on 1 Jan
2026.
HJC
HJC and judicial bodies
Civil society observers
Human
Rights Watch, 7 Aug 2025; Nizar
Saghieh, 7 Aug 2025
Safeguard
judges’ freedom of expression with workable notification
Law affirms freedoms and requires notifying the HJC
President 48 hours before media appearances. Needs a narrow, objective
protocol to avoid chilling effects.
HJC
HJC
Civil society, bar associations
Human
Rights Watch, 7 Aug 2025; Nizar
Saghieh, 7 Aug 2025
Advance administrative courts reform
Remains a priority parallel to the judicial law to ensure
comprehensive justice sector reform.
Parliament
Justice & Admin Committee
Venice Commission
Human
Rights Watch, 7 Aug 2025; Nizar
Saghieh, 7 Aug 2025
Finalize
general judicial appointments / formations
PM Salam signed the full judicial formations decree on 1
Aug 2025 as prepared by the HJC; operationalizes judicial careers and case
allocations.
Council of Ministers
HJC
MoJ
El Nashra 1 August 2025
Restore
quorum at Court of Cassation
April 2025 decree appointed the ten presidents of
Cassation chambers, re-establishing quorum. Draft law introduces an
automatic-enactment clause for future appointments to prevent deadlock.
Court of Cassation
Council of Ministers
Justice Minister, President, Prime Minister
NNA 2 May 2025; Al-Modon 4 May 2025
Finalize
general judicial appointments
Between April and mid-May 2025, the Cabinet appointed 7
members of the Higher Judicial Council (HJC), including prominent presidents
of courts. Two additional members (Judges Rizkallah and Dakroub) were elected
on 15 May by the Court of Cassation. The Council has now reached legal quorum
and will begin partial judicial formations. The 10th and final member is
pending appointment by decree.
HJC
President of the
Republic, Council of Ministers, Court of Cassation
Justice Minister
NNA, 15 May 2025; An-Nahar, 15 May 2025
Adopt
law on administrative courts
Drafting by sub‑committee under Justice & Admin
Committee
Parliament
Justice & Admin Committee
Venice Commission,
Legal Forum for Justice, Justice Forum
Ministerial
Statement, 25 Feb 2025
Operationalize
fair investigation of Beirut Port explosion and political crimes
Legal quorum
restored; with new law and formations, procedural barriers lifted; political
immunities remain the primary obstacle.
Court of Cassation,
General Assembly, Investigative Judges
Ministry of Justice,
Judicial Investigating Unit
UN Human Rights Council, civil society
Ministerial
Statement, 25 Feb 2025; HRW 2025; Amnesty 2025; OJ C, C/2024/4000, 17.7.2024,
ELI: http://data.europa.eu/eli/C/2024/4000/oj
Digitalize
court case management
Not started
Ministry of Justice
MoJ IT Dept.
World Bank, UNDP
World Bank Lebanon - Systematic country
diagnostic, Summer 2024
Reform
HJC appointment process
Draft law with hybrid formula pending secondary
amendments; interim relief achieved through August 2025 formations.
Ministry of Justice
Higher Judicial Council
Parliament, Venice Commission, Lebanese Judges Assoc.
Compilation
of Venice Commission Opinions and Reports concerning Judges, 2025; Legal Agenda, 5–6 May 2025; Coalition for Judicial Independence
Statement, 7 May 2025.
Enforce
anti-corruption measures within judiciary
National
Anti-Corruption Commission established; initial audits commenced.
National Anti-Corruption Commission
Judicial Inspection Authority
UNDP, Transparency International
UNDP 2025
Grant
autonomy to Judicial Inspection Board
Draft enhances independence and broadens nomination
channels (HJC, Council of State, Court of Audit) but leaves procedural-appeal
gaps.
Ministry of Justice
Judicial Inspection Board
Higher Judicial Council
OJ C, C/2024/4000, 17.7.2024, ELI: http://data.europa.eu/eli/C/2024/4000/oj; Legal Agenda, 5–6 May 2025; Venice Commission, June 2022 opinion
Launch
courtroom operations in Roumieh prison
National and regional observers noted reactivation in 2025
and urged expansion; no reverse trend reported in Oct–Nov.
