Tribute to great father of Legal Aid Council in Nigeria

As the Nigerian Legal Aid Council celebrates its 40 years of providing free legal services to indigent Nigerians in pursuit of its vision and mandate  to build a new Nigerian nation where there is equal access to justice for all irrespective of means and where all constitutional rights are respected, protected and defended to ensure justice for all.

To fulfill its mission to remain the leading and pro-active provider of free, qualitative and timely legal aid services in Nigeria, ensuring social justice and the emancipation of the oppressed, reprieve to the weak and vulnerable thereby giving voice to the voiceless.

I see it as a necessary imperative to remember and pay tribute to Nigerians of great minds who saw today yesterday, committed themselves to the struggle and made sure that Nigerians enjoy the services of such a great institution that provides invaluable services to Nigeria and Nigerians.

 I remember the contributions, efforts and sacrifice which my late father, Dr. Chimezie Ikeaszor, Oboli Obosi  and his co travelers  in the Legal Aid family made to give birth to this octopus   known today  as the Legal Aid Council Nigeria.  This legal icon, champion of justice and defender of his people in the company of the late  Dr. Akanu Ibiam in 1978, met the then head of State, General Olusegun Obasanjo in a private meeting  in  Dodan Barracks, Lagos,  then  seat of power  in Nigeria   to present a  demand for the resolution of the abandoned property challenges. 

The issue had deprived thousand of Nigerians of Eastern Nigerian origin of  their property in Port Harcourt and other neighboring areas.  Though Dr. Ikeazor did not have any  property in Port Harcourt, he was concerned, he was worried,   the issue  was justice. He wanted to see that justice was not only done to his people, but that it was manifestly seen to be done. It was at this meeting with Nigeria’s military ruler, that my father demonstrated, argued and  expressed  his most decisive care for the poor and their inalienable  rights  to free legal aid in the country. Armed with pictures, data, reports,  facts and figures from within the country and across the globe,  he persuaded and prevailed on  General Obasanjo who eventually saw the imperative and urgent  need to  promulgate the Legal Aid Decree on November 26, 1976.

With their training and background, the initial reaction of the military establishment was “why should we be spending money on these criminals”. However, faced with the universally accepted theory of  the presumption of  innocence contained in our legal jurisprudence and  applicable in the Common Law family which Nigeria belongs, the argument that  an accused person is  innocent until proven guilty and the point about the injustice of being detained “Awaiting Trial” for periods far in excess of the maximum sentence for the offence in question won the day.

In 1973, Dr. Ikeazor was elected Vice- President of Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), in 1974 he founded the Legal Aid for the Poor Scheme in Nigeria. He single handedly financed the crusade without financial aid from Nigeria or abroad.  Infact, the  seed money money  that secured Nigeria’s place on the International Legal Aid body in 1974 was paid with my mother’s,  Mrs. Marina Ikeazor’s Barclays  Bank International Limited cheque  with  which he paid  48 Pounds to the International Legal Aid Association on February 22, 1974 and another Barclays International payment of 95 Pounds to the International Bar Association (IBA) on April 2, 1974.

A letter of support  to Dr. Ikeazor dated February 1, 1974 and signed by the then  Secretary-General of  the International Legal Aid Association (ILAA)  with headquarters in London and  sponsored by the IBA, Sir, Thomas Lund, C.B.E. reads:

“I was most interested in your plans for Legal Aid in Nigeria which you outlined to me at our recent meeting in London. And I am writing to wish the Nigerian Legal Aid Association a long, useful and successful future

“  It is universally recognized that no man should be deprived of the right to receive legal advice, or where necessary,  legal representation before the Courts or tribunals, especially by reason of his lack of financial resources. The ILAA welcomes the steps which you are taking to bring this basic human right to Nigerians. If there is any information or guidance which this association can give to the Nigerian Legal Aid Association, we shall be delighted to do so. We shall also look forward to welcoming the Nigerian Legal Aid Association as a member of the International Legal Aid Association”

In 1975, he was elected the  Representative Director of the governing body of the International Legal Aid, the first African to be so elected.  Several eminent lawyers and jurists agreed with him and worked with him in this crusade to give free legal aid to the poor.  They formed the Nigerian Legal Aid Association of which Dr. Ikeazor  was elected President, Prince David Akenzua was Vice-President,  Chief Solomon Lar  was elected Secretary-General,  Ogada Ede was the Deputy Secretary-General, late Chief Debo Akande was the Director of Operations, Chief Edwin Ezeoke was Assistant Director of Operations,  Dr. J. Ola Orojo, Chukwuemeka Udenze, Okey Achike, Mallam Abdullahi Ibrahim, H. T. O. Coker, N. O. Izuako, Alabi Masha, late Chief Gani Fawhinmi and Felix Offiah were national Counselors of the association.

