Kenya Country Reports on Human Rights Practices - 2001 Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor March 4, 2002 Kenya is a republic dominated by a strong presidency. President Daniel Arap Moi, who has led the ruling Kenya African National Union (KANU) and served as President since 1978, was reelected most recently in 1997 in the country's second general election since the restoration of multiparty politics in 1991. Since independence in 1963, no president ever has left because of an electoral loss, and KANU has controlled both the presidency and the national legislature continuously, although other parties were illegal only from 1982 to 1991. KANU won a majority of the popular vote and a narrow majority of parliamentary seats in the 1997 general elections. While there were numerous flaws in the 1997 elections, observers concluded that the vote broadly reflected the popular will. In June President Moi appointed National Development Party (NDP) leader Raila Odinga and three other NDP Members of Parliament (M.P.'s) to his cabinet. KANU and NDP have formed an alliance and are contemplating a full merger. At year's end, KANU and NDP members held 139 of 222 seats in the unicameral National Assembly. In addition to his role as President, Moi is the commander in chief of the armed forces, and he controls the security, university, civil service, judiciary, and provincial, district, and local governance systems. The judiciary suffers from corruption
and is subject to executive branch influence.
In addition to the armed forces, there is a large internal security apparatus that includes the police's Criminal Investigation Department (CID), the National Security Intelligence Service (NSIS), the National Police, the Administration Police, and the paramilitary General Services Unit (GSU), which details members on a rotating basis to staff the 700-person Presidential Escort. The CID investigates criminal activity and the NSIS collects intelligence and monitors persons whom the State considers subversive. In 1999 in an effort to improve the accountability of investigative services, Parliament passed and implemented laws that removed arrest authority from the NSIS and separated the organization from the CID. While civilian authorities generally maintain effective control of the security forces, there were some instances in which the security forces acted independently of government authority. Members of the security forces, especially the police, continued to commit numerous, serious human rights abuses.
The large agricultural sector provides food for local consumption, substantial exports of tea, coffee, cut flowers, and vegetables, and more than 70 percent of total employment for the country's population of approximately 29 million. Estimates for the unemployment rate range from the official 25 percent to more than 50 percent. Although many sectors continued to be dominated by state-owned monopolies, the nonfarm economy includes large privately owned light manufacturing, commercial, and financial sectors. Tourism was the third largest source of foreign exchange earnings after tea and other agricultural exports. Major international financial institutions continued their suspension of financial assistance following a 2000 court ruling that the Kenya Anti-Corruption Authority's investigatory and prosecutorial powers were unconstitutional, and the cancellation of other anti-corruption measures. During the year, annual per capita gross domestic product declined in real terms to approximately $271 (21,200 shillings). The spread of HIV/AIDS, which was estimated to have infected approximately 14 percent of the population between the ages of 14 and 49, as well as drought and famine in some rural areas during the year, exacerbated economic problems.
The Government's human rights record remained poor, and it continued to commit numerous, serious abuses. Citizens' ability to change their government peacefully has not yet been demonstrated fully. Security forces, particularly the police, continued to commit extrajudicial killings, torture and beat detainees, use excessive force, rape, and otherwise abuse persons. Prison conditions remained life threatening. Police harassed and arbitrarily arrested and detained persons, including journalists, politicians, and political activists. The Government arrested and prosecuted a number of police officers for abuses; however, most police who committed abuses were neither investigated nor punished. Lengthy pretrial detention is a problem, and the judiciary is subject to executive branch influence. The authorities infringed on citizens' privacy rights. The Government limited freedom of speech and of the press, and harassed, intimidated, and economically pressured newspapers that often were critical of the Government; however, in recent years the Government continued to reduce its domination of the domestic broadcast media. The Government repeatedly restricted freedom of assembly, and the police disrupted public meetings and used force to disperse demonstrators and protesters. The Government restricted freedom of association. The Government continued to limit the independence of its Standing Committee on Human Rights (SCHR), and the President continued to criticize nongovernmental human rights organizations (NGO's) for their alleged involvement in partisan politics. Violence and discrimination against women and abuse of children remained serious problems. Female genital mutilation (FGM) remained widespread, child prostitution remained a problem, and the spread of HIV/AIDS created many orphans. There was some discrimination against persons with disabilities. The Government continued to exacerbate ethnic tensions by discriminating against many ethnic groups; interethnic tensions continued and resulted in numerous violent conflicts and some deaths. There continued to be reports of ritual murders associated with aspects of traditional indigenous religious rites. The Government continued to limit some worker rights. Child labor remained a problem, and there were instances of forced child labor. Violence by mobs and by nongovernmental armed groups also resulted in many deaths.
RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
Section 1 Respect for the Integrity of the Person, Including Freedom From: a. Arbitrary or Unlawful Deprivation of Life
Security forces, especially members of the police, the GSU, and the CID, continued to use lethal force and committed a number of extrajudicial killings. According to government figures, police killed 137 suspected criminals, and another 31 suspects and detainees died while in police custody during the year. The Kenyan Human Rights Commission (KHRC), a domestic NGO, reported that police killed 251 persons during the year (compared with 198 persons in 2000), including 49 by torture (see Section 1.c.). However, People Against Torture (PAT) reported 70 cases of death by torture and still was documenting cases at year's end (see Section 1.c.). Police often were not restrained in the use of lethal force, especially when confronting armed criminal suspects, and the Government generally failed to take appropriate action against members of the security forces accused of unlawful or arbitrary killings.
According to a human rights organization, Muslims for Human Rights (MUHURI), on January 18 in Mombasa, police allegedly tortured, shot, and killed Abdillahi Mohamed Mashuhuri after raiding his home (see Sections 1.c., 1.d., and 1.f.). MUHURI has demanded the arrest of the officers involved; a government investigation into the death of Mashuhuri was ongoing at year's end.
On February 17, police shot and killed Allan Mbito, a 22-year-old student at the University of Nairobi and the son of a prominent judge, as he was walking back to his campus at night. An autopsy revealed that Mbito was shot twice from behind, which contradicted police accounts of the incident. The police claimed that Mbito had approached three plain-clothes officers with a "simi" (a machete) and that the officers shot Mbito only after he did not heed their order to stop. The three officers involved in the killing were arrested, and the President personally promised justice. On December 23, one of the three officers was sentenced to 10 years in prison; the other two officers remained in detention pending trial at year's end. Human rights organizations condemned the killing and applauded the swift action against the offenders; however, they also criticized the Government's inaction on numerous other cases.
On March 25, administration police (AP's) guarding the home of the Minister for Rural Development shot and killed Francis Kiraha Kibugi, a prominent Nairobi businessman, following a traffic accident and an argument between Kibugi and a taxi driver. The officers reportedly jumped the fence of the compound they were guarding and fired five shots, killing Kibugi and injuring the taxi driver. The two officers later were arrested, and the hearing was ongoing at year's end.
On March 30, four armed men carjacked Geoffrey Ngoima Mbugua, a minister at the Presbyterian Church of East Africa's (PCEA) Thika parish and a lecturer at St. Paul's Theological Seminary (see Section 2.c.). Police officers pursued the vehicle; when the armed men began shooting at the police, the police shot back, killing Mbugua; the perpetrators escaped. No investigation into the case had occurred by year's end, and it is unlikely that an investigation will be undertaken; the killing was considered to have taken place while the officers were discharging their duties, and it does not appear that the crime was religiously motivated.
On July 25, police from a special response squad shot and killed seven suspected bank robbers who were traveling by bus on the main highway leading into Nairobi. Police officers allegedly stopped the bus and ordered all of the passengers out of it. Several witnesses reported that the officers then identified the suspected criminals, frisked and disarmed them, ordered them to lie face down on the ground, and shot them. The life of an eighth suspected criminal, a GSU policeman, reportedly was spared following pleas from his pregnant wife; however, police arrested and reportedly beat him. Police claimed the seven victims were killed during a shoot-out after they drew their weapons and shot at the police officers trying to arrest them. The Government has not charged the police officers with any offense; however, it has ordered an investigation after public protest over the killings. No arrests were made by year's end.
On July 29, security officers shot and killed a primary school teacher during a fight between Kisii and Maasai youths (see Section 5). No action was taken against the officers by year's end. Some Kisii leaders claim the security forces target the Kisii community for failing to elect a KANU candidate in a parliamentary by-election in January (see Sections 3 and 5).
In 2000 after numerous deadly attacks on police, Marsden Madoka, Minister of State in the Office of the President, stated that police should use lethal force to eliminate criminals from the streets. The Minister's comments reflect a growing concern that security forces often are not armed or equipped sufficiently. In responding to continuing high levels of crime, some police used excessive force. Police claim that the increased use of sophisticated weapons by criminals has increased the risks faced by police in discharging their duties.
The KHRC reported there were incidents in which police killed bystanders while exchanging gunfire with criminals; however, further information and specific examples were not available at year's end.
Some official efforts have been made to punish police abuses. In March 2000, a police officer in Meru reportedly killed Wallace Kiogora; the officer was arrested. A subsequent public inquest into Kiogora's death was held, and the court ruled that no one was to blame for the death. In March 2000, Philip Kopkoech Kirui died after he allegedly had been tortured. Five police officers based at the Londiani Police Station were charged with Kirui's killing, and the case was pending in the courts at year's end. In January 2000, authorities arrested two police officers who allegedly beat Joseph Ndung'u Nyoike; the 10-year-old boy died after spending the night in prison. The court dropped murder charges against one of the officers for lack of evidence; the other officer committed suicide in October 2000. In August 1999, police killed five Muslim worshipers in the Anas Bin Malik Mosque in Chai village, near Mombasa. Within 1 month of the killings, the Government charged two police officers; one of the officers later escaped, and the case against the other officer was pending before the Senior Resident Magistrate in Mombasa at year's end. In November 1999, a trial began against Justus Munyao Kovu and Gabriel Muendo, two Makueni police officers accused of killing Mwendo Kiema during detention in July 1999. No further information was available at year's end. In July the High Court sentenced to death a police officer for the murder of a 14-year-old street boy in 1998. In December 2000, an inquest was completed into the January 1997 death of Catholic lay brother Larry Timmons in Njoro. In August a police officer was indicted for the killing; the trial date had not been set by year's end.
