*/
Major David Hammond and Paul Hoddinott explain the Bar Council’s involvement in ILAC.
The Bar Council is one of the 44 member organisations that contributes to the running of the International Legal Assistance Consortium (“ILAC”) based in Stockholm, Sweden. Charged with supervising this affiliation, the International Committee recently reviewed the Bar Council’s exposure to and interaction with ILAC. This was to ensure that our relationship remains mutually beneficial and provides key opportunities for interested, qualified and currently available barristers capable of providing pertinent legal assistance to the international community whilst often operating within demanding and unique environments around the globe.
ILAC’s objectives
ILAC’s principal aims are:
Since its first assessment in East Timor in 2001, ILAC has been involved in some capacity in Sri Lanka, Afghanistan, Iraq, Gaza and West Bank, Algeria, Morocco, Liberia, Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda, Kenya and Haiti. Member organisations meantime are currently providing assistance in Afghanistan, Liberia, Democratic Republic of Congo and Haiti.
The assessment teams
ILAC assessment teams are selected to ensure relevant legal background and skills, gender balance, cultural and linguistic familiarity with the region and strict impartiality. Whenever possible, assessments are made with the cooperation of the national government and in coordination with local organisations. English barristers have contributed to ILAC assessments in Rwanda and Kenya, and to follow-up projects in Iraq.
A unique opportunity
ILAC will undoubtedly appeal to many barristers as an alternative, exciting and unique gateway to widening one’s professional portfolio. It is appreciated, however, that barristers who take part need to step outside their everyday practices and to engage for potentially extended periods away from home in developing, emerging and/or recovering countries, often operating in austere and basic conditions and on an expenses-only basis. It is therefore worth making it clear that ILAC seeks suitably qualified and highly motivated individuals who are able to place charitable commitment, as well as personal and professional satisfaction, above financial remuneration. The rewards, however, are clear. Unique international law experiences based upon practical and pragmatic support to needy judicial systems supporting and reinvigorating the rule of law can never be underestimated, either in the development of individual practices, widening networking opportunities or simply respect in the eyes of peers and colleagues alike. In sum, ILAC provides an avenue and opportunities to give back to society and pass on professional expertise on both a legal and altruistic basis.
The next step
Interested readers should contact the International Committee and specifically Christian Wisskichen (e-mail: cwisskirchen@barcouncil.org.uk), so that he can follow up on your experience and inform you of similar opportunities in the future. The intention is that the International Committee will develop an effective database of practitioners capable of reacting at short notice to global needs assessments and subsequently, to participate in longer-term efforts in aiding reconstruction of international judicial systems.
Major David Hammond, Royal Marines, sits on the Bar Council’s International Committee and is a practicing naval barrister, specialising in crime, international, maritime and military operational law matters. Paul Hoddinott is the Chairman of ILAC and since his retirement from the Royal Navy he has been intimately involved in worldwide legal NGO activities including Africa, Iraq and Afghanistan.
ILAC: working in practice
ILAC’s biggest challenge in 2010 is presented by Haiti, where ILAC has been active since 2005, working with the Haitian government to implement the recommendations of ILAC’s assessment report, made at the request of the United Nations Mission to Haiti. ILAC’s activities have consisted of legal reform assistance to the government, support to the Bar in forming a national Bar association, and support to civil society by the establishment of a nation-wide legal aid programme.
The legal aid programme, official name SYNAL (Système nationale d’assistance legale), consists of a network of legal aid offices (Bureaux d’assistance legale (“BAL”)) around the country. At the beginning of 2010, there were eleven BALs in operation. The goal is to have one BAL in each of the 18 provinces. The SYNAL programme is coordinated by a national office in Port-au-Prince which employs four persons. At the beginning of 2010, ILAC employed a total of 130 persons in Haiti, all of whom are Haitian nationals, with the exception of ILAC’s Resident Representative.
In the aftermath of the earthquake catastrophe, a growing number of ILAC member organisations are expressing their determination to get involved. A meeting in Paris on 15 June, attended by representatives of the United Nations, the Haitian government and 15 legal NGOs (including the Bar Council) identified a number of new support projects.
Natural disasters of the scale that hit Haiti were not imagined when the ILAC was founded some ten years ago. But it is hard to imagine a country in greater need of assistance. To live up to the responsibility of re-building the Haitian justice system, ILAC therefore needs the involvement and ongoing active support of its members.
The perspective from the International Committee
The Bar Council has been a key supporter of ILAC, but more engagement would be welcome. Following the 2003 Gulf War Christian Wisskirchen, Head of International Relations at the Bar Council, together with Stephen Mason, a member of the Bar Council’s IT Panel (amongst others), participated as members of the ILAC team in support of the Iraqi Bar Council. They helped to provide IT infrastructure and assistance for the running of the Iraqi Bar Council’s membership database. This resulted in much needed IT systems and bespoke IT programmes being installed and integrated within the recovering Iraqi legal system. Whilst this was acknowledged as not necessarily being the perfect long-term solution, ILAC’s intervention, at the request of the fledgling Iraqi government, provided the urgently needed and essential front-line support to help reconstitute a judicial system which had been isolated from international developments for 30 years and damaged by Ba’athist rule.
For more information about ILAC visit: www.ilac.se
ILAC’s objectives
ILAC’s principal aims are:
Since its first assessment in East Timor in 2001, ILAC has been involved in some capacity in Sri Lanka, Afghanistan, Iraq, Gaza and West Bank, Algeria, Morocco, Liberia, Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda, Kenya and Haiti. Member organisations meantime are currently providing assistance in Afghanistan, Liberia, Democratic Republic of Congo and Haiti.
