The Sierra Leone Legal Aid Board has trained forty-four members
of the Western Area Council of Tribal Heads, their deputies, Section Chiefs and
Barray Clerks as Paralegals. The training took place at the Sierra Leone Labour
Congress Hall last Thursday, 23 March 2017.
The Executive Director of the Legal Aid Board, Ms. Fatmata
Claire Carlton-Hanciles said the training is the first in a series to be
organized by the Board in the coming months. She acknowledged the pivotal role
of Tribal Heads in promoting access to justice because they dispense justice in
an affordable and speedy manner.
She said the Tribal Heads are being trained as Paralegals to
empower their mediation skills. Also, it will enable them to work with the
police and the courts to assist their tribe’s men and women in accessing the
formal justice system and do referrals for matters which fall outside their
remit.
Ms. Carlton-Hanciles said the training is part of efforts by
the Legal Aid Board to recognize their status in the justice delivery system. ‘We
want to lobby government to have Local Courts in Freetown but first have to
train you as Paralegals to build your capacity to dispense justice to address
issues people, especially lawyers, have against you.’ She said. ‘This will
address complaints you have against lawyers relating to undermining your
authority.’
She encouraged the Tribal Heads to hold community level
meetings to preserve some of the good tradition, one of which relate to the
upbringing of children which was seen as a community affair. She noted that
youths make up more than eighty percent of the prison population and that such
meetings could go a long way to reverse this trend.
Papers were presented by staff of the Board on the work of the Paralegals in the areas of mediation,
provision of legal assistance to members of the community accessing the formal
and informal justice system, organizing legal education through community
outreach and monitoring human rights issues in the community.
Contributions were made by the various tribes represented at
the meeting. This includes the Susu, Yalunka, Temne, Loko, Mende, Mandingo,
Bagga, Limba, Kono, Koranko and Bassa.
A Chief of the Temne community, Ya Alimamy Manso Karama noted
that the training has helped them know the difference between matters they can
handle and those to refer to the police.
The Kono Tribal Headman, Chief S.O. Gbekie stressed that the
training has helped address issues of extortion in the courts run by members of
the Council. The Public Relations Officer for the Council of Tribal Heads,
Alhaji Kandeh F.M. Kamara said there is a clear line of authority between the
Tribal Heads and the sub-chiefs stressing that there is no conflict between the
two.
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