The article discusses a proposed law regarding the establishment of a specialized anti-corruption court (SKOK), which was one of the main election promises of the Democratic Party's Anže Logar. The proposal, published by the Ministry of Justice led by Minister Mihael Zupančič, suggests creating a centralized specialized court to replace the current system of four specialized units across district courts. It emphasizes improving efficiency in fighting corruption through centralization, collaboration with the National Investigative Agency (NPU), and restructuring roles within the National Anti-Corruption Commission (KPK). The law is expected to be decided upon by Prime Minister Janez Janša’s government soon. While the ministry believes centralization could improve effectiveness, they acknowledge statistical data does not conclusively show this model would be more effective than the existing system. The proposal maintains the KPK as a cooperating body but does not grant it new powers.
Bias read (Center): While the article presents the proposal as part of a political agenda (fighting corruption), it provides balanced information by acknowledging potential limitations of the new system and citing statistical uncertainty. The framing remains neutral, focusing on factual developments rather than overtly





