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Extrajudicial killings: Geneva test for Kenya

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George Saitoti: In charge of Internal Security, which oversees a police force accused of running death squads. The minister will react to demands that the police commissioner be sacked.

 

By OLIVER MATHENGE
Posted  Friday, May 29  2009 at  21:08

In Summary

  • Kenya’s case will come before the UN Human Rights Council, the UN’s top organ on human rights, on Wednesday, June 3, 2009.
  • Mutula Kilonzo said the Alston report has many exaggerated findings.
  • Mr Kilonzo admitted that the government had failed in some aspects of justice and governance, hence the impending reforms.

A top-level government team has been briefed to travel to Geneva, Switzerland, to defend Kenya against accusations of extrajudicial killings and police impunity.

Internal Security minister George Saitoti, Justice minister Mutula Kilonzo and Attorney General Amos Wako will lead the government’s fight back against a report by UN Special Rapporteur Philip Alston, which has raised the spectre of senior officials being referred to the International Criminal Court at The Hague.

Kenya’s case will come before the UN Human Rights Council, the UN’s top organ on human rights, on Wednesday, June 3, 2009. The council meetings run from Tuesday to June 19.
Prof Saitoti, Mr Kilonzo and Mr Wako leave the country on Monday, June 1, 2009.

In yet another sign that Prof Alston’s report was causing more than a ripple in government, long-standing demands for judicial reforms were finally heeded on Friday at a meeting of lawyers and judges.

Slow and corrupt

Prof Alston accuses top police officials of running death squads and describes Kenyan courts as “slow and corrupt”. Describing the state of Kenyan justice system as “terrible”, Prof Alston said: “Investigation, prosecution and judicial processes are slow and corrupt.”

The report calls for the resignation of Mr Wako and the sacking of Police Commissioner Hussein Ali and all current judges. It concludes that comprehensive police reforms should be instituted since Kenya’s is a dysfunctional criminal justice system that has pushed police to kill suspected criminals, rather than arrest them.

Prof Alston, who visited the country on a fact-finding mission in February this year, also says that some of the killings were officially-sanctioned elimination of suspected criminals.

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Mr Kilonzo on Friday said that although the government appreciated some of the findings of the UN Rapporteur, it took exception to others. “The report has many exaggerated findings. We are taking it as an opportunity to continue engaging and see what we can do.”

The minister’s comments echoed the strong defence prepared by the government challenging Prof Alston’s findings.

A copy of the government’s defence document seen by the Saturday Nation reads: “The government expresses grave concern regarding the allegations contained in the report by the Special Rapporteur.”

Kenya National Commission on Human Rights chairperson Florence Jaoko told the Saturday Nation that she would also be in Geneva to take part in the discussion.

Ms Jaoko said the government had a right to offer its defence, which will be part of the package presented by Prof Alston at the UN meeting.

However, she said the commission’s view was that the government must seek closure to the issue of extrajudicial killings by bringing those responsible to justice. The government should also act on the findings of the Alston report, she added.

Mr Kilonzo admitted that the government had failed in some aspects of justice and governance, hence the impending reforms.

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Add a comment (14 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by PFoster

    The funny thing about this issue is how the kenyan judiciary is criticized by this fellows in the west and the govts. they represent and yet when they capture somali pirates in international waters they quickly send them to our courts.....what a contradiction...

    Posted  May 30, 2009 05:22 PM  
  2. Submitted by mwangi Francis

    Are we a colony or indipendent state why should the government spend tax payers money to go to geneva to defend it self when the police kill mungiki criminals.

    Posted  May 30, 2009 02:52 PM  
  3. Submitted by stevendungu

    After reading thro the report i totally agree with his findings and only faults his recomendations of personalities resignation. If he concluded his report without mentioning that so and so should be sacked or resign, his report contains the naked truth we all know and need to face in the institutional reforms---if any anyway!

    Posted  May 30, 2009 01:43 PM  
  4. Submitted by janamsemo

    If our government can not restructure the judiciary after a lot of wake up calls from the international world, let it be restructured in Geneva and may be they will see some sense. Goodluck ,Hon Wako,Saitoti and Mutula Kilonzo.

    Posted  May 30, 2009 11:32 AM  
  5. Submitted by fraora

    Prof Alston accuses top police officials of running death squads and describes Kenyan courts as “slow and corrupt”. Kenyan this is very true of our judicial system. Let just admit it.

    Posted  May 30, 2009 10:17 AM  

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