In a landmark move to address systemic delays in its judicial system, Guyana’s Court of Appeal has initiated a comprehensive program to resolve more than 2,000 pending appeals and applications, some dating back three decades. The initiative, mandated by Chancellor of the Judiciary Justice Roxane George-Wiltshire, represents one of the most significant judicial reforms in recent memory.
The court has established three specialized panels to handle the massive backlog, with each panel assigned 70 cases in the initial phase. This structured approach includes 21 civil appeals, 20 criminal appeals, and 29 applications for leave to appeal across each panel. The first hearings are scheduled to commence on February 10, 12, and 13, 2026, marking a decisive step toward judicial efficiency.
To ensure maximum transparency and participation, the court will issue hearing notices through multiple channels: mailed to recorded addresses of litigants and attorneys, published in national newspapers, and posted on both the Court’s official website and Facebook page under ‘Hearing Lists’.
The court administration emphasized that this backlog reduction exercise specifically targets cases filed between January 1, 1996, and December 31, 2024. Notably, all applications for leave to appeal and extensions filed before 2021 have already been cleared from the system. Moving forward, newly filed applications in 2026 will receive immediate assignment to prevent future accumulation.
In an official statement, the judiciary acknowledged the legitimate concerns of those awaiting resolution of long-pending matters and reaffirmed its commitment to ‘timely, fair and transparent administration of justice.’ The court further stressed that this would be a court-driven process guided by robust case management principles, with expectations that all legal representatives come fully prepared to facilitate efficient dispositions.