Ministry of Justice
ISF, Judiciary
Beirut Bar Association, civil society
L’Orient-Le
Jour, 21 May 2025; ANND UPR
brief, 23 Oct 2025.
Reform
Roadmap Timeline & Critical PathRecent
Milestone
Date
Description
Critical Path Status
Source
5 Sep
2025
President returned the Judicial Independence Law to
Parliament by Decree 1105 under Article 57 with detailed reasons.
Re-deliberation
required
Presidential
Decree No. 1105, 5 Sep 2025
23 Aug
2025
Reporting indicated potential presidential return or
constitutional challenge if promulgated.
Decision point
Malak Aqil, 23 Aug
2025
12 Aug
2025
Judges Club requested the President not to publish and to
return the law to Parliament.
Pending executive
decision
Judges
Club press conference, 25 Aug 2025
7 Aug
2025
HRW assessed the law as containing positive reforms yet
insufficient to ensure independence, urged amendments in line with Venice
Commission.
Guidance issued
Human
Rights Watch, 7 Aug 2025
1 Aug
2025
PM Salam signed judicial formations decree, completing
full HJC and Cassation appointments.
Completed
El Nashra 1 August 2025
31 July
2025
Parliament adopted the Judicial Independence Law by
single-article procedure, with last-minute insertions and no
article-by-article vote.
L’Orient-Le Jour 1 Aug 2025; Nizar Saghieh, 7 Aug 2025
June
17–18, 2025
Parliamentary committee session on judicial independence
law ends in deadlock; conflict between Justice Minister and committee chair
escalates
Blocked
Parliament Monitoring Observatory, 18 June
2025
June 3,
2025
First trial sessions held in Roumieh courtroom; 20
sessions, 7 verdicts rendered
In progress
MoJ
Press Statement
May 2,
2025
Cabinet approves final draft Law on Judicial Independence; Referral of Judicial Independence
Law from Government to Parliament Pending; Parliament awaits formal
submission from government.
Completed
Legal Agenda, 5–6 May 2025
May 7, 2025
Civil society calls for ratification and further
amendments
In progress
Coalition for Judicial Independence
Statement, 7 May 2025
May 15,
2025
Judges Rizkallah and Dakroub elected unopposed by the
Court of Cassation to the Higher Judicial Council
Completed
NNA, 15 May 2025
Next
Steps – Transparency and Accountability Calendar
Action
Responsible Entity
Target Date
Source
Parliament
to re-deliberate the returned law per Article 57 with line-by-line fixes
specified in Decree 1105
Parliament & Justice & Admin Committee
Q4 2025
Presidential
Decree No. 1105, 5 Sep 2025
Prepare
and publish the internal bylaws and transparency mechanisms required by the
law
HJC
Before 1 Jan 2026
Human
Rights Watch, 7 Aug 2025
Table
amendments to Article 42, Council composition, and 7-of-10 threshold, and
align with Venice Commission
Parliament, Justice & Admin Committee
Before 1 Jan 2026
Human
Rights Watch, 7 Aug 2025; Nizar
Saghieh, 7 Aug 2025
If
published, file targeted constitutional challenge focusing on procedure and
core defects
Concerned MPs
Upon publication
Malak Aqil, 23 Aug
2025
Decide
on publication or return of the law for re-deliberation
President of the Republic
Aug–Sep 2025
Judges
Club press conference, 25 Aug 2025; Malak
Aqil, 23 Aug 2025
Publish
implementing decrees and internal bylaws for Judicial Independence Law
MoJ & HJC
Q3 2025
An‑Nahar 31 July 2025
Expand
in-prison court hearings to other facilities and publish quarterly stats
MoJ & Judiciary
N/A
MoJ
Press Statement
Government
to refer draft Judicial Independence Law to Parliament
Council of Ministers
Q2–Q3 2025
Ministerial
Statement, 25 Feb 2025; Legal Agenda, 5–6 May 2025
Parliament
to begin review of judicial independence law to be finalized and adopted
Justice & Admin Committee; Parliament; Conditional on government submission
Q2–Q3 2025
Legal Agenda, 5–6 May 2025
Incorporate
Venice Commission feedback in final amendments
