Cape Times

Kenya vows to weed out bogus police officers

- Humphrey Malalo

NAIROBI: Kenya pledged on Tuesday to root out impostors in its police force following the arrest last week of a man suspected of masqueradi­ng for a decade as a top provincial security official.

Joshua Waiganjo, who said he was an assistant commission­er in the Rift Valley region, appeared in court on Tuesday to face 10 charges of serious crimes, including impersonat­ing a police officer and highway robbery, prosecutor­s said.

The case has caused an outcry in the east African nation, where persistent corruption scandals have undermined confidence in the government ahead of a presidenti­al election on March 4.

An internal police investigat­ion found that Waiganjo had leaked informatio­n that caused the massacre of 32 police officers in November when they were pursuing cattle raiders, Kenyan newspaper The Standard reported.

Johnston Kavuludi, head of the independen­t National Police Service Commission, said it would seek to establish whether there was any link between Waiganjo and the massacre in Baragoi, 340km north of the capital, Nairobi.

“The incident has exposed serious systemic weaknesses in the police service,” said Kavuludi. “The commission is undertakin­g a detailed audit of all the police officers in the service, an action that would weed out ‘ghost’ officers.”

Waiganjo’s lawyer, Katwa Kigen, said his client “has nothing to do with the Baragoi massacre”.

He said Waiganjo was not an impostor and they would prove his innocence of all the charges.

Newspapers showed photos of a middle-aged Waiganjo wearing the uniform of senior officers and flying in a police helicopter. They carried tales of junior policemen he had intimidate­d and even sacked from the force over the years.

He attended several planning meetings for the doomed mission to recover stolen cattle, The Standard reported, quoting the report of the internal investigat­ion.

Kavuludi said the police commission had suspended John M’mbijiwe, the Rift Valley police boss, and two other senior officers in the region to facilitate its probe.

The commission said a committee leading the investigat­ion would report back within three weeks.

In 2006, Armenian brothers, Artur Margariyan and Arthur Sargsian, whose swaggering lifestyle turned them into celebritie­s, were found to have been fraudulent­ly issued with certificat­es showing they held the rank of deputy commission­er. They were accused of involvemen­t in a police raid on media offices and were deported after assaulting customs officers.

President Mwai Kibaki appointed a new police chief last month to bolster the force ahead of the March presidenti­al vote.

 ?? Picture: REUTERS ?? DESPERATE BATTLE: A man is silhouette­d by flames as he tries to extinguish a fire at the Okobaba sawmill near the Lagos Lagoon. Fire ripped through a poor suburb in Lagos, razing ramshackle homes and workshops as locals fought to stop the blaze.
Reuters
Picture: REUTERS DESPERATE BATTLE: A man is silhouette­d by flames as he tries to extinguish a fire at the Okobaba sawmill near the Lagos Lagoon. Fire ripped through a poor suburb in Lagos, razing ramshackle homes and workshops as locals fought to stop the blaze. Reuters
 ??  ?? JOSHUA WAIGANJO
JOSHUA WAIGANJO

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