A
senior police officer has pleaded with the vetting panel not to retire
officers from the police service, saying such an action could kill some
of them.
Administration Police AP Senior Staff College
Commandant Eusebius Laibuta told the Johnstone Kavuludi-led panel that
retiring him from the service before he completes his “few remaining
years” could kill him.
“I personally appeal to you not
to spell doom on us by taking away our jobs, because if you do so, you
may find some of us on the obituary pages of newspapers,” Mr Laibuta
told the panel as the vetting of 23 deputy police commissioners came to a
close on Saturday.
“Kindly consider the length of our
service to this nation before you spell doom on our careers. We may have
erred here and there, but please forgive us,” he pleaded.
Mr
Laibuta, who was the last to be vetted during the second phase of the
exercise, was at pains to explain the source of his income other than
his salary. For instance, he could not explain clearly the source of a
Sh3 million annual income listed as coming from miscellaneous and rental
payments.
He also vaguely explained huge deposits made
to his account on November 30, 2012, before making the desperate plea,
most likely after feeling he would not make the cut.
Earlier,
former Coast police boss King’ori Mwangi was taken to task to explain
allegations that he assisted drug barons to operate unhindered in the
area.
Mr King’ori also faced allegations linking him to
the murder of former GSU officer Erastus Chemurei and the Sh6 billion
cocaine haul conspiracy in which Mr Chemurei was killed in broad
daylight.
He was further asked to clarify what he knew
about the extra-judicial killing of two administration police officers
at the Coast who were said to be leading investigations on the drug haul
in Mombasa.
Mr King’ori, who is currently based at
police headquarters in Nairobi as the deputy director of police reforms,
was also at pains to explain allegations that he owns numerous rental
houses, passenger service vehicles and several other properties in
Nyeri, Mombasa and Nairobi.
But a seemingly relaxed Mr
King’ori tackled the questions with uncommon calm, even as he dismissed
some of the claims as a witch-hunt.
“I do not own any
rental building in Zimmerman, and if some people think they are my
tenants then they can stop paying rent,” he answered to allegations that
he owns a huge plot in the Nairobi estate.
“There are
many other people called King’ori, and I don’t understand why people
always associate me with properties registered under their names,” he
said.
Panelists Joseph Kaguthi, Samuel Arachi and Dr
Francis Sang had asked the officer to explain accusations that most
police officers at the Coast were on the payroll of drug lords and that
they presided over gross human rights violations including
extra-judicial killings during his tenure.
Mr Kaguthi wanted him to explain what was happening and the measures he took to deal with the situation.
“Let
it be on record that the killing of the two officers took place after I
had been transferred to Western. I was not the PPO at that time,” he
said.
But he told of an incident in 2008 when a Land Cruiser was impounded near Nyali with bhang and the suspect arrested.
He blamed the anti-narcotics officers who he said did not hand over the suspect to the CID.
“The
vehicle was also not handed over to us, and when I reported the matter
to the PC Ernest Munyi, he told me that he was not interested in the
person arrested but rather the owner of the vehicle,” he said.
Mr King’ori criticised the anti-narcotics officers, saying they do not properly understand their work.
“The anti-narcotics unit is now a pale shadow of its former self. Its officers are not properly trained,” he told the panel.
He distanced himself from allegations linking him to the Sh6.5 billion cocaine haul and dismissed them as a pure witch- hunt.
“The
investigations were done exclusively by the GSU and CID officers. I did
not participate in it, and all these reports linking me to the same are
only meant to tarnish my name,” he said.
But he admitted the drug menace remains a national challenge.
“We must all be honest with ourselves and stop apportioning blame and malicious innuendoes on police officers.”
On
extra-judicial killings, Mr King’ori told the panel that action was
taken against officers who were said to have executed innocent civilians
during his term.
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