A TV presenter outside the Westgate Mall |
http://news.sky.com/story/1157250
Wednesday, October 23, 2013
Police
boss David Kimaiyo on Wednesday announced that journalists will be
arrested and prosecuted over their coverage of the Westgate rescue
operation.
He accused the journalists of “provoking
propaganda” and inciting Kenyans against the authorities with
investigative stories which exposed command confusion during the
operation which saw at least one police officer shot and killed by the
Kenya Defence Forces.
Journalists, both local and
international, have also reported the apparent looting of the shopping
mall by the KDF. The military however told Parliament that the soldiers
were carrying water in the shopping bags and not looted goods.
The
Inspector-General’s announcement is the latest in a sustained assault
on press freedom in Kenya in recent months, which has seen the tabling
in Parliament of bills giving government control over media operations.
Mr Kimaiyo said investigative journalists from KTN are among those to be arrested.
He
appeared to take umbrage at the insinuation that he was relieved of
command during the operation against terrorists who massacred nearly 70
shoppers at the mall located in Westlands.
At the time, President Uhuru Kenyatta announced that Mr Kimaiyo remained in charge of the operation.
However,
from around 5pm on Saturday September 21 until the end of the siege
four days later, the operation was controlled by the military. KDF does
not take orders from the police.
Mr Kimaiyo’s decision
to muzzle the press flies in the face of the constitution which
prohibits the government from interfering with the media.
Mr
Kimaiyo has not filed a complaint with the Media Council of Kenya, the
normal procedure for dealing with cases where journalists are involved
in unethical conduct.
At the press conference on
Wednesday, Mr Kimaiyo said the journalists had “overstepped” press
freedom apparently by reporting the command chaos and looting during the
operation.
“You cannot provoke propaganda and incite
Kenyans against the authorities. The two journalists will be
apprehended,” explained Mr Kimaiyo.
In Parliament,
Majority Leader Aden Duale has published a Bill which gives the cabinet
secretary for communication immense powers over the Media Council, which
regulates the media.
The cabinet secretary has, among
others powers, the right to dissolve the current Media Council and then
constitute the selection panel that will interview and nominate members
to form part of the new council.
At Wednesday’s press
conference, Mr Kimaiyo denied that British terrorist Samantha Lewthwaite
was involved in the Westgate attack.
Ms Lewthwaite is a
high ranking and dangerous member of al Shabaab who has explicably been
allowed to live and move freely in Kenya until relatively recently.
In
one egregious act of police incompetence, officers bizarrely did not
take Ms Lewthwaite into custody even though they found her with stacks
of foreign currency and forged papers.
Mr Kimaiyo said yesterday that eight of what he claimed to be chief suspects will be charged.
Police arrested more than 100 suspects after the attack, almost all of whom were innocent.
He said detectives were looking for more suspects who may have played smaller roles in the attack.
But
even as he made the announcements, it was still not clear how many
terrorists took part in the attack and what eventually happened to them.
There
have been claims that some were killed, but no bodies were ever
produced. The government said there were between 10 and 15 attackers.
CCTV footage showed only four.
There are suspicions that four bodies recently found in the ruins of the mall were terrorists, but that is still to be proved.
Explaining the command chaos in the operation, Mr Kimaiyo claimed that he was consulted about the rescue mission.
“It was a joint effort, and we clearly agreed on how to conduct it,” Mr Kimaiyo claimed.
Turning
his guns on the media, the Inspector-General said: “We know very well
that every person or organisation has the right to freedom of
expression, but this freedom does not extend to advocacy of hatred or
propaganda. Again, in the exercise of such rights, people should respect
the reputation and rights of others.”
Mr Kimaiyo has
had a slow start on the job, characterised by widely publicised fights
with Police Service Commission boss Johnston Kavuludi.
Mr Kavuludi was involved in a dramatic incident earlier in the year when a human head was delivered to his office.
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