Insight into what LAB is doing for
children
Since
the Legal Aid Board started operations in May 2015, it has amply demonstrated
commitment to protecting the rights of children through the provision of legal
services, legal education and the introduction of the ‘Child Protection Under
the Law’ Programme which focuses on issues of teenage pregnancy, child marriage
and harmful cultural practices.
The
Legal Aid Act 2012 provides that the Board shall provide legal aid and
determine the type of persons and cases for which legal aid may be granted. The
draft Legal Aid Guide puts the latter into context. It provides that to qualify
for legal aid, the applicant’s monthly income should not exceed five hundred
thousand leones (Le500,000) which as you may know is the country’s Minimum
Wage.
Nationality
is not a criteria for qualification for legal aid. Any resident of Sierra Leone
who meets the requirement is provided free legal assistance. Citizens of other Mano
River Union Countries, Nigeria and Burkina Faso have benefited from the scheme in
the past. The Board in collaboration with the Sierra Leone Drivers Union has gone
the extra mile to provide free transportation to the former to their respective
countries.
Applicants
for legal aid are subject to the ‘Means Test’ to determine qualification for
legal assistance. The ‘Means Test’ determines whether the applicant is employed
and also looks at income and assets.
The
exemption to this requirement are children, the aged and retiree. This means
children or better still juveniles accessing the justice system are provided
free legal assistance regardless of their income, assets and status of parents.
Children
enjoy the added advantage of receiving far more assistance from the scheme than
any other group. The Board has a lawyer assigned exclusively to juveniles. As a matter of fact, the Board is the only
institution with a full-time Juvenile Lawyer, in the person of Joel Tejan
Deen-Tarawally.
The
Board prides the caliber of its staff and Lawyer Deen-Tarawally is no
exception. He has an advance Law degree in Human Rights and Democratization in
Africa. In addition, he has also done advanced human rights courses on
Disability Rights in an African Context and Judicial Enforcement of
Socio-Economic Rights and Sexual Minority Rights in Africa.
Lawyer
Deen-Tarawally believes there have been some modest gains in the Juvenile
Justice System in the form of legislations – Child Rights Act 2007, Sexual
Offences Act - and the establishment of the Legal Aid Board.
At
the same time, he believes the juvenile justice system still fraught with
challenges ranging from the failure to set up committees to promote the child
justice environment as provided for in the Child Rights Act 2007 to the lack of
transportation for juvenile offenders, absence of witness tracing mechanism,
improperly constituted juvenile courts in some cases and lack of psychosocial
support for children going through the justice system.
The
scheme also has Paralegals assigned to juveniles. The paralegals monitor matters
involving children in police stations, juvenile homes, formal courts and the informal
justice system to ensure the treatment of child suspects is consistent with the
law and human rights in terms of legal assistance, bail, detention and support
services.
The
Board has a consultant, Lawyer Francis Gabbidon who is a legal practitioner of
no mean feat having practiced in Sierra Leone for over forty years. He was the
first ombudsman. He teaches at the Law Department at Fourah Bay College,
University of Sierra Leone. He had taught at the Sierra Leone Law School.
Lawyer
Gabbidon sits on Alternative Dispute Resolution matters. His duties include
proffering advice on issues of law so that parties have a clear idea of the
likely consequences should the matter be referred to the courts. This has
benefited children immensely by way of maintenance issues resolved by the ADR.
Against
this backdrop, the successes of the Board in the provision of legal services have
not come as surprise. The scheme provided legal assistance to two hundred and
twenty (220) juveniles around the country by 31 December 2016, which is twenty
months into its operations. This includes discharges, acquittals and
discharges, committals to High Court, sentences, fines, bail and maintenance
orders secured.
Recently,
in January 2017 to be precise, the Board intervened in a high profile matter between
the Minister of Social Welfare, Gender and Children’s Affairs, Dr. Sylvia
Blyden and two children of the Children’s Forum Network (CFN).
The
Minister had taken the kids to the New England Police Station rather than hand
them over to social workers at the Ministry. The Board’s Juvenile Lawyer, Joel Deen-Tawarally
successfully secured bail for the only remaining child suspects after the
Board’s Paralegal had secured the release of the other suspect the previous day.
Contrary to rumors making the round at the time, the suspect is not related to
the Lawyer Deen-Tarawally.
Also,
four hundred and seventy-four (474) children benefited from maintenance orders
secured by the scheme’s Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) services. This has
ensured the children continue their education.
During
the periods leading to the reopening of schools, the ADR worked overtime to
cope with complaints relating to maintenance orders. In August and September
2017, the Board received up to fifty complaints per day from mothers worried
that the fathers of their children might renege on their responsibility to
provide money for schooling.
The
Board has also mediated hundreds of custody matters. There have been cases of
fathers refusing to release children to their mothers in time for schooling at
the beginning of term. Also, the Board had intervened to ensure fathers have
access to their children at regular intervals.
The
ADR has reunited feuding families around the country. The one which stands out
for me involves a prominent Bishop and his estranged wife and four children.
The relationship between the two had degenerated to such an extent that the Man
of God had not been on speaking terms with his wife and children for nearly ten
years. This was a test case for the Board’s ADR as efforts at mediation by
religious leaders and other parties had failed in the past.
Two
hundred and eight (208) senior secondary school pupils of the Hill Top
Community Secondary School at Hill Station in Freetown make up the largest
single group of children to have benefited from the Legal Aid Board at any
given time. The pupils had their results released by the West African
Examination Council after the intervention of the Board. WAEC had held on to
the results because the school authorities had failed to pay the examination
fees.
Children
have also benefited from the Board’s legal education through school outreach. Children
have been educated on the scheme, Child Rights Act 2007, how the justice system
works, Rule of Law and Human rights. The Board held outreach events in fifty
schools around the country in 2016. A total of four thousand six hundred and
sixty-one (4,661) pupils participated in these events. The school outreach
programme was unveiled in October 2016.
As
the Board expands its operations following the deployment of paralegals in
every district in December 2016, monitoring of child rights issues in the
informal justice sector including Alternative Dispute Resolution services
provided by chiefs and other actors have been stepped-up.
The
establishment of Citizens Advisory Bureaus in three Wards in Freetown will
continue to impact positively of child rights issues. The Board hopes to
establish the Bureaus in all the 394 Wards in the country by the end of the
year.
Author Joseph Dumbuya is the
Registrar at the Sierra Leone Legal Aid Board
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