Olukemi Ibikunle, known as Kemi, left her family in Lagos, Nigeria, in 2020 to take on a pivotal role within the country’s prison service. With a background in geology, she quickly became indispensable, overseeing five custodial centers holding nearly 9,000 detainees. Her work balances security with respect for the dignity of prisoners, designing facilities with features such as privacy-conscious toilets and reinforced structures that prevent self-harm while maintaining humane conditions.
Kemi’s expertise led her to MONUSCO, the UN peacekeeping mission in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), where she was tasked with reforming the nation’s ailing prison system. Her approach emphasized the Mandela and Bangkok Rules, advocating for libraries, workshops, sports facilities, and gender-sensitive detention practices. She ensured women had separate facilities or secure sections, mitigating risks of sexual exploitation. By translating technical expertise across language and cultural barriers, Kemi earned respect in a male-dominated field, insisting on practical, budget-conscious solutions while managing large-scale prison construction projects.
In 2023, Kemi faced a direct threat when the M23 militia advanced in South Kivu. As MONUSCO personnel evacuated, she remained on the ground to oversee projects, navigating dangerous conditions and eventually fleeing to safety across the Rwandan border. Despite these challenges, she continued her work from Beni, North Kivu, while the major prison project in Kabare remains on hold.
Her reforms have had tangible impact. At Uvira Prison, she implemented a biogas system that transformed human waste into cooking gas, reducing pollution and providing sustainable energy for kitchens. In Bukavu, she addressed gender inequities in food distribution and facilities for female inmates, ensuring they received the same treatment and dignity as male prisoners. Her persistent oversight turned small, practical interventions into lasting improvements in daily prison life.
Throughout her missions, Kemi has balanced professional commitment with motherhood, maintaining daily contact with her children via video calls while navigating the demands of high-stakes work in conflict zones. Her guiding principle is that dignity is found in the smallest details—a safe pipe, a well-maintained kitchen, or a library. This dedication earned her the 2025 UN Trailblazer Award for Women Justice and Corrections Officers, recognizing her leadership and transformative impact. Despite international recognition, she continues quietly advancing prison reform, demonstrating that peace and human dignity begin behind prison walls.