On June 15, the SCHR released its investigation report into the 2000 case in which prison guards at the King'ong'o Prison in Nyeri killed six inmates who were attempting to escape. Officials initially claimed that guards shot the six as they fled; however, the report concluded that the prison guards bludgeoned the inmates to death to cover up a plot by the guards to facilitate the escape of another inmate. In August following the release of the SCHR report, a judge recommended that the Attorney General charge Professor Onesmus Mutungi, chairman of the SCHR, with contempt of court for releasing the report, and Joseph Odindo, managing editor of the Daily Nation newspaper, for publishing the conclusions of the report. The judge reportedly thought that the release of the report compromised the inquest by the Attorney General, which was completed during the year; a trial was scheduled for January 2002.
Two police officers were charged with manslaughter during the year for the May 2000 killings of two suspected carjackers; one of the officers escaped, and a trial was scheduled for the other in December. It was unknown whether the trial was held by year's end. An inquest before the Principal Magistrate's Court at Kerugoya was ongoing at year's end into the case of Sophia Nyaguthil Mbogo, who died in custody at the Kagio Police Post in April 2000 reportedly after she was beaten by a policeman (see Section 1.c.); no arrests were made in the case. An inquest into the March 2000 killings of eight suspected carjackers was ongoing at year's end. In January 2000, police from the Mukuruweini police station allegedly beat to death Philip Machau. An inquest into this case by the Chief Magistrate in Nairobi was completed, and the court ruled that the two officers should stand trial. The trial date was pending at year's end. There were some internal police investigations into the many killings of civilians by members of the security forces and some prosecutions; however, few were effective. The authorities sometimes attribute the absence of an investigation into an alleged extrajudicial killing to the failure of citizens to file official complaints. However, the form required for filing complaints is available only at police stations, which often lack the forms or are not forthcoming in providing them. There also is considerable public skepticism of a process that assigns the investigation of police abuse to the police themselves. The Police Department reported that 73 police officers were charged during the year for various offenses (the offenses were not noted); only 13 were tried. Of those tried, 9 were acquitted; 1 officer received a 10-year sentence; another received a 3-year sentence; 1 was imprisoned for 15 months; and another was fined approximately $128 (10,000 shillings).
An investigation into the January 2000 killing of 5-year-old Chesortich remained open during the year; however, the body never was found.
The investigations were ongoing at year's end into the September 1999 killings of Mwanzia Mutkuku and of two armed men at a Nairobi bank. During the year, three police officers charged with the June 1999 killings of Victor Polo and Vincent Odhiambo were convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to 15 years imprisonment. An investigation into the January 1999 killings of two rice farmers in Mwea was ongoing at year's end.
There were no reported investigations into the following 1999 cases during the year: The July killings of Peter Kariuki, Jacob Anaseti, and Ramadhani Barula; the April killing of Ahluwalia Subir Ahluwalia; the March killing of Ibrahim Kullow Hussein; the February killing of Elijah Kimani Mwaura; and the February killing of David Muragi.
A hearing before the Senior Resident Magistrate in Kitale in the 1997 deaths in police custody of Moses Macharia Gicheru and Lomurodo Amodoi was ongoing at year's end.
In April the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) released its final report into the August 2000 death of Father John Anthony Kaiser, a Catholic priest working in the country for more than 30 years; the report concluded that the evidence collected was most consistent with suicide (see Section 2.c.).
Unlike in the previous year, there were no reports of fighting between Muslim worshippers and local traders over land surrounding mosques.
Hundreds of prisoners died in custody due to life-threatening prison conditions, including inadequate food and medical treatment (see Section 1.c.). The Government recorded 464 deaths in prisons between January and November.
Mob violence continued at high levels during the year, which observers believe may have been associated with a continuing high crime rate. According to the Government and the KHRC, 56 persons were killed in mob violence during the year. Human rights observers attribute mob violence to a lack of public confidence in the police and the judicial process. The great majority of mob violence victims, who died by lynching, beating, or burning, were persons suspected of criminal activities, including robbery, cattle rustling, and membership in terror gangs. However, the social acceptability of mob violence also provided apparent cover for personal vengeance under the guise of "mob justice." In late April in a Nairobi slum, following beatings of two gang members by residents angered over recent gang muggings, the remaining gang members attacked the residents; seven people were killed in the ensuing violence. A man also was stoned to death during the violence after he shot and killed an 8-year-old boy.
In early May in the Kericho District of Rift Valley Province, a mob attacked a suspected murderer and set fire to many houses in revenge for the killing of a local businessman. Although police rescued the suspected murderer from the mob, a man was stoned to death as he fled his burning home. The incident also reportedly exacerbated ethnic tension in the area (see Section 5).
