Sierra Leone: Legal Aid Board reconciles client with mother

The Executive Director of the Legal Aid Board, Ms. Fatmata Claire Carlton-Hanciles has on Tuesday, 20 October 2020 reconciled a client of the scheme Abdul Rhaman Bangura, 30, and his mother Zainab Koroma. This follows his discharged by the court on the same date.  

The usual post-discharge briefing ceremony for newly released clients took place at the Head Office of the Legal Aid Board in Freetown. Abdul was accompanied by his eleven-year old daughter and relatives including his mother, sister, junior brother, mother-In-law and brother-in-law. 

Abdul had been rejected by his mother Zainab Koroma who was the complainant in the matter for which he was charged to court. This meant Abdul had no home to return to following his discharge. With the intervention of the Board both parties were reconciled and as such Abdul was free to return home.

Ms. Carlton-Hanciles had admonished Abdul to be law abiding, respectful to her mother and other relatives, seek help with his addiction and to find something to do even if it meant volunteering to acquire skills. ‘I will contact our partner to see if they can be of help,’ she promised. She appealed to the mother to accept her son back home and help him to become independent.

The mother Zainab said she had endured several abuses, intimidations and threats directed at her person by her son. Zainab described her son as a drug addict and someone who was misled by his peers and therefore misbehaves quite a lot especially when he is hungry.  ‘He will come home and demand food from me and will misbehave when it is not provided,’ his mother said.

The mother reported the matter to the police after Abdul threatened to kill her if she did not bring his daughter back home. The mother of his daughter had taken custody of the child. Abdul was angry about this and had blamed his mother Zainab for what had happened and therefore gave her an ultimatum to bring back his daughter.

Abdul’s mother reported the matter to the police station at Adelaide Street. He spent 19 days in police cell during the investigations, and the matter was charged to court in September 2018. He was remanded at the Pademba Road Correctional Centre on September 2019 until 20 October 2020, when he was discharged by Justice Komba Kamanda because the prosecution had offered no evidence in his trial. This is despite over two-years on remand with forty adjournments most on the request of the prosecution.

By Sallieu S. Kanu

26/10/2020. ISSUE NO: 7938