All Insights

Determining the Right to Access to Justice

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Blog
by
Amina El Hajjami
Program Director
onFebruary 2, 2022

It is said that attendance and collective participation in various fields makes a person aware of the value of diverse opinions and attitudes, helps them gain experience and expertise, and leads them to understand ways of presenting ideas.

Today, in the center of Souihla, Marrakech, representatives from various associations attended and participated in the activities of a meeting organized by the Adalah Association in partnership with Lawyers Without Borders (Brussels) and the United Nations Women with the joint support of the Belgian Cooperation Agency (DGD) and the Embassy of Canada. The meeting was held on 7,8, and 9 January 2022.

The High Atlas Foundation (HAF) was present, represented by Ms. Amina El-Hajjami, Director of the Legal Clinic project in Marrakech, within the framework of the partnership between Cadi Ayyad University, Faculty of Legal, Economic, and Social Sciences, the Legal Clinic Association for Studies and Research, and with the support of the National Fund for Democracy (NED). The project aims to train 67 research students with a master’s or doctoral degree in law, and will extend from October 2021 to September 2023.

The purpose of the meeting was to develop an action plan to activate the dynamic of the “right of access to justice” for the benefit of vulnerable groups of children in conflict with the law and in difficult situations, male and female migrants, asylum seekers, male and female prisoners, and women and girls who are victims of violence. This action plan is meant to provide legal support, judicial assistance, and accompaniment within the framework of the legal clinic mechanism. It was created in cooperation with universities to guide and sensitize them and their awareness of legal practices in order to ensure a high quality of legal services.

The meeting was attended by various institutions and associations, including legal clinics, health clinics, care cells, listening centers and shelters, as well as multidisciplinary centers. The importance of defining a joint action strategy to facilitate access to justice for women victims of violence and vulnerable groups was embodied in the establishment of a network of national legal clinics. This network creates cooperation in order to activate the dynamism of the right to access to justice between the listening and guidance centers and the legal clinics and helps develop a road map for further cooperation between the relevant associations and institutions.

Introductory speeches on January 7 were initiated by Mrs. Jamila Al-Siuri, President of Adalah Association, and she welcomed the attendees, whether institutional representatives or association representatives, expressing her consideration that this meeting was an educational meeting for the work of civil and institutional actors in the field of facilitating the right of access to justice and the most important reasons and problems that impede this access.

It was highlighted that what distinguishes the Legal Clinic established by Adalah and its partners is that it combined two approaches: a pedagogical approach that relies on the sensitization aspect and the mobilization of students of Law faculties. This curriculum has organized several continuous training sessions of interest to students of legal clinics in the field of human rights in order to bring issues closer to the community.

The curriculum also includes the service aspect so that it provides services within the framework of legal advice, accompanying and escorting, and other legal aid. The basis of this is to provide credible logical knowledge and introduce legal procedures, especially with regard to directing women how to benefit from the legal aid system.

These were followed by the words of Mrs. Nisreen Al-Haskouri, coordinator of the Legal Clinic program, “Justice for All,” where she began her speech considering that the “Justice for All” program came within the framework of a project to improve access to justice for the most vulnerable groups, especially battered women and immigrant women.

The statistics of the High Commissioner for Planning presented the percentage of violence against battered women and girls in 2019, showing that 13.4 million women are directly or indirectly subjected to violence and that more than 7.6 million women between the ages of 15 and 74 have experienced at least one violent act.