Dr. Kamlesh Bahl CBE LLD FRIPD With a very good school record, Kamlesh
went to Birmingham University to read Law. At Birmingham, she was awarded
two Law Prizes and also met her future husband, now a General Practitioner
near their home in South Hertfordshire. Graduating with a good degree,
Kamlesh, after many setbacks where companies were reluctant to employ
a trainee solicitor who is female and Asian, joined the then Greater
London Council and attended Law School to complete her qualifications
as a solicitor.
Subsequently, Kamlesh worked as a solicitor for Texaco, British Steel
and Data Logic, before being appointed in 1993 as Chair of the Equal
Opportunities Commission. The first person from an ethnic minority grouping
to be appointed to that post, she was also the youngest! In total, with
a renewed appointment after the statutory three years, Kamlesh spent
nearly six years at the E O C, serving while there as a member of the
European Commissions Advisory Committee on Equal Opportunities
for Women and Men. In 1998, she became its Vice-President. Her membership
of ECACEOWM in turn led to her appointment as the European Commissions
representative on a new consultative commission on Racism and Xenophobia
in 1994.
In 1997, Kamlesh was created a Commander of the Honourable Order of
the British Empire (CBE) and, also in 1997, was appointed as an honorary
Fellow of the Institute of Personnel and Development.
In July 1998, Kamlesh Bahl was elected by the members (over 100,000
solicitors are the Law Society) as the Deputy Vice President
of the Law Society. The first woman and the first member of an ethnic
minority to be so elected.
In addition to the problems she had encountered as an Asian woman in
obtaining her first legal post, Kamlesh also experienced racism at
of all places - the Equal Opportunities Commission, but decided, for
the good of the EOC, to ignore it. She was, however, surprised and hurt
by the institutionalised racism that is prevalent at Law Society headquarters.
When complaints were made against her at the Law Society, Kamlesh,
knowing them to be false, took action against the Law Society, because
the treatment she suffered was so brutal and out of synchrony with the
published ethics of the Law Society. She needed to challenge the established
practice and vested interests.
The Law Societys motto is To Serve Law and Justice, but in Kamleshs
case justice has neither been given nor has it been seen to be done.
Any discrimination is objectionable, but to meet it at the Law Society
is extremely shocking.
The vulnerability of the public in its dealings with, for example,
medicine and law, is recognised by Parliament, so the Solicitors
Act gives the Law Society the power
to establish standards, to represent and to discipline solicitors.
In a way, the Law Society covers the joint functions of the General
Medical Council and the British Medical Association. The Law Societys
function is to make absolutely certain that solicitors keep to the law
and to established codes of conduct based on fairness and good practice.
In the twenty-first century, there is a need for recognition that the
United Kingdom is multi-racial, multi-cultural and multi-religious and
that there should be discrimination against no-one. In this area, solicitors
should be recognised for their concurrence, their expertise and their
fostering of that doctrine. The Race Relations Act, the Sex Discrimination
Act and the MacPherson Report show how institutions can act as collective
discriminators. That is a feature of history as British institutions
have tended to be peopled by white males and it is therefore their values
and attitudes that has been instilled into the culture of these institutions
over the years.
Kamleshs appointment as Deputy Vice President (to lead, after
two years, to the Presidency) was on a mandate to reform the Society.
A mandate from the Societys members, who are 90% of the lawyers
of England and Wales