Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

African prisoners find education can be freeing

Program teaches literacy and the law to inmates

- By Desmond Tiro and Josphat Kasire

NAIROBI, Kenya — Morris Kaberia was on Kenya’s death row and feeling suicidal when he came across a program that eventually set him free.

The former police officer had been imprisoned for violent robbery, and his protests that he had been framed went unanswered. Then he heard about the African Prisons Project, which is turning even illiterate prisoners into their own legal advocates in countries where such assistance is desperatel­y rare.

In September, the 47year-old was released after representi­ng himself in court. He is now pursuing a law degree from the University of London. “Joining the program is actually the thing which gave me my life back,” he said. “I saw that there is a possibilit­y of thinking big that the walls cannot limit me.”

Eight hundred prisoners have been freed this year alone as of October, project spokeswoma­n Peggy Nyahera said.

The project in Kenya and neighborin­g Uganda was founded in 2007 by thenBritis­h law student Alexander McLean, who was volunteeri­ng in Uganda when he witnessed the sorry state of inmates. Many are illiterate and poor, with little resources to represent themselves.

Under the project, inmates who need it are mastering basic literacy and then encouraged to study law. Project staffers and inmates role-play in mock court situations while law students act as judges.

“Last examinatio­n we did in May, we had a distinctio­n from this prison. We had somebody who had a 72 pass mark grade, which is a distinctio­n under the grading of the University of London,” said Hamisi Mzari, a legal aid officer with the project who works with inmates at a prison in Kenya.

The experience can transform inmates and change how others treat them, Mzari said. “People are now seeing that the people whom we took into prison, whom we had considered that they are the litter and the garbage of society, they are now coming out as polished gold.”

The prisoner with the high score in May, George Karaba, 45, had been charged with murder and sentenced to death. He says he had lost hope. Now he’s applying for a presidenti­al pardon and has become a trustee, with a leadership role among his peers.

Currently 60 prisoners are studying for University of London Law degrees via correspond­ence from 30 prisons in Kenya and Uganda, the African Prisons Project said. The work is supported by the Queens Commonweal­th Trust.

The project also helps former prisoners into positions where they can work to revise what they call unjust laws.

 ?? JOSPHAT KASIRE/AP ?? The African Prisons Project helps poor, illiterate inmates learn to read and study the law so they can advocate for themselves in court.
JOSPHAT KASIRE/AP The African Prisons Project helps poor, illiterate inmates learn to read and study the law so they can advocate for themselves in court.

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