Egypt Country Profile

Judicial System

Individual Corruption

The constitution stipulates equal access to the judicial system regardless of ethnic or racial origin. The judicial system usually functions well, although incidents of corruption have been reported. There are cases where judges have accepted bribes from defendants in exchange for lenient sentences or acquittals. Moreover, according to Global Integrity 2008, bribery, favouritism and informal relationships affect the implementation of judicial decisions.

Business Corruption

The government is reportedly planning to establish special economic courts to rapidly settle commercial disputes. Currently, however, companies wishing to enforce commercial contracts or seeking to resolve disputes face a costly and time-consuming process. Both the average cost and the time required to resolve a dispute are higher than in other countries in the region. According to the Heritage Foundation 2010, it takes an average of 6 years to decide commercial cases and appealing procedures can extend the cases above 15 years. On the other hand, the Heritage Foundation 2010 reports that local contractual arrangements are mostly secure.

Political Corruption

According to Global Integrity 2008, the Military Court, the Supreme State Security Court and the Political Parties Court are not judicially reviewed. Reportedly, the President uses the military courts, in particular, for political purposes. In April 2008, the military courts tried and convicted 25 civilians, all leading members of the opposition, the Muslim Brotherhood.

The independence of judges is guaranteed by the constitution, but this has generally not been respected by the government, especially in politically charged cases. According to the Transparency International Global Corruption Report 2007, both the Chairman of the Supreme Judicial Council, who oversees the functioning of the judicial system, and the General Prosecutor are appointed by the government. This situation hinders independent investigation into corruption within government ranks. Reportedly, the Ministry of Justice rewards loyal judges with generous bonuses. However, although the executive tries to influence the judiciary, the higher echelons of this sector have occasionally ruled against the government, while nearly 7,000 out of Egypt's 9,000 judges conducted a sit-in in spring 2006, advocating for independence and judicial reform. The campaign was led by the Judges' Club, a professional union that fights for judicial independence.

The executive wields significantly more over the lower levels of the judiciary because of the low salaries and selective bonuses found at these levels. The absence of lifetime tenure and other institutional guarantees of independence is a major problem.

Frequency

The World Bank & IFC: Doing Business 2010:
- Enforcing commercial contracts requires 42 procedures, taking an average of 1,010 days and costing 26% of the claim.

World Economic Forum: The Global Competitiveness Report 2009-2010:
- When business executives are asked to what extent the judiciary is independent from influence of members of government, citizens or firms, Egypt gets a score of 3.9 (1 being 'heavily influenced' and 7 'entirely independent').

- Business executives give the efficiency of the legal framework for private companies to settle disputes and to challenge the legality of government actions and/or regulations a score of 4.3 and 3.7 respectively on a 7-point scale (1 being 'extremely inefficient' and 7 'highly efficient').

Transparency International: Bribe Payers Index 2008:
- Business executives give the judiciary a score of 2 on a 5-point scale (1 being 'not at all corrupt' and 5 'extremely corrupt').