Wednesday, October 31, 2018
The government intends to roll out specialized and extensive training
Participants to the training of trainers workshop following
proceedings of the programme, which was organized by the Law School of Tanzania
(LST) in collaboration with Tanganyika Law Society (TLS) and sponsored by the
Legal Services Facility (LSF). The training as part of government strategy to
produce competent paralegals who would provide high quality legal aid and
paralegal services in the country.
The government intends
to roll out specialized and extensive training for paralegals in a move to
enhance provision of quality legal aid and paralegals services delivery in the
country.
Countrywide a
comprehensive paralegal refresher training is expected to start early next
month, targeting more than two thousand paralegals who are currently providing
legal aid services in different parts of the country.
As part of the
preparation for this training, last week the government through the office of
the Registrar of Legal Aid Providers in the Ministry of Constitutional and
Legal Affairs, organized a five-day training of trainers (ToT), which attracted
around 40 participants (legal experts and non-lawyers) from legal aid
organizations operating in Tanzania.
The ToT training was
held in Dodoma, facilitated by the Law School of Tanzania (LST) in
collaboration with the Tanzania Law Society (TLS) and sponsored by the Legal
Services Facility (LSF)—a non-profit and non-governmental organization which
provides grants and technical support to legal aid organizations involved in
the implementation of the paralegal program and related activities.
In an exclusive with
this paper yesterday, Mr. Suleiman Pingoni, facilitator of the ToT training,
said the programme was meant to create a pool of qualified trainers who would
conduct the envisaged training for existing paralegals throughout the
country—starting from earlier November and to be completed before December 31,
this year.
He said the ToT
programme exposed participants to the basic training requirements for the
certification of paralegals as specified in the Legal Aid Act of 2017 and its
regulations of 2018. The implementation of the legal aid legislation requires
existing paralegals to undergo a re-fresher training in order to be recognized,
officially certified, and thus allowed to provide legal aid services to the
needy people in the country.
“In fact, the Legal
Aid Act recognizes paralegals who have been trained following a program
recognized by the Government (MoCLA) and who are presently providing legal aid
services. These paralegals will be issued with practicing
certificates/identity cards after they went through a special
additional training or re-fresher course as required by the law,” said Pingoni.
In that context, he
said, the government through the Legal Aid Providers Registrar Office conducted
the ToT programme, in order to get qualified trainers who would train
paralegals and enable them acquire requisite knowledge and skills specified in
the Legal Aid Act.
At the end of the day,
paralegals who would be trained by the recruited TOTs would receive
certificates, thus making it easier for them apply for registration, and will
later be issued with practicing certificates/identity cards.
“The main objective of
all these processes is to get qualified and competent paralegals who operate in
accordance with the standards and requirements of the Legal Aid Act and who
provide high quality legal aid and paralegal services to the needy people
across the country,” according to Pingoni.
Commenting, LSF
Director of Program, Scholastica Jullu described the comprehensive paralegal
trainings as “a major step” towards broadening the scope of legal aid provision
and expedites realization of the national dream of enhancing access to justice
for all in Tanzania.
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