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Sunday, May 19, 2024

PRISON REVIEWS (Shouldn’t the Judiciary be conducting them more frequently??)

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By: Winstanley.  R. Bankole Johnson

Someone forwarded an audio clip by BBC stringer Umaru Fofana on the unnecessarily long and unjustifiable detentions of detainees in particular, and on Prisons overcrowding in Sierra Leone in general. I almost declined listening to it, more out of disrespect for its contents than for the reporter, because to me it was just a repeat,  or an update of what would now pass off now as a well-choreographed litany of concerns.

The order of presentation was unchanged. First comes the alluring voice intro on the selected topic by the correspondent from an outlet (BBC) that for decades ruled the airwaves as emitting the Gospel, until local partisan politics captured their fancies.

Lamentations

Next in those reports will follow (almost predictably) inserts of lamentations by a Registrar or Bencher of the Superior Courts on the pitiful conditions (and still presumed innocence) of the already disadvantaged detainees, which will be followed by that of a Civil Society Executive, equally profusely lamenting concerns about the administration of justice – in that order.

In those lamentations listeners would be treated to flowery descriptions of the demeanor, mean appearance and reactions of the detainees and also to expressions of hope by the selected Civil Rights Executive (invariably the CARL) for improvements in the justice delivery systems and prison conditions countrywide.

Victims

The narrative thus far you will agree with me justifies my dis-interestedness in any such BBC reports because I’ve heard about prisons overcrowding and delays in justice administration to the physical detriment of hordes of detainees that are still presumed innocent too many times before, to believe that they are aired in the victims’ interests.

Imprison

Now permit me to further explain why readers should understand my initial reluctance to listen to any further reportage on our prisons overcrowding and the pitiful conditions of detainees countrywide.

Nearly two years ago (presumably out of concerns for the same purposes), the entire Benchers decided to figuratively “imprison” themselves within various Correctional Centers. They sort of practically afflicted themselves with the afflictions of detainees, in order for them to obtain real time updates and experiences of their cases and conditions.

The main objective of that crusade was both to accelerate justice delivery and reduce congestion wherever such existed within our prisons systems. No fewer that eleven (11) Correctional Centers were targeted.

Prior to commencement of that crusade which was supposed to have lasted for a little over two weeks, we were informed by the Judiciary that the total number of detainees countrywide was in excess of six thousand.  On completion of that exercise and despite my public inquiry,  they did not think it prudent to have informed us about their successes or failures or reasons for such failures if any.

In the recent BBC reports by Umara Fofana, the figures quoted for detainees countrywide still stands at in excess of six thousand, five hundred (6,500),  a third of which number are within the Pademba Road Correctional System and meaning that either those numbers were either not significantly reduced following the last interventions by the Bench, or that the justice delivery systems are still so bureaucratically encumbered as to have reversed the successes of the Bench within so short a period.

Significance

Of significance about recent Newspapers and the BBC reports on the same matter is the number of cases addressed by two Judges during their recent interventions to fast track justice delivery: over 340. And this was within forty-eight (48) hours. (Hmmmmm?).

The BBC reports did not conclusively confirm how many inmates were ultimately released, but if it is possible for two Judges to fast track resolutions of so many cases (over 340 within two days) to reduce prisons overcrowding that successfully, the logical question arising therefrom is,  shouldn’t the Judiciary be thinking of conducting such case reviews more frequently.

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