Occasionally mobs killed members of their communities on suspicion that they practiced witchcraft; however, there were no statistics available on the number of such deaths during the year (see Section 5).
Interethnic violence continued to cause numerous deaths (see Section 5). Some of these disputes spilled over into the country from neighboring countries (see Section 2.d.).
In 2000 armed men reportedly from Ethiopia killed nine persons and seriously injured five others near the border town of Moyale. Local politicians claimed that the attackers had support from Ethiopian security forces; the incident was not resolved by year's end. Unlike in the previous year, there were no reports that the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF), an Ethiopian rebel group, laid landmines in northern areas of the country near the Ethiopian border.
b. Disappearance There were no reported cases of politically motivated disappearances.
c. Torture and
Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or Punishment
The
Constitution states that "no one shall be subject to torture or degrading
punishment or other treatment;" however, security forces continued to use
torture and physical violence during interrogation and to punish both
pretrial detainees and convicted prisoners. Although authorities periodically issue
directives against the use of torture by police, the problem
persists.
Human rights organizations, churches, and the press highlighted and
criticized numerous cases of torture and several cases of indiscriminate
beating of groups of persons by police during the year. Common methods
of torture practiced by police included hanging persons upside down for
long periods, genital mutilation, electric shocks, and deprivation of air
by submersion of the head in water. The KHRC reported 49 torture-related
deaths during the year, and PAT reported 70 cases of death by torture and
238 total cases of torture; however, PAT still was documenting cases at
year's end (see Section 1.a.).
There
were numerous allegations of police use of excessive force and
torture.
The KHRC believe police brutality is widespread and estimated that
there were hundreds of cases during the year. Detainees
routinely claimed that they had been tortured, making it difficult to
separate real from fabricated incidents. According to MUHURI, on January 18,
police allegedly tortured, shot, and killed Abdillahi Mohamed Mashuhuri
(see Sections 1.a., 1.d., and 1.f.); no action was taken against the
responsible officers by year's end.
On
January 2, Arwings Odera was charged with publishing false information; in
December 2000, police reportedly shot and injured Odera (see Sections 1.d.
and 2.a.).
No action was taken against the police by year's end.
In June
The Nation newspaper reported that Francis Muruatetu testified that he had
been tortured by police into confessing to a murder. The victim, a
retired police inspector, reportedly said that he was hung naked from a
tree in a forest where a dead body hung from another tree; the police
allegedly shot at the other body while they interrogated Muruatetu. The victim
also claimed that he was denied food and medicine during his 4 days'
detention.
During his trial, the court determined that his allegations of
torture were unfounded.
According
to an unconfirmed report published on August 1 in the People Daily
newspaper, workers at Nyeri Provincial Hospital said that prison wardens
from King'ong'o prison pulled a murder suspect from his hospital bed and
returned him to the prison. The suspect reportedly claimed that he
was beaten outside the hospital and then beaten unconscious after he
returned to the prison. Prison guards reportedly returned the
suspect to the hospital the following day out of fear that he might die
from his injuries. According
to organizations that work with street children, police also beat and
abuse street children (see Section 5). The case against Mombasa police officers
Mwinge Chula and Peter Ndwiga, who were arrested for raping a 13-year-old
street girl in May 1999, was pending at year's end.
Police
repeatedly used excessive force and beat persons when breaking up
demonstrations and opposition political party rallies (see Sections 2.b.
and 6.a.).
Police forcibly dispersed several protests after they became
violent, injuring some persons (see Section 2.b.).
Following
President Moi's December 2000 ban on all future rallies by Muungano wa
Mageuzi (MWM or Movement for Change), police prevented or forcibly
dispersed all rallies held by the group, which resulted in several
injuries and arrests (see
Sections 1.d., 2.a., 2.b., and 3).
On
February 4, police beat and arrested James Orengo when he notified them of
a planned MWM rally; on February 8, police forcibly prevented the rally
(see Sections 1.d. and 2.b.). On July 7, police again beat and
arrested Orengo and environmental activist Wangari Maathai at a rally to
commemorate the anniversary of the multi-party movement; they were
released and their cases were pending at year's end (see Sections 1.d. and
2.b.). On
July 22, police used tear gas to forcibly disperse a rally in Kapsabet
town (see Section 2.b.).
On
October 20, police arrested 71 members of the Release Political Prisoners
(RPP) group, prominent activist Kivutha Kibwana, and members of other
NGO's for holding an illegal meeting to commemorate Kenyatta Day (see
Sections 1.d. and 2.b.). Police reportedly used tear gas during
the arrests and beat some of the detainees. On October 21, members of the RPP
converged on the police station where the detainees were being held to
call for their release. Police officers responded with tear gas
and beat the RPP members with batons and hockey sticks. On October 26,
the detainees were released on bond and scheduled for trial in December;
all charges against the group later were dropped (see Sections 1.d. and
2.b.).
