LEGAL AWARENESS WORKSHOP |
In Kenya,there
have been various efforts at providing legal aid through voluntary legal aid
schemes by individual advocates and law firms. The first recognized effort at
providing legal aid was in 1973 when a clinic was set up at Shauri Moyo in
Nairobi under the aegis of the Faculty of Law, University of Nairobi and the
Law Society of Kenya. This clinic operated as the Legal Advice Centre
throughout the 1980s and was thereafter renamed Kituo Cha Sheria to date. Later
in the 90s, many initiatives were started by non-governmental organizations
(NGOs) which offered a range of services.
Legal
aid in Kenya has taken long to enter into our policy papers as a key measure in
the alleviation of poverty. The first
recognition of legal aid in our policy framework was in the Poverty Reduction
Strategy Paper for 2001-2004 which noted that “Communities and the poor cited
lack of access to socially responsive and affordable legal and judicial
services as critical issues that need to be addressed by the government in the
fight against poverty.
The
Government of Kenya has come up with a practical and affordable and effective
legal education and aid delivery scheme that increases access to justice for
the poor in Kenya in accordance with the priorities set out in the poverty
alleviation strategy. It is the poor who suffer most from the effects of weak,
unaccountable and insensitive legal and judicial systems.”
Other
policy initiatives such as the National Poverty Eradication Plan 1999 – 2015,
Investment Programme for Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment
Creation (ERS) 2003 – 2007 and the Kenya Vision 2030 identify lack of access to
justice as having a direct link to poverty. Accordingly, they recognize the
need for access to justice as a critical pillar for economic development and
poverty reduction.
The
Government has made commitments under regional and international human rights
instruments to provide state funded legal aid and education as conduits to
enhancing access to justice. These include the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights; the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights; the African
Charter on Human and People’s Rights; the Convention on the Right of the Child;
among others.
Legal
aid and legal awareness are a critical component of enhancing access to
justice. Promoting the administration of justice and the rule of law is one of
the several priorities of the Government of Kenya. Efforts by the Government
towards comprehensive reforms has included a review of the legal sector
covering the State Law office, the Judiciary, Legal Education Institutions and
other law enforcement agencies such as the police, prisons, children and
probation services departments.
Despite
the initiatives to promote access to justice having had some degree of success,
the demand for legal aid and awareness services is overwhelming and has stretched
the capacities of those bodies dealing with legal aid to their limits.
Furthermore, their efforts have been largely uncoordinated and their
quantitative reach insignificant in terms of addressing the problem at the
macro policy level. However, coupled with lack of standardization, supervision,
regulation and spatial limitation, the quality and frequency of legal aid and
legal awareness provided by these players have been compromised.
Legal
provisions exist relating to the right to legal representation both in Kenya’s
civil and criminal procedures. However, obstacles to access to justice, the
nature of the legal system itself, and the context within which it operates.
The legal system is faced with structural, procedural, administrative, fiscal and
human resource limitations, thus leaving a majority of the Kenyan population,
especially the poor, vulnerable and marginalized unable to access justice. In
the criminal justice system for example, suspects in remand endure inordinately
long remand periods for reasons ranging from long cause lists, missing
investigation files, lack of witnesses, lost court files, among others, a
situation that is further compounded by lack of legal representation.
Several
barriers prevent the poor, the marginalized and vulnerable from accessing
judicial services and justice in general. Apart from inadequate court
infrastructure in many places, poverty and lack of awareness of legal rights as
well as corruption inhibit access to justice for the majority. The use of
traditional/community justice systems have been relegated in favour of the
formal justice system. As a result, populations in far flung areas who cannot
reach the formal justice infrastructure are excluded.
Majority
of the Kenyans are unable to access justice due to a number of reasons
including: Access to legal representation is mostly available to only those who
can afford to pay private practitioners for their services; Services provided
by non-governmental can only reach a limited number of those who require legal
representation; The existing pauper brief system for capital offenders only
caters for murder suspects on trial in the High Court, leaving out other
capital offenders facing death sentences; The procedure for one to be declared
a pauper under the Civil Procedure Rules is highly technical and difficult to
apply; courts are too far for sections of the population; corruption; inadequate number of judicial officers leading to backlog and delays in the
dispensation of justice; Inequality before the law and under-utilization of
alternative dispute resolution mechanisms.
Kenya’s
formal justice system is adversarial in nature and requires that one has legal
representation or legal knowledge. The public has often expressed frustration
at the delays experienced in the dispensation of justice and many have lost
confidence in the formal justice system.
Access to
justice is now contained in the constitution. The Constitution of Kenya
recognizes the need for enhanced access to justice and lays a solid foundation
for the establishment of a national legal scheme. The Bill of Rights (Chapter
Four) of the Constitution recognizes the need to protect human rights and
fundamental freedoms for purposes of preserving the dignity of individuals and
communities and promoting social justice and the realization of the potential
of all human beings. Every organ of the state is obliged “to observe, respect,
protect, promote and fulfill the rights and fundamental freedoms in the Bill of
Rights”[1]
All state organs to are required to “address the
needs of vulnerable groups within society, including women, older members of
society, persons with disabilities, children, youth, members of minority or
marginalized communities”, among others[2]
and every person has “the right to institute court proceedings claiming that a
right or fundamental freedom in the Bill of Rights has been infringed, or is
threatened.”[3] Legal
aid will provide a person with limited financial resources access to justice through this provisions.
