I am not sure who is in charge of the judicial reform now. The consensus at the conference was the model currently being used by the British as part of their counter-narcotics effort whereby they select, train and fund a complete judicial system (police, jails, judges and prosecutors) specifically for counter-narcotics is working reasonably well.

The Italians had a good plan based on their experience of running a judical system that can cope with pervasive organised crime, but it was under-resourced and there was no impetus to get it established.

Whether the British counter-narcotics system could be expanded further, perhaps to deal with anti-corruption is another matter. Certainly the British have found it very difficult to keep their counter-narcotics stovepipe clean and untainted.