http://web.amnesty.org/library/Index/ENGAFR320032005

AI Index: AFR 32/003/2005               23 March 2005
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
PRESS RELEASE


AI Index: AFR 32/003/2005 (Public)
News Service No: 064 
23 March 2005

Embargo Date: 23 March 2005 08:00 GMT

Kenya: Crackdown on "terrorism" violating human rights

Kenyan authorities must take immediate action to halt numerous human
rights violations committed against suspects detained during recent
"anti-terrorism" operations, Amnesty International said today.

In a new report presented at a news conference in Nairobi, the
organisation gave details of extensive violations including arbitrary
arrest, incommunicado detention without charge, torture and harassment
of family members. The human rights violations occurred during
"anti-terrorism" operations conducted since the 2002 bombing of a
hotel near Mombasa that killed 15 people.

"States have a duty to protect their populations from violent criminal
acts, but this duty is not a license to torture and abuse suspects in
secret locations and harass their families. The Kenyan authorities
have failed to comply with international human rights law and
standards, as well as Kenyan law. Security and human rights go hand in
hand, and are not alternative options" said Kenya researcher Sheila
Keetharuth. 

The report, Kenya: The impact of "anti-terrorism" operations on human
rights, is based on interviews with former detainees, families of
suspects, human rights activists, lawyers and faith-based
organisations carried out in Nairobi, Mombasa and Lamu. The Amnesty
International delegation also met with government and law enforcement
officials.

"During interrogation, they told me that if I did not speak the truth,
they would beat me up. All they wanted to know was where my husband
was and I did not know. At a certain moment, they actually started
beating me with wooden sticks on my legs, my knees and the soles of my
feet. A woman police officer carried out the beating. The next day I
could not walk and had fever. I asked to be brought to the hospital,
but they refused to take me."
Testimony from wife of "terrorist" suspect interviewed by Amnesty
International on 17 May 2004.

The report's main findings include:
•       The use of torture and other ill-treatment during detention
including physical abuse; 
•       Detention of suspects without charge in undisclosed locations and
without access to a lawyer or relatives; 
•       The holding of suspects in degrading and unsanitary conditions
without access to medical care when needed; 
•       Harassment of family members and the arbitrary detention of
relatives to put pressure on suspects to hand themselves in; 
•       The failure of police to show warrants when arresting individuals or
conducting searches of property.

Amnesty International is calling on the Kenyan authorities to ensure
respect for the rights of anyone arrested or detained according to
international law and standards. In particular, detainees must be
given prompt access to legal counsel, relatives and medical care if
needed and any allegations of torture or other ill-treatment must be
fully and independently investigated.

The organisation also urges the Kenya Police Force to properly train
its officers at all levels in human rights law and avoid unlawful
arrests, detentions and the holding of people without charge or trial.

For a copy of the report, Kenya: The impact of "anti-terrorism"
operations on human rightsplease see:
http://web.amnesty.org/library/index/engafr320022005


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