The assessment teams
ILAC assessment teams are selected to ensure relevant legal background and skills, gender balance, cultural and linguistic familiarity with the region and strict impartiality. Whenever possible, assessments are made with the cooperation of the national government and in coordination with local organisations. English barristers have contributed to ILAC assessments in Rwanda and Kenya, and to follow-up projects in Iraq.
A unique opportunity
ILAC will undoubtedly appeal to many barristers as an alternative, exciting and unique gateway to widening one’s professional portfolio. It is appreciated, however, that barristers who take part need to step outside their everyday practices and to engage for potentially extended periods away from home in developing, emerging and/or recovering countries, often operating in austere and basic conditions and on an expenses-only basis. It is therefore worth making it clear that ILAC seeks suitably qualified and highly motivated individuals who are able to place charitable commitment, as well as personal and professional satisfaction, above financial remuneration. The rewards, however, are clear. Unique international law experiences based upon practical and pragmatic support to needy judicial systems supporting and reinvigorating the rule of law can never be underestimated, either in the development of individual practices, widening networking opportunities or simply respect in the eyes of peers and colleagues alike. In sum, ILAC provides an avenue and opportunities to give back to society and pass on professional expertise on both a legal and altruistic basis.
The next step
Interested readers should contact the International Committee and specifically Christian Wisskichen (e-mail: cwisskirchen@barcouncil.org.uk), so that he can follow up on your experience and inform you of similar opportunities in the future. The intention is that the International Committee will develop an effective database of practitioners capable of reacting at short notice to global needs assessments and subsequently, to participate in longer-term efforts in aiding reconstruction of international judicial systems.
Major David Hammond, Royal Marines, sits on the Bar Council’s International Committee and is a practicing naval barrister, specialising in crime, international, maritime and military operational law matters. Paul Hoddinott is the Chairman of ILAC and since his retirement from the Royal Navy he has been intimately involved in worldwide legal NGO activities including Africa, Iraq and Afghanistan.
ILAC: working in practice
ILAC’s biggest challenge in 2010 is presented by Haiti, where ILAC has been active since 2005, working with the Haitian government to implement the recommendations of ILAC’s assessment report, made at the request of the United Nations Mission to Haiti. ILAC’s activities have consisted of legal reform assistance to the government, support to the Bar in forming a national Bar association, and support to civil society by the establishment of a nation-wide legal aid programme.
The legal aid programme, official name SYNAL (Système nationale d’assistance legale), consists of a network of legal aid offices (Bureaux d’assistance legale (“BAL”)) around the country. At the beginning of 2010, there were eleven BALs in operation. The goal is to have one BAL in each of the 18 provinces. The SYNAL programme is coordinated by a national office in Port-au-Prince which employs four persons. At the beginning of 2010, ILAC employed a total of 130 persons in Haiti, all of whom are Haitian nationals, with the exception of ILAC’s Resident Representative.
In the aftermath of the earthquake catastrophe, a growing number of ILAC member organisations are expressing their determination to get involved. A meeting in Paris on 15 June, attended by representatives of the United Nations, the Haitian government and 15 legal NGOs (including the Bar Council) identified a number of new support projects.
Natural disasters of the scale that hit Haiti were not imagined when the ILAC was founded some ten years ago. But it is hard to imagine a country in greater need of assistance. To live up to the responsibility of re-building the Haitian justice system, ILAC therefore needs the involvement and ongoing active support of its members.
The perspective from the International Committee
The Bar Council has been a key supporter of ILAC, but more engagement would be welcome. Following the 2003 Gulf War Christian Wisskirchen, Head of International Relations at the Bar Council, together with Stephen Mason, a member of the Bar Council’s IT Panel (amongst others), participated as members of the ILAC team in support of the Iraqi Bar Council. They helped to provide IT infrastructure and assistance for the running of the Iraqi Bar Council’s membership database. This resulted in much needed IT systems and bespoke IT programmes being installed and integrated within the recovering Iraqi legal system. Whilst this was acknowledged as not necessarily being the perfect long-term solution, ILAC’s intervention, at the request of the fledgling Iraqi government, provided the urgently needed and essential front-line support to help reconstitute a judicial system which had been isolated from international developments for 30 years and damaged by Ba’athist rule.
For more information about ILAC visit: www.ilac.se
Major David Hammond and Paul Hoddinott explain the Bar Council’s involvement in ILAC.
The Bar Council is one of the 44 member organisations that contributes to the running of the International Legal Assistance Consortium (“ILAC”) based in Stockholm, Sweden. Charged with supervising this affiliation, the International Committee recently reviewed the Bar Council’s exposure to and interaction with ILAC. This was to ensure that our relationship remains mutually beneficial and provides key opportunities for interested, qualified and currently available barristers capable of providing pertinent legal assistance to the international community whilst often operating within demanding and unique environments around the globe.
The beginning of the legal year offers the opportunity for a renewed commitment to justice and the rule of law both at home and abroad
By Louise Crush of Westgate Wealth Management sets out the key steps to your dream property
A centre of excellence for youth justice, the Youth Justice Legal Centre provides specialist training, an advice line and a membership programme
By Kem Kemal of Henry Dannell
By Ashley Friday of AlphaBiolabs
Providing bespoke mortgage and protection solutions for barristers
Joanna Hardy-Susskind speaks to those walking away from the criminal Bar
From a traumatic formative education to exceptional criminal silk – Laurie-Anne Power KC talks about her path to the Bar, pursuit of equality and speaking out against discrimination (not just during Black History Month)
Yasmin Ilhan explains the Law Commission’s proposals for a quicker, easier and more effective contempt of court regime
Irresponsible use of AI can lead to serious and embarrassing consequences. Sam Thomas briefs barristers on the five key risks and how to avoid them
James Onalaja concludes his two-part opinion series