Paul Davis, 3L
Sixty Feet's Children's Justice Initiative
Kampala, Uganda
Since we (my wife and I) got into Kampala at 1am on
Sunday, life has been non-stop. Between
driving on the left side of the road through seas of trucks, vans and bodas
(motorcycles) and trying to understand our role within the organization life
has been very full. Full but good.
In Ugandan Sixty Feet is known as Children’s Justice
Initiative (CJI). CJI’s principle goal
is to care for children in conflict with the law. CJI accomplishes this by supporting counselors,
providing basic medical care and participating in legal advocacy for the children
in the juvenile homes. CJI operates in
Nguru which is a small section in the lush hills of Kampala. The office is located next to a juvenile
remand home and a reception center for street kids.
What I
have learned in my first week is that helping is complicated, it’s not axis versus
allies or good versus evil. Often it
appears that when attempting to help in one area their will be great harm in
another or that creating a solution becomes a matter of choosing the lesser
evil. Government agencies attitudes
towards children in conflict with the law range from strong advocacy to blatant
obstruction of justice. One thing is
very certain though, a strong governmental and cultural belief in the rule of
law is desperately needed. The Ugandan
laws for Children found in the Childrens Act are actually quite expansive: requiring
that children have education, immunization, adequate diet, clothing, shelter,
medical attention and protection from abuse. The problem is that both
enforcement and cultural support are inconsistent and rampant bribery further
dilutes legislation’s power.
CJI’s legal department is presently advocating for
children’s rights in several ways. A
main focus currently is on the diversion program. This program is designed to direct children
who are arrested for committing petty crimes away from the criminal
institution. Instead of serving a
sentence in a prison they are given the opportunity to pay back or work for the
person they harmed or be enrolled in counseling. The program functions by having advocates
stationed at police stations that counsel the police officers on the law and
encourage them to offer the children alternative resolutions for their crimes. The program has been operating for one week
and so far diversion has been successful in many instances. The legal department also supports a program
called J-Faster which is run by Pepperdine’s global justice fellow. This
program works with children accused of crimes and helps negotiate guilty pleas
in order to significantly reduce sentences. This addresses the abundance of overcrowding
in the juvenile homes and a severely backlogged case file in the juvenile
system. J-Faster has been very
successful in the past and we hope to be very involved while we are here.
My role
as legal director is to oversee the successful implementation of these
programs, maintain CJI’s relationships with partners and further identifying
areas in which the legal program can advocate for children in conflict with the
law. If the first week was any
indication of what the rest of the summer will look like I expect that I will
be presented with an abundance of opportunities to advocate both individual
children and the implementation of the rule of law.
No comments:
Post a Comment