In May
2000, President Moi was quoted widely in the press calling for action
against the Mungiki religious and political group; police forcibly
disrupted several of the group's meetings during the year, injuring
several persons (see Section 2.b.). On April 18, police used tear gas and
batons to forcibly disperse a march by Mungiki members; numerous persons
were injured, (see Sections 1.d., 2.b., and 2.c.). The Government
arrested numerous Mungiki members during the year (see Section
1.d.).
Student
protests and riots occurred frequently during the year, and police
forcibly dispersed several protests after they became violent, which
resulted in injuries.
Unlike in
the previous year, there were no violent incidents during the elections to
the Kenya Tea Development Authority's Board of Directors (the cooperative
which represents the country's 56 tea factories).
In 2000
94 M.P.'s released a report entitled "The Politicization and Misuse of the
Kenya Police and the Administration Police Force," which criticized the
police for misuse of force and human rights abuses. The SCHR wrote
in its 2000 report that the "majority of [human rights] cases have
involved torture and brutality meted out to individuals mainly by law
enforcement agencies and others whose primary duty would be to protect and
defend those very rights." In June 2000, President Moi ordered
police to stop using live ammunition when quelling riots; however, the
pronouncement had little effect on police behavior.
During
the year, the Government investigated some allegations of police use of
excessive force and torture, and prosecuted several police officers; some
officers were charged, convicted, and sentenced for killings (see Section
1.a.).
The Government recorded no cases of torture during the year. In September
2000, prison guards at the King'ong'o Prison in Nyeri killed six inmates
who were attempting to escape (see Section 1.a.). Officials
initially claimed that guards shot the six as they fled; however, there
were media and NGO reports that the six had died of blows to the head and
severe beatings after recapture. By some accounts, the dead inmates had
their eyes gouged out and heads beaten and were disfigured beyond
recognition.
The Attorney General ordered an inquest into the killings, and the
police were investigating the matter at year's end. A woman,
Margaret Njeri, claimed that police tortured her to extract a confession;
police officers allegedly stripped, whipped, beat her until she bled, and
sexually abused her. In 2000 Njeri filed a formal complaint
to police and said that she intended to sue police for damages; the case
was pending at year's end. In May 2000, police officers Charles
King'ori and Wilson Kinyanjui from the Makueni Police Station allegedly
undressed Charles Muteti Mulwa, bound his hands and legs, and sexually
abused him.
King'ori and Kinyanjui were charged with assault and their cases
were pending before the Makindu Principal Magistrate at year's end, and
further hearings were scheduled for February 2002; it was unknown whether
they were in detention or released on bail.
In
September 2000, a magistrate in Nakuru granted the request of six army
officers, Nahashoon Kili, Moses Kiprotich, John Masai, Joseph Tanui, Henry
Buienei, and Tito Rono, to pursue charges of torture against members of
the 66th Artillery Battalion; the six had been held for 6 months in 2000
on suspicion of mutiny. On February 3 in Eldoret, four of the
six officers told journalists that while under military detention, they
had their testicles pricked with needles, were beaten, were deprived of
food for days, and were doused with cold water while naked. The officers
said they were tortured into falsely confessing to having planned a
mutiny.
During the year, the Chief Magistrate dismissed the case against
the members of the 66th Artillery Battalion for procedural reasons; the
army officers appealed the decision, which was pending at year's end.
In 2000
authorities disbanded a special squad of 30 police officers attached to
the CID because they allegedly were involved in numerous robberies,
carjackings, and killings. Due to lack of evidence against them,
there were no reports that members of the squad, reportedly code-named
Alfa Romeo, were prosecuted by year's end. The Attorney General's office reported
that the officers were redeployed in order to enhance efficiency, not for
any illegal activities.
The
inquest into the April 2000 killing of Sophia Nyaghthii Mbogo was ongoing
at year's end.
The inquest into the January 2000 killing by two officers of Philip
Machau was completed during the year; the officers were awaiting trial at
year's end.
The
December 2000 case of Betty Dindi and the January 2000 killing of Joseph
Ndung'u Nyoike, which involved torture, beatings, or abuse by members of
the security forces, were dismissed due to lack of evidence.
No action
was taken in the February 2000 beating case of journalist Mohammed Sheikh;
the Government claimed that it was unaware of Sheikh's complaint and that
Sheikh could not be found. There was
no known action taken against members of the security forces responsible
for torturing, beating, or abusing the persons in the February 2000 case
in which police fired at suspected robbers who were fleeing from police
and seriously injured a teenaged boy and the January 2000 case of William
Tanui.
No known
action was taken during the year against police who reportedly used
excessive force when breaking up demonstrations, student riots, or Mungiki
meetings on the following dates in 2000: December 17; December 13;
September 11; August 19; July 30; June 21; June 20; June 12; and February
28.
Investigations were ongoing in the following 1999
cases: The case of Julius Muhoro Mugo, who was tortured by CID officers;
and the case of Johnnes Musyoka Kimonyi, who was beaten by police in Buru
Buru.