Justice & Admin Committee; Parliament
Q2–Q3 2025
Legal Agenda, 5–6 May 2025; Coalition for Judicial Independence
Statement, 7 May 2025
Conduct
general judicial reshuffle, including transfers and appointments without delay
Council of Ministers & Higher Judicial Council
Expected Q2 2025,
post-quorum
Ministerial
Statement, 25 Feb 2025; NNA, 15 May 2025
Public
hearings on judicial appointments and oversight roles
Parliament + Civil Society
2025
Coalition for Judicial Independence
Statement, 7 May 2025
Resume
Beirut blast investigation
Investigating Judges, HJC
Immediate
HRW 2025; Amnesty 2025; OJ C, C/2024/4000, 17.7.2024,
ELI: http://data.europa.eu/eli/C/2024/4000/oj
Nominate
final HJC member
Minister of Justice (via President of Republic)
Immediate
NNA, 15 May 2025; An-Nahar, 15 May 2025
Remove
executive barriers delaying Beirut blast investigations
Government of Lebanon
Immediate
Ministerial
Statement, 25 Feb 2025
Digitalize
court processes and case access including publishing feasibility roadmap
for digital case management
Minister of Justice
2025–2026
Ministerial
Statement, 25 Feb 2025
Implementation
Bottlenecks & Required Actions
Bottleneck
Official Explanation
Required Action
Source
Committee
obstruction and institutional conflict
Committee chair rejected government’s endorsed draft,
blocked Justice Minister participation, and reverted to older 2023 version
Reinstate government-endorsed draft on the agenda and
resume participatory review process in line with Article 35 and 38 of
internal regulations
Legal
Agenda, 12 June 2025; Parliament Monitoring Observatory, 18 June
2025
Partial
adherence to Venice Commission recommendations
Cabinet adopted only 1 out of 8 recommendations fully
Parliament to incorporate Venice Commission advice during
review phase
Venice
Commission (2022); Legal Agenda, 5–6 May 2025
Lack of
HJC independence and politicized appointments
Political interference in judiciary persistently blocks
reform
Enact HJC law reforming composition, insulation from
politics
HRW 2025; Amnesty 2025; World Bank Lebanon - Systematic country
diagnostic, Summer 2024
Delays
in judicial appointments and transfers
Administrative backlog and political vetoes
Expedite judicial formations via clear timelines
Ministerial
Statement, 25 Feb 2025
Obstruction of key investigations and stalled port
blast investigation
Legal and
administrative barriers lifted (Cassation quorum restored); Abuse of
immunities and refusal to appear before judiciary; political immunity, legal loopholes
Lift immunities,
permit international inquiry support; enable unimpeded access to judicial
process for lead investigators
Ministerial
Statement, 25 Feb 2025; Kataeb.org, 3 May 2025
Draft judicial laws remain unratified
Delayed legislative action
Parliament to pass laws in line with Venice Commission
advice
Legal Agenda, 5–6 May 2025; Coalition for Judicial Independence
Statement, 7 May 2025
Low digital capacity across courts
Absence of a unified digital platform for case tracking; No digital infrastructure.
Adopt phased rollout of court digitalization
Ministerial
Statement, 25 Feb 2025; World Bank Lebanon – SCD, Summer 2024
Stakeholders
& Roles
Entity
Core Function
Ministry of Justice
Drafts judicial policy, countersigns decrees
Higher Judicial Council
Governs judicial careers & appointments
Court of Cassation
Final civil/criminal appeals; elects HJC members
Parliament
Justice & Admin Committee
Prepares judiciary bills
National
Anti-Corruption Commission
Investigates and prosecutes corruption within public
institutions
Justice Forum (منتدى العدالة)
National participatory platform (launched Feb 2024)
coordinating judicial reform roadmap; includes judiciary, executive,
legislative branches, bar associations, civil society, and academia.
