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Kenya's search for truth, justice gains ground
The chairperson of the Truth Justice and Reconciliation Commission Bethuel Kiplagat during the launch of the national statement taking on September 9, 2010 at KCA University. He urged Kenyans who have suffered gross violations and abuses of human rights to take time and record their story with the statement takers. JENNIFER MUIRURI
Posted Thursday, September 9 2010 at 15:19
Kenya’s journey to truth and justice is on course despite the commission set up to investigate historical injustices facing a crisis of leadership.
On Thursday, the Truth, Justice and Reconciliation Commission officially launched the national statement taking exercise in Nairobi.
The ceremony at the Kenya College of Accountancy was marked with the swearing in of 30 statement takers who will operate within Nairobi.
TJRC chairperson Bethuel Kiplagat appeared unperturbed by calls that he quits his job over allegations lodged against him by the civil society. Mr Kiplagat said that those seeking to have him removed had the right to do so adding that this could not stop his Commission’s work.
He, however, complained that the Sh190 million set aside for the Commission was inadequate and appealed to the government to grant it more resources.
“The money set aside for all the Commissions in the reform process is inadequate. But I am glad that the Ministry of Justice has agreed to ask Treasury to grant more resources,” Mr Kiplagat said.
The TJRC boss said that those to testify to the Commission from November will be picked from the statements to be taken by the 300 personnel recruited for the exercise.
The statement takers will be required to gather information on atrocities committed between December 12, 1963 to February 28, 2008.
Mr Kiplagat urged the statement takers to ensure that the quality supersedes the quantity of their work. He asked them to take time in recording their statement as the records will form the patterns that will qualify the witnesses for hearing.
“It is not how much the quantity of statements that matters to the Commission but the quality. The questionnaire in the statement form is designed to generate ample content so do not rush those whose statements you are recording but allow them the room to bring all of their story out,” said Mr Kiplagat.
He also urged Kenyans who may have been victims of various atrocities to come forward and record their statements. He said these include economic crimes, human rights abuse, irregular and illegal acquisition of land, marginalisation of communities, ethnic violence and sexual crimes.
The TJRC begins public hearings in November, a year before it presents its final report. The statement takers have been trained on human rights and trauma management before they begin collecting information.
“The hearings will be individual, institutional and thematic or event based. These should begin in November and carry on through the first half of 2011. The Commission will also hold community dialogue sessions nationwide to better enable healing, restoration of dignity and reconciliation,” Mr Kiplagat said.
The first sessions will be held in Mount Elgon, where the Commission has already taken statements from witnesses in the months of May and June.
The collecting of statements from the public in an exercise expected to run until January next year. The Commission expects to present its report and recommendations by November next year.
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Submitted by ThomasMusyokiMutuse1Posted September 10, 2010 10:28 AM
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Submitted by bizmogul
Whats the difference between this body and human rights commission? man we love bureacracy..drain on the tax payer..And kiplagat..an old relic of the past injsutices
Posted September 09, 2010 07:19 PM -
Submitted by YoungHeart
Compare the work of TJRC with that of other commissions. TJRC is led by relics of the old order that believe in the status quo while PAC, IIEC and COE are led by youthful people of the new order yearning for change. Any one expecting Kiplagat to deliver anything is day dreaming. Kip is all talk and complains, just like the ways of the government he served in those olden days.
Posted September 09, 2010 05:20 PM -
Submitted by krugutt
NCIC and TJRC should be merged. There is a lot of duplicity in their work coupled with the fact that NCIC has been turned into a political tool by a few highly placed individuals to try to intimidate their opponents. TJRC should get down to serious business given that the new constitution has elements in it that talk about historical injustices and land problems that stretched to colonial time. This is the time to pursuit such leads while not forgetting the genesis of the 2007/2008 violence and its aftermath. The sooner these two bodies (TJRC and NCIC)-are-merged,-the-better.
Posted September 09, 2010 04:58 PM -
Submitted by kairutim
This is a total waste of tax payers money, Kiplagat just be ashamed of your self, no one can trust you. look at your self in the mirror and you can see another moi
Posted September 09, 2010 04:26 PM




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The man has heard enough, he knows that Kenyans suspect him and posterity will judge him harshly in case he does not deliver,let's get down to business and shelve the pessimism in the meantime.