Kenyan police units 'murder hundreds'
Jon Swain 
A damning report containing evidence of a high-level policy to murder suspected 
criminals and troublemakers in Kenya threatens to undermine the reputation of 
the government of President Mwai Kibaki. 

The report, by the Kenya National Commission on Human Rights, reveals that in 
the past 18 months about 500 young men have been killed or have disappeared in 
a police campaign carried out with the apparent connivance of political 
leaders. 

The dead and missing were suspected of being members of the Mungiki, a feared 
criminal gang that had itself committed gruesome murders. 

The Mungiki was outlawed in 2002 following a spate of slum violence. It is a 
quasi-religious group from the dominant Kikuyu tribe and had become one of 
Kenya's largest crime and extortion rings. 

In a speech on June 1 last year, Kibaki warned gang members they should expect 
no mercy. Two days later more than 300 Mungiki members were arrested and 20 
killed. 
John Michuki, the internal security minister, said: "We will pulverise and 
finish them off. Even those arrested over the recent killings, I cannot tell 
you where they are today. What you will certainly hear is that so and so's 
burial is tomorrow." 

Since then the commission has compiled the names of at least 300 men who have 
been killed or have disappeared. It also said there were about 200 victims 
whose identities could not be established since they were booked into the 
mortuaries as unknown. 

Initially the police shot most suspects but then, the commission said, they 
turned to strangulation, drowning, mutilation and bludgeoning in an attempt to 
make the public believe rival gangs were responsible for the killings. 

Several witnesses told the commission that police death squads carried 
machetes, iron bars, ropes and other crude weapons in their cars. Its evidence 
is being studied by the United Nations committee against torture. 

A typical victim's story came from Kagunda wa Mbui, a 45-year-old mason. 
Arrested on his way to work, he was savagely beaten with iron bars and rifle 
butts. The police burnt his dread-locks, a mark of Mungiki membership, by 
pouring paraffin over his hair and setting light to it. Finally they dumped him 
in the street. His wife took him to hospital but he died at the gate. 

The commission believes the police were involved in an extortion racket in 
which they arrested individuals and then demanded money from relatives to 
secure their release. "These acts were ordered, directed or coordinated by the 
top leadership of the Kenya police acting jointly with a common purpose," it 
stated. 

The commission was set up in 2002 by the Kenyan parliament as an independent 
institution to protect human rights. A thorn in authority's side, it has not 
always commanded popular support for attacking police rough justice in a 
country plagued by violent crime. 

At the start of the year Kenya was torn apart by violence that erupted after 
Kibaki's hotly disputed reelection. This led to a dramatic shift in public 
sympathy away from the police, who were blamed for shooting at least 400 of the 
1,133 killed. 

Last week as the commission called for a parliamentary inquiry and reform of 
the police, sources revealed that several of its officials who had worked on 
the report had fled abroad, fearing that if they stayed any longer they would 
be killed. 

Their fears were heightened by the murder in broad daylight at the end of 
October of one of the commission's main informants, Bernard Ngirinya, a father 
of two. 

Ngirinya had been the driver for a police death squad that had allegedly 
carried out many of the killings in and around Nairobi. "He was physically 
present at many of the murders and was able to provide us with an account of 
what his unit was doing," said one source. 

Fearing for his life, Ngirinya went underground in Nairobi. But he was lured 
out of his hiding place and shot three times as he collected money from a cash 
machine. 

"Dead men tell no tales," said the source. "The police say he was a victim of 
crime. But we have his testimony on tape and it is the only protection we have, 
if it is true, that the police were really responsible for silencing him." 

The commission has handed its report, The Cry of Blood, to Kibaki and other 
senior Kenyan government officials, as well as to the UN. 

It does not look as if it will be taken seriously by either the government or 
the police. Instead of acknowledging the gravity of the issue, Major-General 
Hussein Ali, the police commissioner, responded by calling the commission a 
meaningless busybody and challenged it to provide any evidence to back up its 
"rather infantile accusations". 

 The Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Uganda is in anarchy"
            Groupe de communication Mulindwas 
"avec Yoweri Museveni, l'Ouganda est dans l'anarchie"
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