The Department of Justice is responsible for most everyday policing and justice powers in Northern Ireland. In 2009, responsibility for
interface areas and
peacewalls passed from the
Northern Ireland Office to the Minister of Justice. As such, the Department of Justice is responsible for the policy of 'removal of all peacewalls in Northern Ireland by 2023'. The '''''' (
SI 2010/976) outlines the policy areas transferred to the
Northern Ireland Assembly. These include: •
criminal law •
policing •
prosecution • public order •
courts •
prisons and
probation •
criminal history disclosure (the
AccessNI service) Some justice matters remain
reserved to Westminster, with the Assembly's agreement e.g. the
prerogative of mercy in terrorism cases,
illicit drug classification, the
National Crime Agency, the accommodation of prisoners in separated conditions within the
Northern Ireland Prison Service,
parades and the security of
explosives. In addition, some justice matters remain
excepted and devolution was either not discussed or not considered feasible:
extradition (as an
international relations matter),
military justice (as a
defence matter), the enforcement of
immigration law, and
national security (including
intelligence services). The Department of Justice's main counterparts in the
United Kingdom Government are: • the
Home Office (on policing, drugs and public order); • the
Ministry of Justice (on criminal law, courts, prisons, probation); • the
Northern Ireland Office (on national security in Northern Ireland). In the
Irish Government, its main counterpart is the
Department of Justice. A considerable proportion of law enforcement in Northern Ireland (and media coverage of policing and justice stories) is taken up with unresolved cases arising from
the Troubles, continuing paramilitary activity and tensions caused by sectarian division. The
border results in differences in law between Northern Ireland (the only UK jurisdiction with an international land border) and the Republic of Ireland, which are exploited through
smuggling and other forms of crime. The border has become an external border of the
European Union, following
Brexit. ==Finance==