CJ commits to champion environmental sustainability in Justice System


Chief Justice, Martha Koome, has expressed her commitment to conduct civil and criminal justice reforms that support green justice, to ensure laws and legal practices actively promote environmental sustainability.

‘At the grassroots level, we will upscale greening interventions through Court Users Committees (CUCs), bringing environmentally conscious practices, closer to the communities we serve’, said Justice Koome.

The CJ also committed to advocate for environmental sustainability in the Kenyan justice sector through upholding the rule of law, protecting rights, ensuring sustainable development and promoting ecological sustainability.

Koome who was speaking, Wednesday, during the launch of ‘a Strategic Guiding Framework for Greening Kenya’s Justice System and Dissemination of Research Findings, covering theories, frameworks, elements and practice imperatives for greening the Justice System, held at a Nairobi hotel.

She said the quest for justice is intertwined and inseparable from environmental sustain
ability and the justice sector should lead by example and be the pacesetters to be emulated by other sectors.

The Strategy provides specific recommendations for National Council on Administration of Justice agencies, covering upscaling green investigations and arrests, enhancing green prosecution, institutionalizing environmental safeguards to resolve cases within courts, greening sentencing practices, greening correctional services, promoting green legal empowerment and embedding a human rights approach in each greening element.

It also requires justice actors to implement reforms and interventions to enhance the administration and access to justice for vulnerable and marginalized persons, particularly those disproportionately affected by climate change among them children, women, survivors of gender-based violence, and youth.

‘Through this Strategic Guiding Framework, we are affirming our renewed commitment towards integrating environmental sustainability into the functioning of our justice institutions,
‘ said CJ Koome.

She acknowledged that the justice system has in the past not been fully conscious of the environmental impact of its operations and assured that it will now embed sustainability within the justice system which she noted requires a renewed commitment to change and a concerted effort towards efficient and effective administration of justice.

‘The push for a greener justice system requires relentless efforts as it is about reorienting our practices to ensure we have a livable planet for the future generations. Agencies and stakeholders in the Kenyan justice sector are committed to ensuring that we promote the goal of environmental sustainability,’ said the CJ.

She added that the Strategic Guiding Framework calls for agencies within the justice system to integrate green practices into their core and operational functions.

Others who addressed the forum are Cabinet Secretary Ministry of Environment, Climate Change and Forestry, Aden Duale, Mr. Renson Mulele Ingonga, Vice Chairperson of the NCA
J and Director of Public Prosecutions and PS Correctional Services, Ms. Salome Beacco, among others.

Source: Kenya News Agency