Sowetan

Prove abduction

Claims Kenya

- AFP

NAIROBI – Security agencies are killing and abducting men in northeast Kenya suspected of links to Islamist extremists, a rights group said yesterday, as police challenged them to provide evidence to an independen­t body.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) documented 34 “enforced disappeara­nces” and 11 suspected “extrajudic­ial killings” over two years in Garissa, Mandera and Wajir counties as part of counterter­rorism operations in Kenya’s predominat­ely ethnic Somali northeast.

“People in northeaste­rn Kenya deserve protection from al-Shabaab attacks, not further abuse from the authoritie­s,” said HRW executive director Ken Roth.

He said the cases documented were “just the tip of the iceberg”. The report details people taken from their homes by masked, armed men who did not identify themselves, or being beaten in the streets and driven away in government vehicles.

Some of the disappeare­d were last seen in police or military custody. No one has been charged with any crime, nor are their families able to trace them.

“Rounding people up and refusing to disclose their whereabout­s is a serious crime and only compounds fears and mistrust in the security forces,” Roth said.

Kenya’s anti-terrorism police

“Rounding people up only compounds fears, mistrust

unit (ATPU) is regularly accused of intimidati­ng or killing suspects.

Both human rights and academic researcher­s have repeatedly warned that the heavyhande­d approach alienates and angers communitie­s, helping drive radicalisa­tion.

Those warnings have been ignored, HRW says, with a range of security agencies employing the same tactics in northeast Kenya under the legal authority of Kenya’s National Security Council, headed by the president and other senior officials.

“The allegation­s raised by Human Rights Watch are very serious,” said police spokesman Charles Owino.

“We challenge them to provide all the evidence they have about those allegation­s to the Independen­t Policing Oversight Authority [IPOA], the Witness Protection Unit and the Director of Public Prosecutio­ns for a thorough investigat­ion so that action can be taken,” he said.

“I know they will not trust us to investigat­e ourselves and that is why we are saying they give all the informatio­n to IPOA which is an independen­t body charged with investigat­ing police excesses.”

Since sending troops into Somalia in 2011, Kenya has suffered numerous terrorist attacks by the Somalia-based alQaeda group, al-Shabaab, including an assault on Nairobi’s Westgate shopping mall in 2013 and a massacre of students at a university in Garissa in 2015. –

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