LAB calls for support to Advisory Bureaus
The
Executive Director of the Legal Aid Board, Ms. Fatmata Claire Carlton-Hanciles
has called for urgent support to the newly established Citizens Advisory
Bureaus in Freetown. The Board has opened fifteen Bureaus since February 2017,
all in the capital Freetown. This will continue until they are established in
all the 394 Wards in the country.
Ms. Carlton-Hanciles
warned that the Bureaus could struggle to create maximum impact if people do
not contribute to their upkeep and sustenance.
She encouraged members of the public to copy the example of a staff of the
Office of National Security (ONS) who donated money to the Bureau in Ward 393
in Grassfield, Lumley.
‘People
should take ownership of the Bureaus because they belong to them, the Board is
only the architect,’ she said. ‘The reception has been very positive, but this
is not being translated into support needed to keep the Bureaus up and running.
The Bureaus need stationery, furniture and money to cover transportation,
electricity, water and other basic necessities and allowance for the volunteers.’
The warning
comes as most of the Bureaus struggle to open their doors on a daily basis due
in large part to lack of funding. ‘I would encourage people to visit the
Bureaus in their Wards to have a feel of the work they are doing in terms of
promoting peace by mediating minor disputes which in the past were taken to the
police and tribal authorities at prohibitive cost,’ she said.
Ms.
Carlton-Hanciles was quick to point out that the Bureaus are managed by
volunteers. She noted that each has at least twenty volunteers. What’s more,
they do not receive any allowance. With the exception of retirees, the other
volunteers can hardly afford to offer full-time service due to other competing
priorities relating to livelihood.
She said
the Board has amply played its part in working with stakeholders in the various
Wards to secure office space for the Bureau, identify and train volunteers as
stipulated in the Bye-Law for the Bureaus, provide ledgers and the various
forms for referral and invitation.
She said
the Board will continues to assist the Bureaus into the future. ‘Following the
opening of the Bureaus, the Board continues to provide technical support and
oversight.’
The
National Outreach and Community Affairs Officer for the Board, Mr. Ibrahim
Kamara echoed similar sentiments, noting that while some of the twelve Bureaus
in Wellington and Calaba Town in the East are doing wells, majority are falling
short of the standards set by the Board. ‘We intend to provide additional
training to build the capacity of volunteers as part of ongoing support to the
Bureaus,’ he said.
By: Jodeph
Dumbuya
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