Tuesday, May 21st 2013, By CYRUS OMBATI
Kenya: The TJRC report says between 2002 and 2008, President Mwai Kibaki
presided over a Government that was responsible for numerous gross
violations of human rights that included unlawful detentions, extra
judicial killings and, economic crimes and grand corruption.
The Commission found that there was a common trend pattern and state-sanctioned killings and disappearances.
“Indeed,
the use of excessive and disproportionate force by the police has been a
common theme running through Kenya’s history,” reads part of the
report.,
It adds that it was common for the state, and particularly
the police, to summarily execute individuals who were suspected to be
criminals or members of proscribed criminal gangs.
Further, it
adds excessive use of force by the police resulted in significantly high
numbers of death during, inter alia, the following contexts, security
operations, the official opening of the Nyanza General Hospital in
Kisumu in 1969, 1991 Saba Saba riots in1991, and 2007/2008
Election-related Violence.
“The Commission finds that in the last
half of 2007, state security agents, mainly the Kenya Police, summarily
executed and/or forcefully disappeared large numbers of individuals
suspected to be members of the outlawed Mungiki militia group.”
The
Commission found that the killings and disappearance of suspected
members of Mungiki was a systematic attack against a civilian population
and could, thus qualify as a crime against humanity.
It adds, in
March 2008, as part of Operation Okoa Maisha, state security agents,
including Kenya Police and Kenya Army, were involved in the summary
execution and/or disappearance of suspected members of Sabaot Land
Defense Force (SLDF) and this, the Commission says qualifies as a crime
against humanity.
Whenever the state has been faced with
allegations of extra-judicial killings and/or disappearances, its
traditional response has been to blatantly deny these allegations and
attack the credibility and legitimacy of those making the allegations,
rather than investigate those allegations.
The Commission
recommends that the President and the respective heads of the Kenya
Police and the Kenya Defense Forces, within six months of the issuance
of the Report, offer a public and unconditional apology for
extra-judicial killings committed during the mandate period.
The
report further recommends the fast-tracking of reforms in the Police
Service, including introduction of new standard operating procedures on
the use of force. Subsequently, it calls upon the Government to ratify
the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from
Enforced Disappearance.
“The Commission recommends the establishment of a fully equipped
national modern forensic laboratory within 36 months of the issuance of
this Report, and thereafter, in every County.”
Death sentence
The
report recommends the abolition of the death penalty and the calls for
moving all death sentences to life imprisonment or other appropriate
sentence. Further, it wants reparations for families of victims of
extra-judicial killings in accordance with the Commission’s Reparation
Framework.
The Kiplagat-led report wants the enactment of
legislation prohibiting all forms of torture and other forms of cruel,
inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment committed both by state and
non-state actors. Such legislation shall be enacted within one year of
the issuance of this Report.
The Commission recommends the
prosecution of police officers and other state agents who were involved
in the torture and ill-treatment of individuals during the mandate
period.
The Commission has identified individuals who were
involved in the torture and ill-treatment of, amongst others, Mwakenya
and FERA suspects and recommends their investigation and, where there is
sufficient evidence, prosecution.
The report found out that state
security agencies have, as a matter of course in dealing with banditry
and maintaining peace and order, employed collective punishment against
communities regardless of the guilt or innocence of individual members
of such communities.
“The Commission recommends that State
security agencies, and in particular the Kenya Police, Kenya Defence
Forces, and the National Intelligence Service apologize for gross
violations of human rights committed by their predecessor agencies.
No comments:
Post a Comment