The Daily Telegraph

Kenyan police blamed for Briton’s death

Victory for family as coroner rules that Alexander Monson was beaten to death in custody

- By Adrian Blomfield in Nairobi

Four Kenyan police officers are to be charged with the murder of a young British aristocrat who died in their custody six years ago. A Kenyan inquest ruled that Alexander Monson died in May 2012 from injuries that “could only have been caused” when he was in police custody.

FOUR Kenyan police officers are to be charged with the murder of a young British aristocrat who died in their custody six years ago.

Defying expectatio­ns, a Kenyan inquest ruled on Thursday that Alexander Monson died as a result of “blunt force trauma that could only have been caused when the deceased was in the custody of the police”.

The ruling represente­d a stunning breakthrou­gh for Nicholas Monson, the 12th Baron Monson, whose long campaign for justice for his son had been thwarted at so many turns.

The police officers who held Monson after he was detained in May 2012 on suspicion of possessing a joint of cannabis, long claimed he had died of a drugs overdose.

But the magistrate entirely rejected their claims and within minutes of his ruling, Kenya’s new director of public prosecutio­ns had ordered the arrest of the four policemen.

Kenya, as many Kenyans would attest, has a reputation for official impunity, particular­ly its notoriousl­y brutal police force.

A series of prominent murders, both of black and white individual­s, remain unsolved, with some cases stretching back decades. Few, therefore, expected such a ruling, least of all Lord Monson, who admitted to feeling “complete shock” when he received the news.

“I was so prepared for an exoneratio­n of the police,” he said. “Kenya is notorious for its corruption and this is a quite extraordin­ary ruling. Not inasmuch as it is surprising in regards to what happened but that the judiciary are prepared to take on the police.”

Monson was detained by police in the early hours of May 19 2012 after he and a friend were stopped outside a nightclub on suspicion of smoking cannabis.

The friend was later released but Monson was arrested after allegedly being found with half a joint.

A family friend, who went to the police station, discovered him barely conscious on the floor of his cell. He later died in hospital, handcuffed to his bed, with his mother by his side.

The police doggedly stuck to their version of events: Monson, they said, was a drug addict who suffered an overdose. They tried to revive him; they even took him to hospital. The bruises on his head were due to a fall. Those on his groin were not from repeated kicking, but were the result of “oral sex”.

The ruling, with its rare rejection of police testimony, will raise hopes that other infamous cases could perhaps be resolved, among them the murder of Julie Ward, a British tourist killed in the Maasai Mara in 1988.

Her father, John Ward, fought an unsuccessf­ul and expensive campaign for decades to discover how she died, alleging that powerful political figures may have been involved.

It is unclear why Richard Odenyo, the magistrate, chose to withstand suspected pressure to rule the way he did.

Even as Kenya has been accused of retreating into authoritar­ianism in recent years, the country’s judiciary is increasing­ly independen­t. Last year, the supreme court became the first in Africa to overturn a presidenti­al election, ruling that a victory by Uhuru Kenyatta, the incumbent president, was marred by “irregulari­ties and illegaliti­es”.

Mr Kenyatta went on to win a rerun, boycotted by his opposition challenger, but the ruling was seen as emboldenin­g other judges.

Lord Monson suggested that yesterday’s ruling may also have been triggered by disgust within Kenya’s establishm­ent against the police after Willy Kimani, a prominent human rights lawyer, was murdered in 2016 while in police custody.

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 ??  ?? Alexander Monson with his mother Hilary, left; Hilary with her husband John Lockhart, above; Nicholas Monson, the 12th Baron Monson, below
Alexander Monson with his mother Hilary, left; Hilary with her husband John Lockhart, above; Nicholas Monson, the 12th Baron Monson, below
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