Macau's top court to move to old courthouse: govt

2020-08-29 15:30
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Macau's top court will move to the long-vacant old courthouse in the city centre, Secretary for Administration and Justice Andre Cheong Weng Chon has announced. 

Cheong made the announcement during a press conference after yesterday's regular meeting of the Executive Council, the government's top advisory body. 

Cheong, who is the council's spokesman, said that the old courthouse in Avenida da Praia Grande had the "architectural and historical features" to house judicial facilities such as the Court of Final Appeal (TUI). 

Public broadcaster Radio Macau reported on Wednesday that the government had decided not to go ahead with the controversial project by its predecessor to redevelop the old courthouse into the city's new central library. 

The Macau Post Daily on Thursday cited sources of Macau's legal fraternity as saying that the old courthouse was an "ideal" place to house the special administrative region's highest court.

Lawmakers and community leaders have urged the government for years to construct a purpose-built edifice for the new central library, instead of redeveloping the old courthouse for the project, which for some 15 years never got off the ground for a variety of reasons, such as the cancellation of its first design tender and complaints about its "unsuitable" location in a highly congested area in the city centre. 

Cheong said yesterday that the government was still looking for a suitable location for the new central library. However, he insisted that the new central library will certainly be built in a residential neighbourhood on the peninsula. 

The central library is currently housed in a listed building in Praça do Tap Seac. 

The old courthouse built in 1951 initially housed Macau's then Portuguese administration's financial and economic services departments and later its courts. The three-story building in Portugal's Estado Novo style has been vacant for nearly two decades and has been used for temporary exhibitions in the past few years.

Currently, the Court of Final Appeal shares a building with the Court of Second Instance (TSI) in the Nam Van Lake district. 

Meanwhile, Cheong also confirmed this week's media reports that the government has cancelled its predecessor's plant to build a "judicial complex" on reclaimed land off the MGM resort in Nape. The policy secretary said the government believed that at least part of the area could instead be used for the development of high-quality office buildings of which there is a lack in Macau.

Details of the government's urban development projects are expected to be revealed when its urban master plan's public consultation process will start next Friday. 

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