By Politico staff writer
The Attorney-General and Minister of Justice, Mohamed Lamin Tarawally has narrated Sierra Lwonw's Human Rights Reforms in promoting peace and national cohesion since 2018.
He was speaking in Geneva, Switzerland, on Thursday last week at the High Level of the 52nd Session of the Human Rights Council which started on the 27 February and will end on the 4 April 2023. He reported that Sierra Leone under the leadership of President Bio has initiated and rolled out several policy reforms with the view of safeguarding the fundamental human rights of all Sierra Leoneans. He also said that the President has made ‘remarkable’ strides in the promotion and protection of the rights of citizens especially of women and children including girls.
Minister Tarawally noted that the government had introduced legislative measures and reforms to further reinforce the independence of the justice system, and to demystify the law and expand access to justice for all citizens. He added that the government has sanctioned an unprecedented recruitment exercise to ensure the presence of judicial staff in every district in the country to service the courts, which he said culminated in the deployment of resident Magistrates and Judges in almost all districts in the country.
To ensure speedy trial, he said, the judiciary had established specialized courts - such as the Anti-Corruption Court, Sexual Offences Model Court, Social Security Court and Small Claims Court. All these are steps he said that are meant to make justice not only accessible but also expeditious.
The Attorney General added that, there has been a considerable increase in budgetary support to the Judiciary with judicial staff benefitting from improved conditions of service to help bring them in line with their counterparts in the sub-region.
“In a bid to strengthen democratic good governance and national cohesion, we have established a peace as well as a civic education commission while consolidating existing rule of law institutions such as the Human Rights Commission, which was recently reaccredited with a grade “A” status for the third consecutive time by the Global Alliance for National Human Rights Institutions,” he disclosed.
He went on to say that, during the 76th Session of the United Nations General Assembly, President Bio made a passionate plea for “global solidarity on access to justice and remedies for survivors of sexual violence.” He pointed at the ‘Hands Off Our Girls’ Campaign, an initiative by the First Lady which he said has been effective in protecting women and girls from sexual abuse and exploitation, and the Diversion and Alternatives to detention framework for children through public engagement in all police stations throughout the country.
During the adoption of the country’s 3rd cycle UPR report, Minister Tarawally reiterated that the government took further steps to accept hitherto recommendations that were noted following previous UPRs, especially those on the ban against pregnant girls, sexual and gender-based violence, criminal libel and the death penalty.
Another significant human rights milestone of the Bio led Government presented by the Attorney-General and Minister of Justice is the signing of “All the nine fundamental Human Rights treaties and submitted initial and periodic reports on five of the treaties. These are clear demonstrations that as a nation, we are committed to undertaking actions that will improve our human rights record and our sustained engagement with this international human rights mechanism demonstrates our government’s commitment in this regard,” he said.
He concluded that Sierra Leone would continue to collaborate and effectively participate in the affairs of all established regional and sub-regional human rights treaty bodies.
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