Under
the Civil Procedure Rules,2010, a litigant may apply to be declared a pauper where
the litigant has an opportunity to file suit without the requisite filing fees
and other court disbursements. However, the procedure laid down for instituting
these suits under the Civil Procedure Rules is rarely applied for the reason that
the applicants are usually illiterate and strict adherence to procedure would
shut out many on technicalities. The procedure is so technical that a poor
litigant still requires a lawyer to file the necessary application on her/his
behalf. It is also time-consuming, thereby defeating the whole purpose of
access to justice.
The
guarantee to legal assistance provided by Section 186(b) of Children Act 2001
is conditional to a child offender having no other recourse to legal
assistance. However, this proviso does not place any specific obligation on the
state to provide legal aid.
The
persons with Disabilities (Legal Aid) Regulations 2009 which establishes a
Legal Services Department provides that persons with disability are entitled to
legal aid in matters affecting the violation of their rights or the deprivation
of their property, and in cases involving capital punishment. It requires the person
with disability to lodge an application for legal aid with the National Council
for Persons with Disabilities.
In
2005 the Ministry of Justice and Constitutional Affairs undertook to design and
operationalize a Legal Education and Aid Pilot Programme, which would provide
lessons for the eventual National legal Aid Scheme in Kenya. This was a build
up from previous efforts at creating a legal aid Programme by the Attorney
General’s office and other stakeholders.
The
National legal Aid (and Awareness) Steering Committee was established on 3rd
November 2007. The development goal of the pilot programme is to achieve a
practical, affordable and legal education and service delivery scheme that
increases access to justice for the poor in Kenya in accordance with the
priorities set out in the Kenya Vision 2030. The pilot programme is designed to
provide lessons for the design and development of an appropriate national legal
aid scheme for Kenya.
Non-
governmental organizations including faith based organizations have initiated
projects and programmes geared towards providing legal awareness and legal aid
based on their specific areas of focus such as women’s rights, children’s
rights, land rights and employment, to name a few. As a result of this
specialization, many needy cases that do not fit into the selected themes or
eligibility criteria do not get to benefit from those services.
Non-governmental
organizations in the legal aid and awareness business have called for a more
sustainable and systematic government approach to the provision of legal aid
and legal awareness, which this policy seeks to address. One of the most
important contributions of these schemes has been the breaking away from the
traditional philanthropic focus of the official interventions by attempting to
address some class aspects of the problem, by promoting empowerment and social
change.
Universities
have developed means of enhancing access to justice where university students
provide legal advice and assistance to needy clients as a way of gaining
practical legal experience. In Kenya, the concept has been embraced by the
University of Nairobi. Through these clinics students are guided by the faculty
in the services they provide and are sometimes attached to organizations as
appropriate.
Apart
from legal advice and assistance, the students also carry out conciliation,
research and develop publications on legal matters. A programme developed by
the University of Nairobi known as Public Interest Clinic which is a unit in
the final year of study involves attaching the students to various NGOs and
human rights institutions where they offer similar services and also learn
various notions and alternatives to enhancing access to justice and promoting
social justice.
The
Kenya Human Rights Commission (KHRC) in its effort to enhance access to justice
provides legal aid and legal awareness through its response to human rights
violations through monitoring, policy proposals and investigations. The KHRC
however, does not have the requisite human and material resources to deal with
the large numbers of cases brought especially those in need of legal aid and
awareness.
Previously
challenges relating to the judicial system have been addressed on the basis of
philanthropy. This has been done through the paper brief system and limited pro
bono litigation which has been seriously disregarded by the established
advocates leaving it to the new ones in the fields and due to their little
experience in the field they may end up losing cases some of which could have
been easily won.
Legal
aid encompasses legal representation by a lawyer, including such assistance as
is given by a lawyer in the steps preliminary or incidental to any proceedings
or arriving at or giving effect to a compromise to avoid or to bring to an end
any proceedings. Lawyers mainly practice in urban centres, leaving the poor
majority in the rural areas without the benefit of legal representation.
The
constitution also defines marginalized group as a group of people who are
disadvantaged by discrimination on the grounds set out in Article 27[4] of the
Constitution which are race, sex, pregnancy, marital status, ethnic, social
differences, colour, disability, religion, conscience, belief, culture, dress,
language or birth. To these groups should be added the economically
disadvantaged special attention been given to the needs of the indigent who have
to face the criminal justice system, either as accused persons or as prisoners
upon conviction. Inevitably many of these seeking justice and seeking legal
assistance may suffer from multiplicity of challenges they may be indigent
person, marginalized or persons affected with HIV/AIDS.
Access
to justice to these different groups will definitely mean different things due
to their differences and challenges and therefore appropriate legal frameworks
should be drawn with special regard to these groups of the community. Access to
justice incorporates the ability of the citizens to utilize the legal systems
with the least possible costs, without delay or inconvenience and effectively.
Use of the legal system is not a privilege granted to the philanthropic members
of the society or members of the legal profession, but as part of the basic
framework for development. Access to justice should therefore without any doubt
be regarded as a Constitutional right to all member of the society. So the
question to be addressed is how this Constitutional entitlement is affected.
The need and justification for legal aid in Kenya is
that it performs five major tasks which include;-to justly allocate advantages
and disadvantages, to prevent abuse of power, to prevent abuse of liberty, to
justly decide disputes and to justly adapt to change. For poor people who do
not have money to pay court fees or hire a legal expert to advise and represent
them, the right to subsidized legal service is the most fundamental right of
all rights. Legal aid should thus be looked at as a system which facilities
equality of access to the justice system through the provision of legal
services in serious matters to those who would not otherwise be able to finance
them solely from their own resources. It also facilitates fair hearing so that
all the parties seeking justice may get convinced that justice has been done
but it has also manifestly and undoubtedly been seen to have been done.
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