Oviedo (EFE).- The president of the Superior Court of Justice of Asturias, Jesús María Chamorro, has demanded this Wednesday that the regional government resolve “in the short term the pressing situation” in which several judicial districts find themselves “with inefficient facilities ”.
In the presentation of the memory of the Asturian high court regarding 2022, Chamorro has warned that the venues of Cangas del Narcea, Cangas de Onís, Pravia, Lena and Llanes have space problems or are in minimal accessibility conditions or suffer flooding .
For this reason, it has urged the Asturian Government to “develop an infrastructure plan as soon as possible that sets a date and deadline for the different works that must be undertaken in view of the very serious situation that judicial offices have been going through for many years.”
In relation to the Oviedo judicial district, he stressed that he still has no news of the possible unification of the judicial headquarters in Llamaquique despite the fact that the Government announced last September the “imminence” of an agreement with the University and Social Security for the installation of faculties in El Cristo that would allow the grouping of the seven headquarters of the capital.
In this sense, Chamorro has indicated the possibility that some of the faculties be transferred outside of Oviedo to be able to install the new judicial offices there and avoid the “collapse” to which justice is destined in the capital of the Principality.
The president of the TSJA has admitted that his experience tells him that “things have not turned out as they had to turn out”, such as the failed unification on the grounds of El Vasco, for which he has asked all the parties to face the elections May 28 make their proposals on justice in Asturias.
On the other hand, Chamorro has also claimed the need for the technological “adaptation” of the Administration of Justice to improve the constitutional function and the service to the citizenry and has valued the implementation of the electronic judicial file. EFE