THIS IS A LOCAL POSITION FOR WHICH ONLY APPLICANTS WITH UKRAINIAN NATIONALITY OR WITH THE RESIDENCY/WORK PERMIT IN UKRAINE ARE ELIGIBLE FOR CONSIDERATION.
In response to the request of the Government of Ukraine, UNOPS
opened an office in Ukraine in 2017, which provides a broad spectrum of
services to the Government and the people of Ukraine. Currently, the office is
classified as an Operations Centre, with a portfolio of projects exceeding USD
100 million, in the areas of rule of law, environment, energy efficiency,
crisis recovery, good governance, human resources management, procurement, and
logistics.
The Support for Rule of Law Reforms in Ukraine (hereinafter - PRAVO
Police) is a project funded by the European Union that has the overall
objective of supporting the strengthening of the policing, prosecution and
civilian governance in Ukraine and to align them with the best European and
International practices. On matters of substance, the project relies on the EU
Advisory Mission (EUAM) to Ukraine.
The PRAVO Police is partnered with the following national
agencies: the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Ukraine, the National Police of
Ukraine (NPU), the Office of the Prosecutor General (OPG), the State Bureau of
Investigations (SBI). Activities include providing technical support tailored
to the needs of each individual agency, while some interventions address larger
scale and cross-cutting issues, including inter-agency cooperation and data
exchange.
One such activity relates to the development and roll-out of a new
integrated Electronic Criminal Case Management System (eCMS) – an electronic
system to be used for the storage and exchange of data on criminal offences at
the pre-trial investigation stage and, partially, on judicial proceedings. Its
users are the OPG, the NPU, the Security Service of Ukraine (SSU), the National
Anti-Corruption Bureau of Ukraine (NABU), the SBI, the State Fiscal Service of
Ukraine, courts and others. An integrated system for the entire chain of Law
Enforcement Agencies (LEAs) with investigative powers, will allow the
streamlining of case management within and between stakeholder agencies in the
processing and exchange of key case information and documents leading to
prosecutions or other procedural conclusions or resolution of cases. This will
contribute to more efficient electronic interaction among investigators,
prosecutors and judges at the pre-trial investigation stage, speed up the
decision-making process, decrease routine administrative processes and reduce their
duration and costs.
Development of the system should be carried out in close
coordination with each relevant agency and take into consideration each
agency’s vision of the eCMS, their internal ICT landscape and specific needs
(analytics, user interface, performance, etc.) and cybersecurity aspects. The
new system will be based on modern information technologies and the best EU
practices.
The support from the PRAVO Police will be in stages. As a starting
point, the PRAVO Police will contribute to the planning of the preparatory
stage which includes development of the action plan on eCMS development and
coordination with relevant partners. The role of the OPG in this process will
be critical. As an initial step, the OPG will establish the interagency-working
group (IWG), and will facilitate its meetings. The IWG will be comprised of all
relevant LEAs, courts, other governmental agencies and experts from EUAM and UNOPS. One key task of the IWG
is to identify the parameters and functionality of the eCMS which will meet the
expectations of its users and be in line with the best European standards for
this type of system (the Concept of eCMS to be approved by IWG). The IWG will agree on the sequencing of actions
(development and roll-out of eCMS in Ukraine), and on subsequent migration of
data from (or interoperability with) the existing Unified Register of Pre-Trial
Investigations (the ‘Register’).
The IWG will identify areas where additional work would be
required prior to launching an eCMS, such as specific options within a
fully-featured solution that would be acceptable to all relevant stakeholders. The
ultimate outcome of IWG meetings would be a jointly agreed solution on how to
achieve automation of the entire document flow pertaining to the pre-trial
criminal investigation process. The IWG will elaborate on the options to
increase the number of future users, as compared to the current Register user
base, through providing access to the system for judges and defense attorneys.