Agenda | Jul 13,2025
Jan 3 , 2026
By Yonas Jarsa
Federal courts are wrestling with unprecedented delays, with cases routinely taking a long time to resolve after hearings conclude. For many litigants, this means prolonged uncertainty and an arduous journey through the justice system. What was once expected to deliver timely remedies now often feels like a test of endurance.
Federal courts are under mounting pressure, marked by growing delays, inconsistent judgments, and rising legal costs. For many, the justice system has become less a forum for remedy and more a test of endurance, as litigants face prolonged waits, unpredictable outcomes, and high financial burdens.
The most acute issue is the steady lengthening of federal court proceedings. Cases often take months, sometimes years, to resolve after final hearings conclude. Businesses and individuals are left in limbo, forced to operate or live with persistent uncertainty. This is not a rare exception but has become the expected course for most litigants. “Justice delayed is justice denied” rings especially true, as the backlog feeds frustration and undermines confidence in the courts’ ability to provide timely redress.
Granted, procedural reforms have been introduced and new directives issued in the hope of improving efficiency. However, these changes remain largely cosmetic and do not address core problems. Judges are overburdened, and support staff are stretched thin. The sheer volume of cases outpaces institutional capacity. More paperwork alone does not move the needle. The judiciary is working to implement the ECourt Ethiopia digitalisation initiative by 2026, a step welcomed by many as a move toward modernisation, less backlog, and improved access.
Technology, however, is not a cure-all. Without investment in human resources and institutional welfare, digital systems risk producing swifter but still unreliable results.
A troubling trend is the declining quality and consistency of court judgments. Many decisions show little engagement with legal arguments or precedents. Similar cases often yield contradictory outcomes. This inconsistency erodes legal predictability and public confidence, as reflected in Ethiopia’s poor rankings on global rule-of-law indices. Judges, under pressure to dispose of cases quickly, may prioritise speed at the expense of careful reasoning. Justice, after all, is not an assembly line.
Less visible but equally important is the quiet exodus of experienced judges from federal courts. Salaries remain well below the norm for sub-Saharan Africa, especially given the complexity and workload judges face. In many countries, judicial service is protected and supported by competitive pay, pensions, and social safety nets. In Ethiopia, the role is increasingly seen as a sacrifice rather than a profession. As senior judges leave for international institutions or the private sector, courts lose institutional memory and mentorship. Younger judges, under pressure and with limited guidance, are left to preside over complex commercial and constitutional disputes, leading to unpredictable and uneven outcomes.
The issue is not only about pay. Recent deaths among judges have revealed a striking lack of compensation or social protection for their families. The demands placed on judges, in terms of autonomy, integrity, and personal risk, are not matched by the security and recognition offered in return. This undermines judicial independence at its core.
Financial barriers to justice have grown heavy. Increases in court filing fees and the imposition of a 15pc value-added tax (VAT) on legal services, mandated under a law passed in 2024, have made accessing the courts more expensive. It raised constitutional concerns, with Article 37 of the Constitution guaranteeing the right of access to courts. That right becomes meaningless if most citizens cannot afford to exercise it. Small businesses, ordinary citizens, and marginalised groups now find the price of seeking justice beyond reach. There is a risk that the courts become a privilege for the wealthy, not a right for all.
Judicial reform will require more than new technology and stricter case management. Real progress will only come from sustained investment in judicial capacity, fair remuneration, and respect for the dignity of the profession. Without this, any efficiency gains will remain fragile and short-lived.
The implications would be far-reaching, as businesses depend on predictable, timely dispute resolution. Citizens look to the courts as the ultimate guardians of their rights. When justice becomes slow, inconsistent, and expensive, trust in the entire system of governance erodes. Restoring that trust means building a justice system that delivers not only speed, but fairness and access, qualities essential for public confidence and the rule of law.
PUBLISHED ON
Jan 03,2026 [ VOL
26 , NO
1340]
Agenda | Jul 13,2025
View From Arada | Jun 28,2025
Viewpoints | Dec 13,2025
Viewpoints | Feb 21,2026
Radar | Nov 03,2024
Agenda | May 09,2020
Advertorials | May 21,2024
Fortune News | Apr 10,2023
Exclusive Interviews | Apr 10,2026
Radar | Jun 07,2025
Photo Gallery | 187796 Views | May 06,2019
Photo Gallery | 177802 Views | Apr 26,2019
Photo Gallery | 174308 Views | Oct 06,2021
My Opinion | 140426 Views | Aug 14,2021
Commentaries | May 30,2026
Dec 22 , 2024 . By TIZITA SHEWAFERAW
Charged with transforming colossal state-owned enterprises into modern and competitiv...
Aug 18 , 2024 . By AKSAH ITALO
Although predictable Yonas Zerihun's job in the ride-hailing service is not immune to...
Jul 28 , 2024 . By TIZITA SHEWAFERAW
Unhabitual, perhaps too many, Samuel Gebreyohannes, 38, used to occasionally enjoy a couple of beers at breakfast. However, he recently swit...
Jul 13 , 2024 . By AKSAH ITALO
Investors who rely on tractors, trucks, and field vehicles for commuting, transporting commodities, and f...
May 30 , 2026
Tomorrow, millions of Ethiopians are expected to vote in the seventh national electio...
May 23 , 2026
An International Monetary Fund (IMF) team has spent weeks in Addis Abeba conducting t...
May 16 , 2026
The federal budget tells a troubling story about inflation, debt and reform. The prob...
May 9 , 2026
The Ethiopian state appears to have discovered a fiscal instrument that is politicall...
May 31 , 2026 . By BEZAWIT HULUAGER
The Ethiopian Customs Commission (ECC) has introduced a legally binding advance rulin...
May 31 , 2026 . By BEZAWIT HULUAGER
The Ministry of Transport & Logistics has introduced new requirements for foreign...
May 31 , 2026 . By BEZAWIT HULUAGER
Ethiopian Investment Holdings (EIH) has introduced a performance-linked remuneration...
May 31 , 2026 . By NAHOM AYELE
The Federal High Court's Arada Division has ruled that Sandford International School...