The concern of the judiciary is aimed at guaranteeing that the independence and autonomy of the jurisdiction remains effective as the cornerstone of the constitutional system”. This was stated by the First President of the Supreme Court, Pasquale D’Ascolain the report on the occasion of the inauguration of the Judicial Year in the Supreme Court.
“In a Constitution which has its essential pivot in the principle of substantial equality, the judiciary, which exercises the jurisdictional function so that the law is equal for all, feels that it has fulfilled its duty if the right, every right, has effective protection and not if it is merely declared. Its autonomy and independence are not a privilege, but are prerequisites for the judge to always be impartial”, he added.
“A climate of mutual respect and effective collaboration between institutions must be tenaciously cultivated, which allows the development of a calm and rational dialogue on the future of Justice”. This was stated by the First President of the Supreme Court, Pasquale D’Ascola.
In the presence of the Head of State, Sergio MattarellaInterventions by the Minister of Justice expected, Carlo Nordio and the vice-president of the CSM, Fabio Pinelli.
Present are the presidents of the Chamber and Senate, Lorenzo Fontana and Ignazio La Russa and the president of the Consulta, Giovanni Amoroso and the undersecretary of the Presidency of the Council, Alfredo Mantovano.
“In every judicial office he looks around him with an attentive eye to the phenomena with which he is in contact and which had already been highlighted in the final considerations of last year: the crimes of violence against women with the barbarity of feminicides, the transformation, a source of insecurity and instability, of the world of work, which brings with it the tragic toll of deaths and accidents at work, the plague of suicides in prison”. This was stated by the First President of the Supreme Court, Pasquale D’Ascola, in the report on the occasion of the inauguration of the Judicial Year in the Supreme Court. “Prison and the old and new growing poverty in the population lead to the most inalienable of the fundamental rights of the person, dignity, which is unbearably offended in the citizen unfairly deprived of work, in the abandoned destitute, in the mistreated prisoner, sometimes in the sufferer who has reached the end of his life”, he added.
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