By Alusine Sesay
The death of a baby aged 17-months in police cell in Makeni City, northern Sierra Leone on December 23, 2021, was caused by severe anaemia and gross malnutrition, according to an autopsy which was conducted at the Connaught Hospital.
The autopsy results show that “other significant conditions contributing to death, but not related to the disease or condition causing it” including hepatosplenomegaly, severe dehydration, and malaria.
The child was buried on Saturday, January 8, in Makeni.
The Police Complaint Board has commenced investigation to determine the circumstances surrounding the death of the child in police cell.
The Board said in a statement that “it commenced a preliminary investigation into reports of an alleged death of a 17-month old baby, while locked up with her mother in police cell at the Pamlap Police Division in Makeni City on Thursday 23rd December, 2021.”
The mother of the deceased, Kadiatu Koroma, had been accused of stealing a bag containing medicines worth over Le 700, 000.
The Local United Commander, the Crime Officer, the officers who took custody of the accused, and other officers have been suspended and subjected to investigation, according to Head of Police Media, Police Commissioner Brima Kamara.
The mother of the deceased, Kadiatu alleged that the police officers at the station could not come to her aid when she informed them that her child’s health was deteriorating.
Placing a child in police cell violates international and police regulations guiding detention.
The Human Right Commission Sierra Leone (HRCSL) 2019 Report indicated that police cells remain appalling. Overcrowding, poor hygiene and sanitation were observed in most police stations monitored by HRCSL.
This appalling state of police detention facilities is a violation of suspects’ rights to live in humane and hygienic conditions, as provided for in section 4(c) of the Luanda Guidelines on Arrests, Police Custody and Pre-trial Detention of Detainees.
The HRCSL recommends that the Ministry of Internal Affairs should overhaul police detention facilities in the entire country.
AdvocAid, an organisation that works on providing holistic access to justice through free legal representation, education, empowerment, detainee support and a moving forward programme, has strongly condemned what it described as ‘the tragic loss of life of a baby’ who died in a police cell.
AdvocAid has over the period repeatedly called for pregnant women and women with young children not to be detained, but instead for them to be supported through alternatives to incarceration such as community support, mediation or diversion.
This is in line with the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child (Article 30), UN Standards for the Treatment of Female Prisoners and Non-Custodial Measures for Women Offenders (Rule 64), and Sierra Leone’s Bail Regulations 2018.
AdvocAid maintained that the mother had been arrested for a minor and non-violent offence and should not have been detained, especially with a young baby. AdvocAid calls on the Government of Sierra Leone to urgently review all cases of pregnant women and women with young children detained in police stations and correctional facilities across the country.
“We urge the Government to facilitate early releases of this group of women as a COVID-19 prevention measure given the increasing infection rates, in line with our press statements of 25 March and 8 July 2020, and calls by the UN, WHO and African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights.”
The rights group further stressed the need for petty offences to be decriminalized.