Archive for ‘Women in Law’

July 11th, 2008

Book Review: Sisters in Law

by Sharon Famonure

Title: Sisters in Law: Career Choices for Nigerian Women Lawyers

Authors: Boma Ozobia & Elizabeth Cruickshank

Review By: Sharon Famonure

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When I first saw this book, my first thought was that it was about the lives of some sisters-in law. Having read it through (twice), I have come to the conclusion that this is not just a book but a practical guide for Nigerian women lawyers.

The women portrayed in this book cut across diverse backgrounds and inclinations. They however had one thing in common…the Law and family. They each successfully combined both and achieved outstanding results.

One of such women is Uju Aisha Hassan Baba, the Direcotr General of the Legal Aid Council. After several years as a prosecutor in the Ministry of Justice, She made the move from prosecutor to ‘Chief Public Defender’ in 1999. After an initial adjustment period, Uju Aisha Hassan Baba rolled up her sleeves and went to work with such zeal and enthusiasm; from Prison yard to Court Room, her passion spills over.

During my stint as a corp member with the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC), I had regular contact with the Legal Aid Commission and got to hear of the incredible service this spectacular woman was rendering. I also became quite familiar with the mission statement of the Commission, ‘Giving Voice to the Voiceless.’ It was therefore with a bubbling sense of excitement that I turned to the section which had her interview in the book and I was not disappointed. She is every bit the dynamic woman I had suspected her to be. Her advice for female lawyers is spot on:

From the very beginning every female lawyer must be sincere and hardworking. You need to take every case seriously and you have to put all that you have into it. Without hard work, you will not succeed.

Quite a number of eminent women in the profession featured in the book, but one in particular stands out boldly in my memory. This is Sena Anthony. She is the Group General Manager, Corporate Secretariat and Legal Division and Secretary to the Corporation of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC). She is not just the first woman to chair the International Bar Association (IBA) Section on Energy and Natural Resources, but is also the first African.

This sister in law made me see the beauty in being an in house counsel; reading her interview made me want to be an in house counsel. She gently and patiently takes the reader through the multi-faceted abilities and the versatility of the in house lawyer. This is certainly an eye opener; as Sena Anthony puts it:

We really have to have a knowledge of everything. We need to know about Aviation Law and the Law relating to Goods and Services; as in-house lawyers we really have to have a broad base of legal knowledge.

The book, Sisters in Law reads like an accolade of the women who have climbed unto the highest platforms of their chosen areas of law with notable ’sisters’ like Funke Adekoya who is the Managing Partner of AELEX Legal Practitioners and Arbitrators and is also one of only 5 women who are Senior Advocates of Nigeria; or the inestimable Yinka Omorogbe, Professor of Law and Dean of the Faculty of Law, University of Ibadan (my almer mater). Professor Yinka Omorogbe is a consultant on Energy Law and Policy, Managing Director of the Centre for Petroleum, Environment and Development Studies and the General Secretary on the Nigeria Society of International Law. These women and their contemporaries mentioned in Sisters in Law, have a number of achivements to their name. The authors are no exception.

Growing up in the Oil City of Nigeria, Port Harcourt, Boma Ozobia, one of the authors of the book experienced first hand, the challenges faced by lady lawyers in Nigeria yet she did not let that hold her down. She qualified both in Nigeria and in the United Kingdom. She is the founding partner of Sterling Partnership Solicitors LLP and was Chairwoman of the Association of Women Solicitors of England and Wales in 2005. She is a highly principled person and her belief in hard work and determination come across clearly as one reads through the live of the different women she writes about. She is one of those inimitable women who have successfully combined law practice and a home life.

Elizabeth Cruickshank, author of “Women in the Law” and Editor of Link, the magazine of the Association of Women Solicitors of England and Wales is another outstanding woman. She was Chairwoman of the Association of Women Solicitors in 2004, and in 2005 was given the Era Crawley Award for services to women solicitors. She is certainly a role model to young lawyers; she has shown me that it is indeed possible to ‘have it all:’ a fulfilling career and a happy home.

Sisters in Law is a compulsory read for all young female lawyers. When I was at the University and even at law school, I had no mentors to look up to; no doubt they existed but of who they were and how to find them, I was totally clueless. If I’d had this book, it would have been a different story.

