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The Conversation
The Conversation
Science
Benjamin Okorie Ajah, Lecturer, University of Nigeria

Nigeria has too many prison inmates awaiting trial. Technology could achieve swifter justice

An activist protests against the incarceration of hundreds of inmates imprisoned without trial in Nigeria. Pius Utomi Ekpei/AFP via Getty Images

Nigeria’s prison population is more than 76,000, housed in 240 correctional centres. About 70% of these inmates are still awaiting trial. They have been arrested and charged, but not yet convicted or cleared.

This is the highest percentage of awaiting-trial prisoners in Africa. World Prison Brief’s latest report puts the figure at 12.4% for Ghana and 32.9% for South Africa.

The presumption of innocence is enshrined in Nigeria’s constitution, in section 36(5). It says:

Every person who is charged with a criminal offence shall be presumed to be innocent until he is proved guilty.

But the reality in Nigeria, as a number of researchers have shown, is that many people accused of crimes are presumed to be guilty. They are arrested and imprisoned before their cases are investigated.

Add to this a court system beset by delays and backlogs – it’s no wonder that Nigeria has so many inmates awaiting trial.

There are reports of accused people spending 10 years awaiting trial in the US, and between 12 and 15 years in Nigeria. This long wait in Nigeria is against section 296 of the 2015 Administration of Criminal Justice Act. The law provides that the period of remand should not exceed 28 days.

There have been some efforts to address the situation. The government offers some free legal services through the Legal Aid Council. It provides free legal assistance and representation, legal advice and alternative dispute resolution to indigent Nigerians to enhance access to justice. But the problem seems intractable.


Read more: Waiting for trial can be worse than facing the sentence: a study in Nigerian prisons


We wondered whether a technological solution might be a step towards addressing trial backlogs.

So we set out to study the situation at two correctional centres in Abakaliki and Afikpo, towns in Ebonyi State in south-east Nigeria. We investigated the underlying causes of long awaiting-trial periods and ways of addressing them.

The main causes of delay include the slow pace of investigation by the police and the loss of case files. Others are an inadequate court system and poor access to lawyers.

Our findings suggest that a repository portal system could help address most of the issues delaying trials. The portal would be a database where information about accused persons and their current trial status would be stored. It would be easily accessible, too. Material relating to investigations and police findings could be uploaded to the portal, which would then automatically allocate cases, depending on the nature of the alleged offences, to the relevant court.

This would address the challenge of loss or manipulation of data by criminal justice agents, like the police and correctional centre officials. It also tackles the challenge posed by manually sorting through large files.

A system like this has not been proposed or applied in any African country yet.

What we did

Our study focused on 1,343 inmates at Abakaliki and Afikpo correctional centres. Of that figure, 845 (63%) were awaiting trial.

We used structured questionnaires and unstructured in-depth interviews with a sample of 1,498 respondents drawn from the Nigerian criminal justice agencies and “awaiting-trials”. We asked the participants about their experiences in the criminal justice system, whether the processes were automated or manual, and how the process affected their experience. This was with a view to identifying the gaps caused by manual methods in the system, and determining how information and communication technology could fill that gap.

Nigeria’s criminal justice bureaucracy uses manual processes to record and preserve information about suspects and evidence, transfer case files, prepare for suspects’ court appearances and allocate cells to inmates.

Some of the problems identified are losses of case files, degradation of evidence and delays in preparing inmates for court appearances. Other problems are delays in concluding cases and improper allocation of cells.


Read more: Nigeria's jailbreaks point to a prison system out of step with reality


The results showed that 39.1% of the police officers (241 of 617), 69% of the prison officials (100 of 145) and 53.1% of the court officials (60 of 113) were of the view that automation of the criminal justice processes using a repository system could address the delays.

These findings are in line with our qualitative data. The criminal justice agents we interviewed affirmed the importance of linking and automating all the criminal justice agencies with a repository system.

Developing the portal

The information on the portal should categorise offences as simple, misdemeanour or felony. There should be detailed information about the suspects, offences they are accused of and legal provisions guiding such offences.

Here’s the process we propose for using the repository system:

  • police upload cases onto a database

  • the system can transfer cases to the nearest courts of competent jurisdiction

  • the trial can commence

  • after judgement, those found guilty will be sent to correctional centres to serve their sentences

  • those acquitted will be released and their cases will be marked closed.

To ensure seamless functioning of the system, a monitoring body should be created, independent from the Nigerian Correctional Service. It would monitor the activities of the criminal justice agents.

The Conversation

Benjamin Okorie Ajah does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

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