Abstract:
The prosecution was hierarchically linked to the executive authority with the justification
for implementing the state penal policy; The government sets the parameters for this policy
and is politically responsible to Parliament.
While it has been stated that the prosecution should apply the penal policy defined by the
government, within the framework of hierarchical subordination, it should not be forgotten
that members of the prosecution are ultimately judges. They must act in a impartial and
objective manner because the judiciary's independence is not only that of judges but also that
of members of the prosecution.
Although the idea of subordination of the prosecution to the executive power is firmly
based on the logic of democratic legitimacy and framed by the principle of balance between
the authorities. the prevailing trend today is to remove the judicial power from all these
conflicts. Political, and there is no will - especially within the European judiciary - to link the
judicial institution to a world of politics, especially executive power.
Due to the influence of the decisions of the European Court of Human Rights, it is no
longer acceptable today to have a public prosecutor structurally affiliated with the judiciary
and functionally subordinate to the executive power.
In addition to trying to establish the available mechanisms to sever the Public Prosecution's
link with the executive branch, the study concluded that the structural and functional
separation of the Public Prosecutor's Office from the executive branch would ensure the
effectiveness of human rights and fundamental freedoms, enshrine the right to a fair trial and
strengthen the fight against corruption in national legal systems.