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June 26th, 2008

Legal Personality: Beatrice Hamza-Bassey

by Sharon Famonure

Beatrice Hamza-Bassey made history recently when she became the first African to be named a partner at New York City-based Hughes Hubbard and Reed, one of the oldest law firms in the United States, and one of the biggest in the world. A 1994 Law graduate of the University of Maiduguri, Beatrice, as she is fondly called, bagged a Master’s degree in Law in 1998 from the prestigious Harvard University in the United States. Married with two children, brilliant Beatrice, 37, had scooped many awards in Nigeria and the United States before bagging the landmark partnership. But in all this, she is humble and gives God the glory. “God uses us as instruments for his glory,” she enthuses.

SHE came to the United States to study law at Master’s level at the prestigious Harvard University and then, as she planned, she would go back home and teach at a university or the Nigerian Law School. But all of that changed when she got an offer to work with one of the oldest law firms in US legal history. And after 10 years, Beatrice Hamza-Bassey has made history as the first Nigerian trained female lawyer to make partnership in a big US law firm.

What about how she decided to study law? At age four, she buffeted a visiting family relative -her aunt staying the night – with so many questions all night that in the morning the relative had to report “your lawyer-daughter” to Beatrice’s mum! That was her first contact with the idea of becoming a lawyer and she stuck with it.

And even after she had settled down in the career as a lawyer in New York City, the way things happen in her life continue to reflect a bigger hand at work. When time came to choose a life partner, an influential Nigerian lawyer who knew her, as a “hardworking lady” was instrumental to introducing her to another “hardworking Nigerian man” also based in New York so that two-hardworking people – the one is a lawyer and the other a doctor- became man and wife in 2004 and now both have two happy children.

It is therefore not surprising that this young woman who has managed to balance a thriving and outstanding legal career with a happy married life that is blessed with two young children is in fact a believer! She mentions the fact that she grew up in a Pentecostal church and in Sunday school classes.

Beatrice is happily married to a Nigerian medical doctor, Yarromi Bassey and with Derrick Alvari, their son and Margaret Annieka, their daughter, are based in New York. Asked how she has been able to cope as a professional woman and as a wife and mother all at once, she points to her faith in God as a driving force.

Said the New York lawyer: “I’m truly blessed. I believe there is God’s hand, and nothing comes to me without God’s blessings.”

As a Christian, Beatrice makes the point that she is a born again “Pentecostal” and that she feels “a particular responsibility to God.” According to her, “I may not live up to every expectation, but will make sure I am successful and that I will be an instrument for God’s glory.”

In her school days in Nigeria, she had been a brilliant student at Queen’s College, Lagos making As in her SSCE – being the first set that sat for the SSCE and not WAEC in 1988. At the University of Maiduguri (UNIMAID) she graduated with distinction in 1994. She won the Dean’s Prize, the Moot Court Competition and was also the Class Valedictorian. She was also the President of the Law Students Association and Chairperson of the university’s Students’ Union between 1993 and 1994.

At the Nigerian Law School where she graduated with honours in 1995, Hamza-Bassey won the Sir Darnley Alexander Prize, Chief Ernest Shonekan Prize and the FRA Williams prizes.

Hamza-Bassey also loves her community. Although she is based abroad, she is a passionate participant in activities of Nigerians abroad in the US. For instance, she was president of the Nigerian Lawyers Association between 2001 and 2002 and is the current chair of the Association’s Board of Directors. She is also a member of the Board of Directors of the Mac Arthur Foundation’s Nigeria Higher Education Foundation. “I love to get involved in the community,” she affirms.

She hails from Bora-Kwaya in Kusar Local Government Area of Borno State from a family of educated and Christian parents with six children. Her father was a professor of Geography at the Bayero University, Kano and later the University of Maiduguri where her mother was also the University Librarian. In the Second Republic her father later became an elected federal legislator.

After her faith in God, Hamza-Bassey points to mum’s influence. “Mum has been a very positive influence in my life.” She recalls how it was her mother’s idea that she should attend secondary education in Lagos, at the famous Queen’s College, even though the family was mainly based in Maiduguri.

(. . . Read the rest of this article here.)

An Article by Laolu Akande, Culled from the Guardian Newspaper.

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