The May
1999 case of residents of Balessa and El Hadi and the April 1999 case of
Duncan Ndwega, which involved torture, beatings, or abuse by members of
the security forces, were dismissed due to lack of evidence.
Police
denied that charges of torture, beating, or abuse had been filed in the
following 1999 cases: The September case of Geoffrey Mbuthia Nduati; the
February case of Peter Macendu; and the January case of Jeremiah
Kasuku.
There was
no known action taken against members of the security forces responsible
for torturing, beating, or abusing the persons in the following 1999
cases: The May case of James Orengo; and the January case in which police
beat a crowd protesting the results of the National Assembly by-election
in Eastern Province.
Caning
continued to be used as punishment in cases such as rape (see Section
5).
Acts of
violence, including rape, banditry, and shootings, occur regularly near
refugee camps (see Sections 2.d. and 5).
There
were several violent incidents between progovernment supporters and
opposition supporters during the year, mostly during opposition rallies
(see Section 2.b.).
Unlike in
the previous year, there were no reports of fighting between Muslim
worshippers and local traders over land surrounding mosques.
Prison
conditions are harsh and life threatening, due both to a lack of resources
and to the Government's unwillingness to address deficiencies in the penal
system.
Prisoners are subjected to severe overcrowding, deficient health
care, and receive inadequate water, diet, and bedding. Police and
prison guards subject prisoners to torture and inhuman treatment (see
Section 1.a.).
Rape of both male and female inmates, primarily by fellow inmates,
is a serious problem, as is the increasing incidence of HIV/AIDS. Disease is
widespread in prisons, and the death rate is high. Only one
prison health facility had a resident doctor. The others
were staffed by clinical officers or nurses posted from the nearest
government hospital. Prisoners sometimes are kept in solitary
confinement far longer than the maximum 90 days allowed by law. Prisoners and
detainees frequently are denied the right to contact relatives or
lawyers.
On July 4, The Nation newspaper reported on its investigation into
prison conditions nationwide. The article highlighted the difficulty
family members have in visiting prisoners, including numerous bureaucratic
and physical obstacles, each requiring a bribe.
The
country's prisons reportedly hold 2 to 3 times their estimated combined
capacity of 15,000 inmates. The average daily population of prison
inmates was 38,739, 33 percent of whom were pretrial detainees. While the
prison population has increased steadily over the last several years,
prison facilities have not. According to the Government, there are
89 prison facilities. Overcrowding led to health-related
problems arising from the sharing of amenities, encouraged the spread of
infectious diseases, and resulted in food and water shortages. There is
little access to health care and medicine. According to the Government, 464
prisoners died in jails during the first 11 months of the year, compared
with 768 in 2000. Deaths were due chiefly to tuberculosis,
dysentery, anemia, malaria, heart attack, typhoid fever, and HIV/AIDS, for
which there is little access to health care and medicine.
On March
23, the KHRC hosted a public meeting at which former prisoners discussed
their experiences while in prison. The former prisoners described prisons
as full of disease, death, corruption, and brutality with guards demanding
bribes for the most basic amenities. Responding to public allegations of
unacceptable detention conditions, in 2000 the Government sent to Kodiaga
Prison a fact-finding team, which found that prison conditions were
acceptable.
In January 2000, Commissioner of Prisons Edward Lokopoyit dismissed
allegations of widespread torture in prisons; however, press reports
continue to highlight the substandard conditions in the prisons. In September
2000, the Attorney General said publicly that some prisons were "unfit for
humans."
The following day, the Nyeri District Commissioner decried poor
prison conditions countrywide.
By most
accounts, prisoners receive three meals per day; however, in the past
there have been reports of food shortage as well as reports that senior
prison officers misappropriated the meat provided for prisoners. There were no
reports during the year of food shortages or that prisoners died from
hunger.
During a 1999 visit by the U.N. Special Rapporteur for Torture,
Nigel Rodley, prison authorities at Nakuru GK Prison confirmed that
inmates on remand received half the ration of food provided to regular
prisoners because they did not work.
Men,
women, and children officially are kept in separate cells, and there were
no reports that men and women were placed in the same cells. Women
sometimes lack access to sanitary napkins and often have only one change
of clothes, leaving them naked during the washing of their laundry. Young
teenagers frequently are kept in cells with adults in overcrowded prisons
and detention centers. Youth detention centers are
understaffed, and inmates have minimal social and exercise time. Some young
inmates remain for years in the centers, as their cases await
resolution.
Nearly
all prisoners serving more than 6 months in prison work in the prison
industries and farms. Men work in printing services, car
repair, tailoring, metal work, and leather and upholstery work. Women are
taught sewing, knitting, dressmaking, rug making, basket weaving, jewelry
making, and other crafts. Outdated laws mandate prisoners'
earnings at $0.35 to $0.70 per year. Prisoners on good conduct can, with
permission, work beyond the 8-hour day to produce goods, from which they
earn two-thirds of the profits. Prisons are unable to invest these
sizable profits in the prisons because income generated from the sale of
prison products is sent directly into the Government Consolidated
Fund.