Supported by UNDP and EU.
Legal Forum for Justice (الملتقى
القانوني للعدالة)
Technical legal platform convened by MoJ and Venice
Commission to align draft judicial laws with international standards. Focused
on legislative reviews (e.g., Judicial Independence Law).
Venice
Commission
Technical/legal advisory body (Council of Europe)
Coalition
for Judicial Independence
CSO-led coalition advocating for legal, transparent, and
merit-based reform of the judiciary. Issues alerts and position papers to
track political interference.
Legal
& Policy Framework
Instrument
Status
Key Provisions
Implementation Note
Draft
Law on Judicial Independence
Approved by Cabinet (2 May 2025); pending referral to
Parliament
Introduces merit-based appointments, election of HJC
members, limits on arbitrary transfers, and expanded judges' rights.
Draft reviewed by Legal Forum (MoJ + Venice Commission).
Civil society urges further amendments on financial autonomy, appointment
neutrality, and disciplinary protections.
Venice
Commission Recommendations
Issued
Provides benchmarks for judicial independence, appointment
procedures, structural autonomy, and disciplinary safeguards.
Only one out of eight core recommendations fully
implemented in the current draft. Full alignment pending.
Law on
Beirut Port Blast Investigation
Not passed
Would establish a special tribunal and legal protections
for investigating judges.
Investigations continue to face obstruction due to
political immunities and legal loopholes.
Cabinet
Decree (8 May 2025) appointing 10 Cassation presidents
Enforced
Reinstates quorum at the Court of Cassation by appointing
all 10 Presidents.
Decree signed by President, Prime Minister, and Ministers
of Justice and Finance; unlocks progress on pending high-level cases.
2024
Justice Forum Recommendations
Endorsed
Outlines a national reform roadmap including judicial
independence, expanded judicial representation, procedural justice, and
transparency.
Not codified in law yet. Recommendations were developed
through multi-stakeholder working groups, including civil society, judiciary,
and donors.
EU
Parliament Resolution (2023)
Political support
Demands accountability in the Beirut Port case, structural
independence of the judiciary, and international involvement.
Continues to serve as diplomatic pressure for reform and
anti-impunity efforts.
Official
Sources and Reference Materials
Instrument
Source
Ministerial Statement (25 Feb 2025)
Ministerial
Statement, 25 Feb 2025
Amnesty Intl. Statement on Judicial Reform (Jan 2025)
Amnesty 2025
Human Rights Watch Letter to PM Salam (Jan 2025)
HRW 2025
Situation in Lebanon – European Parliament resolution of
12 July 2023 on the situation in Lebanon (2023/2742(RSP))
OJ C, C/2024/4000, 17.7.2024, ELI: http://data.europa.eu/eli/C/2024/4000/oj
Compilation of Venice Commission Opinions and Reports
concerning Judges, 2025
Compilation
of Venice Commission Opinions and Reports concerning Judges, 2025;
World Bank Lebanon - Systematic Country Diagnostic, Summer
2024
World Bank Lebanon - Systematic country
diagnostic, Summer 2024
List
of Acronyms – Justice Reform Tracker
Acronym
Full Name
HJC
Higher Judicial Council
MoJ
Ministry of Justice
HRW
Human Rights Watch
UNDP
United Nations
Development Programme
EU
European Union
IMF
International Monetary Fund
UN
United Nations
CAS
Central Administration of Statistics
3RF
Reform, Recovery, and Reconstruction Framework
OJ
C
Official Journal of the European Union, Series C
ELI
European Legislation Identifier
Amnesty
Amnesty International
NGO
Non-Governmental Organization
[1] All reform data presented
here is based on official Lebanese government sources, such as laws, decrees,
strategies, and verified public data. Where possible, each update is linked to
a document, gazette entry, or institutional publication.
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