Kenya’s failure to hold police accountable for allegedly killing dozens of people after the 2017 elections heightens the risk of officers abusing their power during next week’s elections, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said yesterday.
The US-based rights watchdog said the Kenyan authorities had failed to investigate accusations of police brutality or institute reforms, raising the threat of violence if the results of the August 9 elections are disputed.
“The failure to tackle police abuse in previous Kenyan elections risks emboldening them to continue their misconduct around this year’s general election,” said the HRW’s director for East Africa, Otsieno Namwaya.
Kenyan police are often accused by rights groups of using excessive force and carrying out unlawful killings, especially in poor neighbourhoods.
They have also been accused in the past of running hit squads targeting those investigating alleged rights abuses by police, such as activists and lawyers.
The HRW said that it had documented the alleged killing of at least 104 people by police during the 2017 election, mostly supporters of then opposition leader Raila Odinga.
Heavily armed police were deployed to disperse demonstrators after Odinga refused to accept President Uhuru Kenyatta’s victory.
“With just seven days to another general election, Kenyan authorities have yet to take steps to ensure justice for police abuses that characterised the 2017 general elections,” the rights group said.
The HRW said it had interviewed activists, government officials, police officers and victims’ families who voiced fears that law enforcers “would respond abusively” to any violence or public protests if disputes arose after the vote.
On Tuesday Kenyans will be electing a new president as well as hundreds of members of parliament and about 1,500 county officials.
About 150,000 officers will be deployed to ensure the safety of the polls, police chief Hilary Mutyambai has said.
This year’s presidential vote is seen as a two-horse race between Deputy President William Ruto and Odinga, who is now backed by Kenyatta and the ruling party.
With its diverse population and large ethnic voting blocs, Kenya has long suffered politically motivated communal violence around election time, notably after a 2007 poll when more than 1,100 people died.
At least 16 civil society groups called yesterday for a peaceful vote as they launched a platform to monitor the polls, saying it would “increase transparency and accountability”.
“We have synergised our efforts and decided to coordinate ... to have a rapid and efficient response,” said the head of election observer group ELOG, Anne Ireri.
The responsibility for a peaceful poll should not only be reserved for the electoral agency, said Felix Owuor, executive director of the Electoral Law and Governance Institute for Africa (ELGIA). “Collectively we can have an election that is credible.”
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