Some observers allege that prison officials use the free prison
labor for personal profit; however, many inmates leave prison with a valid
trade certificate.
The
courts are responsible partly for overcrowding, as the backlog of cases in
the penal system continues to fill the remand sections of prisons (see
Section 1.d and 1.e.). Many detainees spend more than 3 years
in prison before their trials are completed, often because they cannot
afford even the lowest bail. Very few can afford
attorneys.
The
Government does not permit consistent independent monitoring of prison
conditions.
In general the Government does not permit domestic NGO's to visit
prisons; however, some independent NGO's work with the Government in
evaluating torture cases and performing autopsies on deceased
prisoners.
The SCHR has the authority to inspect prison facilities on demand
at any time.
The SCHR inspected several prisons during the year and found very
poor conditions.
For example, the Industrial Area Prison in Nairobi housed 3,000
prisoners despite a capacity for only 500.)) In 2000 U.N.
Special Rapporteur Rodley released a report on his visits to several
prisons in 1999.
Rodley noted the problems of limited access by observers, poor
sanitation and health care, and overcrowding.
d. Arbitrary
Arrest, Detention, or Exile
Despite
constitutional protections, police continued to arrest and detain citizens
arbitrarily.
The Constitution provides that persons arrested or detained be
brought before a court within 24 hours in noncapital offenses and within
14 days in capital cases. The Penal Code specifically excludes
weekends and holidays from this 14-day period. The law does
not stipulate the period within which the trial of a charged suspect must
begin.
Indicted suspects often are held for months or years before being
brought to court. The Government has acknowledged cases in
which persons have been held in pretrial detention for several years. Police from
the arresting location are responsible for serving court summons and for
picking up remandees from the prison each time the courts hear their
cases.
Police often fail to show up or lack the means to transport the
remandees, who then must await the next hearing of their case. For example,
in the case of six army officers who pursued charges of torture against
members of the 66th Artillery Battalion, the courts later criticized
Police Commissioner Philemon Abong'o for failing to serve the accused army
officials with the court summons (see Sections 1.a. and 1.c.). The law
provides that families and attorneys of persons arrested and charged are
allowed access to them, although this right often is not honored (see
Section 1.c.).
Family members and attorneys may visit prisoners only at the
discretion of the authorities. This privilege often is denied. For those who
have been charged, it often is possible to be released on bail with a bond
or other assurance of the suspect's return.
Prison
overcrowding is a problem, and the backlog of cases in the penal system
continues to fill the remand sections of prisons (see Section 1.e.). Many detainees
spend more than 3 years in prison before their trials are completed, often
because they cannot afford even the lowest bail.
In 2000
the Government instituted the Community Service Order (CSO), a program
whereby petty offenders perform community service rather than serve a
custodial sentence. According to the Home Affairs Permanent
Secretary, the Government spent $250,000 (20 million shillings) on the CSO
in 2000 and $500,000 (40 million shillings) before year's end. There were
11,000 petty offenders participating in the program during the year. The program
eventually may help alleviate overcrowding; however, there was no
indication of any relief by year's end.
Citizens
frequently accuse police officers of soliciting bribes during searches or
falsely arresting individuals to extract bribes (see Section 1.f.). The police
continued repeatedly to conduct massive searches ("sweeps") for illegal
immigrants and firearms (see Sections 1.f. and 2.d.). The KHRC
recorded 1,950 arrests during sweeps in 2000. In May police
arrested approximately 1,400 suspects during a single sweep (see Section
1.f.). It
was unknown if they had been released by year's end.
According
to MUHURI, police allegedly detained five colleagues of Abdillahi Mohamed
Mashuhuri whom they arrested on narcotics charges after raiding
Mashuhuri's house on January 18 (see Sections 1.a., 1.c., and 1.f.). A ruling on
the case was pending at year's end; it was unknown whether the five
remained in detention.
On March
7, environmental activist Wangari Maathai was arrested as she collected
signatures to block a controversial government plan to transfer vast
tracts of forest from public to private ownership; no charges were filed,
and Maathai was released 2 days later.
The
Government often arrested civil society leaders and opposition politicians
and charged them with participating in illegal gatherings (see Section
2.b.). On
February 4, police beat and arrested James Orengo when he and others went
to a proposed rally site in Kisii to notify police of their intent to hold
an MWM rally, as required by law (see Sections 1.c. and 2.b.). Police
prevented Orengo's lawyers from seeing him. Orengo was charged with taking part in
an illegal assembly and resisting arrest; he subsequently was released,
but his case remained pending before the court at year's end. Orengo has
been arrested on questionable charges more than eight times since 1997;
many of these cases against Orengo, including one from January 2000,
remained pending at year's end. On February 8, police forcibly prevented
the MWM rally and arrested numerous persons. On February 8
in Kisumu, police arrested another opposition M.P., Anyang' Nyong'o, and
four other opposition supporters in Kisumu, where MWM also attempted to
hold a rally (see Section 2.b.). On July 7, police again beat and
arrested James Orengo and environmental activist Wangari Maathai at a
rally to commemorate the 10th anniversary of the multi-party movement (see
Sections 1.c. and 2.b.). Orengo and Maathai were released, and
the charges against them were dropped.
