Back Montenegro publishes Guidelines on Victims’ Right to Compensation

Podgorica 26 February 2026
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Montenegro publishes Guidelines on Victims’ Right to Compensation

The Guidelines for exercising the right to compensation to victims in criminal proceedings (for criminal cases of trafficking in human beings, domestic violence, war crimes, and other criminal cases) have been published and made available to both professional stakeholders and the general public.

The document is primarily intended for judges, prosecutors, lawyers and other participants in criminal proceedings, with the aim of improving judicial practice where victims seek compensation within criminal cases. In practice, the right to compensation has often been the weakest element of the victim protection system. These Guidelines help bridge the gap between the normative framework and effective enforcement, contributing to the realization of compensation as a genuinely enforceable right.

As such, the Guidelines represent an important step toward harmonising judicial practice and strengthening the protection of victims’ rights, ensuring effective, timely, and fair compensation in criminal proceedings, in line with domestic legislation and international standards.

Further support will be provided, in close cooperation with UNODC, to ensure the effective implementation of the Guidelines through capacity-building activities and increased awareness among legal professionals.

The Guidelines were developed with expert and financial support from the action “Strengthening accountability of the judicial system and enhancing protection of victims’ rights in Montenegro,” as well as with the support of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.

 

 

Work in this thematic area focuses on prisons and police (including human rights in policing, healthcare in prisons and safeguards against torture and ill-treatment), human rights standards in the judiciary (focusing on enhancing the application of case-law of the European Court of Human Rights), migration issues, the efficiency of justice systems (with a focus on analysing judicial statistics to optimise court administrations) and/or legal co-operation (which concentrates on increasing the individual independence of judges and prosecutors and the accountability of the judicial system).

*This designation is without prejudice to positions on status, and is in line with UNSCR 1244 and the ICJ Opinion on the Kosovo Declaration of Independence.