|
|
|
NEWS > 06 November 2007 |
Other related articles:
UK: Police officers face misconduct hearing after breaking man’s shoulder
A NIGHTCLUB reveller was left scarred for life after police officers wrongly arresting him on suspicion of being drunk and disorderly used excessive force.
The Independent Police Complaints Commission ruled that PC Nigel Gallagher and his colleague PC Benjamin Schofield should now be subject to a misconduct hearing in light of their violent treatment of Terrence Else in a car park close to Dunstable’s After Dark nightclub on November 29 2009.
CCTV footage shows the officers, who had been called to the Quadrant to deal with a separate altercation, arresting Mr Else shortl... Read more
|
Article sourced from |
|
International Herald Tribune - 06 November 2007
This article appeared in the above title/site. To view it in its entirity click this link.
|
|
Kenyans hold police responsibl
MATHARE, Kenya: Residents along this slum's smoky, twisting alleys say they're caught in the middle of a battle between the police and a murderous street gang known for beheading its victims.
A report by the state-funded human rights commission on Monday linked police to the deaths of over 450 young Kenyans in the past five months in a crackdown on the gang, known as Mungiki. Police denied involvement, but slum dwellers backed the commission in interviews Tuesday.
"People were arrested in a crackdown against (Mungiki) and have never been found. Relatives say they disappeared without a trace and they don't know if they are dead or alive," said Irungu Wakogi, who owns a restaurant in Mathare, Kenya's second largest slum.
Many of the victims investigated by the commission came from Mathare. Most of the 454 bodies were killed by a single bullet to the back of the head, and dumped in mortuaries around the country despite permanent police roadblocks on all major roads.
Samuel Mwangi, a 40-year-old soccer coach and father of three, said that several people in his area of Mathare had been killed by police after a gang attack killed two officers and stole their guns.
"They hid the guns within the slum and the government reacted, leading to the deaths of many people," he said.
Although Mwangi accused the police of shooting innocent people, he also said the street gang shared responsibility for the violence.
"I can't blame the government for their reaction," he said. "But of course, some people were innocent and police used excessive force."
The report by the Kenya National Commission on Human Rights did not explicitly blame the police for the deaths, but said "circumstantial evidence" linked the police to the murders and said the force seemed to be blocking efforts to find the mystery killers.
Police spokesman Eric Kiraithe said the allegation was "total nonsense." He declined to comment on the commission's figure, but scores of deaths had been reported in the police crackdown on the gang, accused of killing of at least 27 civilians — beheading many of them — and 15 police officers since April.
Mungiki gang, an outlawed quasi-political gang, draws its support from thousands of unemployed Kikuyu youth. All the murder victims the commission investigated were Kikuyu.
Mungiki, whose name means "multitude" in Kikuyu, began as a group promoting traditional Kikuyu practices, including female genital mutilation, but gradually became involved in extortion, murder and providing hired muscle to politicians.
After its members beheaded 21 people in a turf war with a rival gang, it was outlawed in 2002.
The allegations and denials of police brutality come at a sensitive time. President Mwai Kibaki is seeking re-election in general elections this December. The leading opposition politician Raila Odinga of the Orange Democratic Movement promised to rid the country of Mungiki within a month if he is elected president.
Mungiki members have threatened to disrupt the elections and circulated leaflets in July calling on Kenyan youth to rise up against the government. The government has already launched a campaign against electoral violence, featuring children orphaned by political thugs. There have been several election related attacks on politicians and their supporters already.
|
|
EiP Comments: |
|
|
* We have no wish to infringe the copyright of any newspaper or periodical. If you feel that we have done so then please contact us with the details and we will remove the article. The articles republished on this site are provided for the purposes of research , private study, criticism , review, and the reporting of current events' We have no wish to infringe the copyright of any newspaper , periodical or other works. If you feel that we have done so then please contact us with the details and where necessary we will remove the work concerned.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ethics in Policing, based in the UK, provide information and advice about the following:
Policing Research | Police News articles | Police Corruption | International Policing | Police Web Sites | Police Forum | Policing Ethics | Police Journals | Police Publications |
|
|
|