PHOTO | PPS President Kenyatta receives the Truth, Justice and Reconciliation Commission’s final report from team chairman Bethuel Kiplagat at State House Nairobi. PPS
By NG’ANG’A MBUGUA
jmbugua@ke.nationmedia.com, May 22 2013
In Summary
- TJRC chairman was named adversely over abuses during his reign as Foreign Affairs PS and property acquisition
Dr
Bethuel Kiplagat could go down in history for having the distinction of
being both the chairman of a commission and one of the people adversely
mentioned in the commission’s final report.
The very
mandate of the Truth, Justice and Reconciliation Commission (TJRC) put
its chairman on a collision course with rights activists, who demanded
that he resigns from the position soon after President Kibaki appointed
him in 2009.
Matters came to a head when some of the
commissioners proposed that a tribunal be set up to hear complaints
against their chairman.
Among those who had called on
Dr Kiplagat to quit were his deputy, Ms Betty Murungi, and Commissioner
Ronald Slye. This caused a rift in the commission that reduced its
standing in public. The two later resigned.
Those who
opposed his appointment argued that they had information linking him to
the Wagalla Massacre of February 1984 in which hundreds were killed in
Wajir, while others were tortured in a security crackdown.
Questions
were also asked about Dr Kiplagat’s role in the 1990 death of Foreign
Minister Robert Ouko, and his acquisition of government land while
serving in the Moi administration.
And now in its
report, the truth commission has recommended that the Land Commission
carry out further investigations into Dr Kiplagat’s acquisition of land
in Liyavo Farm, Kitale.
When the allegations were
levelled against him, Dr Kiplagat protested his innocence, insisting
that he, too, deserved justice and had a right to be heard. He declined
to step aside despite pressure.
At the time of the
Wagalla Massacre, Mr Kiplagat was a member of the Kenya Intelligence
Committee by virtue of being a permanent secretary in the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs.
“The Kenya Intelligence Committee of
the 1980s was described as an intelligence gathering body by James
Stanley Mathenge, the Permanent Secretary in the Office of the President
in charge of Internal Security and Provincial Administration at the
time,” the report says.
“The rest of the committee
consisted of a small and fairly select group of people: permanent
secretaries drawn from the ministries of Information, Foreign Affairs,
Defence, Home Affairs, and the Director of Intelligence, the
Commissioner of Police and the officer in charge of Intelligence in the
Army.
In February 1984 the persons occupying those
posts were Mr Gituma, Dr Bethuel Kiplagat, Mr Muliro, David Mwiraria, Mr
James Kanyotu, Mr Bernard Njinu and Brigadier (later General) Joseph
Raymond Kibwana, respectively.”
Became minister
One
of the witnesses who gave evidence before the commission was Mohammed
Ibrahim Elmi, a doctor at the time of the massacre, but later became the
minister for Northern Kenya and Asal Development.
He
said: “On Saturday, 11 February, 1984, the operation continued. It was
particularly bad in Bulla Jogoo in Wajir town, where all non-permanent
houses called herios belonging to the Degodia were burnt down.
“That
was when women were raped. I distinctly remember that a disabled person
was burnt in one of those houses. My colleague at TB Manyatta
Dispensary, Sister Annalena Tonelli, went to remove the body for burial
on Sunday morning.”
Mr Elmi broke down in tears as he recounted the horrors he witnessed.
Another
witness who gave her testimony in camera, said of the massacre: “No
woman was spared. They did not care whether some were pregnant. They did
not care when some women told them they were about to give birth. They
did not care that some women were old. Every soldier came. They were so
many soldiers. They were uncountable.
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