The thrust of crusade was that lawyers should take up the representation of aggrieved persons in court and that the State should make lawyers available for anybody who has a brush with the law, either as an aggrieved person in a civil suit,  an arrested or accused  person who finds himself in custody without money to brief a counsel.

On November 26, 1976 the dream of these illustrious and patriotic Nigerians came true. News of the establishment of the Council was everywhere. For instance, the caption  of the lead story on Daily Times newspaper was “ At last, Govt.  backs the Scheme: Legal Aid Dream Comes True, fund established”  The happenings within the association did not escape the  attention of the world, for example Reuters News Agency reported in a London Newspaper that three hundred prisoners had been set free at the instance of the Association. In Lagos, Nigeria it was reported that: “ At least 300 suspects held in Nigerian jails for up to seven years without trial, have been freed in the past two months. They were released not because the police failed to prove charges against them, but because the length of detention far exceeded the maximum penalty for the alleged offences.

“The crusade is spearheaded by the Nigerian Legal Aid Association, inaugurated last February, its leader, Chimezie  Ikeazor, a 44year old  lawyer from the war- scarred  East Central State, launching the campaign says: “A speedy trial should not be a privilege, but a right. It is a cruel aspect of our litigation system that a man who does not have the services of counsel can hardly hope to obtain justice in full and quickly

Chimezie Ikeazor says: “our aim is to ensure that nobody is denied justice on account of poverty.”

In recent months some members of the Bench have been critical of the police for not bringing offenders to court in time. But it was not until the Association went into operation that prison conditions and the plight of many suspects came to light. A report compiled by leaders of the Association after visits to prisons in the Nigerian capital revealed terrible congestion and unduly long detention periods.

Ikoyi prison built to accommodate about 800, has nearly 2,000 immates; more that half were on remand and some had been held for several years. Labourer Adamu Katshine, freed on May 20, after intervention by the Association, had been held for four years on a theft charge.

Since the report the Chief Justice of Nigeria and nearly all Nigeria’s 36  State Chief Judges, have inspected prisons in their areas and moved to speed up the legal process.  And so it was gladdening that the activities of the Association has now been moved to world stage. Thanks indeed to the press, local and international. Equally gladdening was the fact the rights of the individual for so long brushed aside, is  now being  recognised.

The first beneficiary of Dr.  Ikeazor’s campaign of free  Legal Aid to the indigent was one Mallam Adamu Sokoto who was in prison custody for years awaiting trial for an offence for which if he had been found guilty,  he would have been sentenced to a maximum of six months imprisonment.

I wonder where Mallam Sokoto is now,   but  I remember visiting Kirikiri and Ikoyi prisons with my dad as a young girl, no wonder I run a prison outreach today  assisting Prison inmates, paying fines for prison inmates and securing their release.

By 1976, after intensive media campaign, countless court appearances freeing scores of awaiting trial inmates who had spent several months and years in prison custody, the Legal Aid Decree No. 56 of 1976 was promulgated and Dr.  Ikeazor firmly declined any suggestion or attempt to become chairman  of the newly created Legal Aid Council or the Director.

Throughout their crusade, Ikeazor and his fellow crusaders never asked for or received any funding from home or abroad, the decisions were taken in order to protect the integrity and independence of their course. Dr. Ikeazor, the Oboli can look back and be saluted and proud of his six graduate children with scores of grandchildren from Obosi, Awgbu, Kaduna and Ondo.

The lawyer who battled to make free Legal Aid for the poor in Nigeria a reality spent their own money on the crusade, their tours and court appearances. I salute them all for their selfless service and join the Legal Aid Council community to celebrate a successful, remarkable and memorable 40th year anniversary.

Sharon Ikeazor

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