By Simitie Lavaly | Project Leader
In December 2017, Kadija*, a mother of three from Kenema, borrowed Le 1,200,000 (approximately US$ 153) from her friend, Hawa*, to start a business. According to Kadija, they did not agree a timeframe for paying back the loan. However, with the help of her husband, Kadija saved Le 400,000 (approximately US$50) to begin the payment process. Kadija passed this money to her uncle, Mohamed*, for safekeeping. In May, Kadija was arrested. Unknown to her, Hawa expected to be repaid by within five months. Hawa had contacted the police, who arrested Kadija on suspicion of ‘judgment debt’ and, given the amount of money involved, Kadija was remanded to prison without an opportunity to contact her family or make arrangements for her young children.
AdvocAid’s Programmes Officer met Kadija the day she was put on remand at the Female Correctional Centre in Kenema. During an interview, Kadija said she was worried that two of her children, aged 3 and 7, had been left at home without a caregiver. Because Kadija’s husband was away, AdvocAid contacted Kadija’s uncle who agreed to look after the children in her absence. AdvocAid also supplied Kadija with extra food for her 8-month old baby, detained with her in the Correctional Centre.
AdvocAid’s Paralegal also spoke with Kadija. She explained Kadija’s legal rights to her and described the legal process. AdvocAid’s paralegal and Kadija agreed that they would ask the Magistrate to allow the case to be mediated out of court. In court, our Paralegal informed the Magistrate that Kadija was concerned for the welfare of her young children, explained that Kadija had already saved Le 400,000 to return to Hawa, and asked that the matter be settled out of court. The Magistrate agreed to the mediation and Hawa was released from the Correctional Centre that day.
AdvocAid’s Paralegal contacted Hawa and convinced her to resolve the dispute with Kadija without the police. At the mediation, Kadija and Hawa agreed that the loan would be repaid by the end of May and Kadija paid Hawa Le 500,000 (approximately US$64) as a first instalment.
Cases of unpaid debt, like Kadija’s, are all too common. At heart, these are commercial disputes which should be settled through the civil legal system. Instead, the police are called, women find themselves in detention and they lose the ability to repay their debt. Debt-related offences contribute to congestion in the courts and overcrowding in Correctional Centres. Without AdvocAid’s intervention and mediation, Kadija could have spent months in the Correctional Centre awaiting trial, unaware of her children’s wellbeing and unable to care properly for her baby. AdvocAid continues to advocate for the decriminalisation of petty offences, so that women like Kadija do not face months or years in pre-trial detention.
One cause of extended pre-trial detention is the wait for an indictment. Once a Magistrate has ruled that a case is serious enough to be referred to the High Court, a prosecutor must prepare and issue an indictment before a case can be heard. Yet this process can take months or even years. The March 2018 general election in Sierra Leone seems to have contributed to a backlog in the preparation of indictments. There are presently 18 women waiting for an indictment for their case to progress while in detention. In one case, the accused woman was admitted to the Correctional Centre over two years’ ago and has been waiting for her indictment since May 2016. Excessive delays are an infringement of women’s right to liberty and the presumption of innocence.
AdvocAid has written to the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) twice this year to enquire about the status of these women and to request that the situation receives immediate attention. We are seeking a meeting with the DPP to press the urgency of this matter and hope that indictments can be expedited now that the election period is over.
It is with your help that AdvocAid is able to support and promote women’s legal rights in Sierra Leone. We have provided assistance to 146 women at the police station whilst also representating 71 women in court during the last 3 months. Without support from you, our donors, AdvocAid would not be able to continue its vital work and more women would be detained for debt-related offences, or languish in prison waiting for their cases to be heard. On behalf of the women and girls we work with, we thank you for your generosity and urge you to share the work of AdvocAid with your contacts.
Please sign up to our newsletter, via our website, and follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram to get the latest news about AdvocAid’s work.
*Names have been changed to protect the individuals’ identities
By Leanne Greenfield | Development Intern
By Leanne Greenfield | Development Intern
Project reports on GlobalGiving are posted directly to globalgiving.org by Project Leaders as they are completed, generally every 3-4 months. To protect the integrity of these documents, GlobalGiving does not alter them; therefore you may find some language or formatting issues.
If you donate to this project or have donated to this project, you can receive an email when this project posts a report. You can also subscribe for reports without donating.
Support this important cause by creating a personalized fundraising page.
Start a Fundraiser