Following
an opposition rally on April 28 that police earlier had attempted to
cancel for "security concerns," police arrested two Democratic Party (DP)
M.P.'s, Maina Kamanda and David Manyara (see Sections 2.a. and 2.b.). Kamanda was
charged with treason for allegedly threatening the life of President Moi
during a speech at the meeting. Kamanda later was released and the
treason charge was dropped; however, he was charged with the lesser
offense of "incitement," the same charge on which Manyara was arrested a
few days later for a speech he gave at the same rally.
On April
18, police forcibly dispersed a march by Mungiki members; six persons
reportedly were arrested, and numerous persons were injured (see Sections
1.c., 2.b., and 2.c.). It was unknown whether those arrested
had been released by year's end. On November 16, more than 70 members of
the Mungiki and Kamjesh groups were arrested for extortion and for seizure
of the routes used by privately owned public transportation vehicles,
known as matatus. On November 19, police arrested Mungiki
leader Ibrahim Waruinge, who previously had announced that Mungikis
planned to take over the management of the routes of privately owned
transportation vehicles; he was charged with promoting "warlike"
activities during a July clash between Mungiki members and matatu drivers
which resulted in five deaths.
On
October 20, police arrested 71 members of the RPP group, prominent
activist Kivutha Kibwana, and members of other NGO's for holding an
illegal meeting to commemorate Kenyatta Day (see Section 2.b.). Police
reportedly used tear gas during the arrests and beat some detainees. On October 26,
the detainees were released on bond and scheduled to go on trial in
December; all charges against the detainees later were dropped.
Student
protests and riots occurred frequently during the year, and police
arrested numerous students responsible for violence during the
incidents.
During
the year, police arrested a number of journalists on charges of publishing
information "likely to cause alarm to the public" (see Section 1.a.). On January 2
in Kisumu, Arwings Odera, a freelance journalist, was charged with
publishing false information (see Sections 1.c. and 2.a.) In January he
was released on bail; Arwings reportedly fled the country, and the case
against him remained pending at year's end. In April the Government sealed the
offices of Citizen Radio and Television and detained its owner, who later
was released (see Section 2.a.). The case was pending at year's end.
There
were no developments in the following cases from 2000: The December
case of several journalists arrested during an MWM rally; the July arrests
of 10 Mungiki members; and the April arrests of Joseph Kirangathi Njoroge,
Esther Wamucii, John Gitonga, and Mwangi Gachie Kamau.
In April
2000, police arrested and beat Mohammed Sheikh, a journalist for The
People (see Section 2.a.). Sheikh was released on bail and filed a
complaint; the Government claimed that it was unaware of Sheikh's
complaint and that Sheikh could not be found. In February
2000, John Wandetto, a journalist for The People who was arrested in 1999,
received an 18-month jail sentence for writing a report that "risked
causing alarm."
During the year, Wandetto appealed the sentence to the High Court,
which ruled in his favor and released him without charge. Pretrial
detention remained a problem. On June 22, Richard Wachira Wambugu was
released after spending 18 years in detention awaiting trial for
murder.
On October 26, 2000, Michael Owour, on remand at Kamiti Prison and
charged by the Kiambu Court with a violent robbery, was tried, convicted,
and sentenced to death; he allegedly had been awaiting trial for 4
years. e. Denial of Fair
Public Trial The
Constitution provides for an independent judiciary; however, in practice
the judiciary often is corrupt and subject to strong influence from the
executive branch. The President has extensive powers over
appointments, including those of the Attorney General, the Chief Justice,
and Appeal and High Court judges. The President also can dismiss judges
and the Attorney General upon the recommendation of a special
presidentially appointed tribunal. Although judges have life tenure (except
for the very few foreign judges who are hired by contract), the President
has extensive authority over transfers.
In
previous years, judges who ruled against the Government sometimes were
punished with the transfer or nonrenewal of their contracts; however, no
retaliatory action against judges was reported during the year. Judges
occasionally demonstrated independence. Several cases involving opposition
M.P.'s have been pending for years, with the courts repeatedly postponing
the hearings, thereby requiring the M.P.'s to appear periodically in court
or risk fines or imprisonment. In 2000 a Homa Bay court sentenced M.P.
Shem Ochuodho to more than 3 years in prison for a violent assault on a
political rival during the 1997 election. While violence may have occurred,
observers believe the court may have applied the law inequitably; no KANU
M.P.'s were similarly charged despite credible allegations of violence on
their part during campaigning. There were a number of protests against
Ochuodho's conviction; 10 days later, High Court Justice Barbara Tanui
overturned the conviction, ordered a new trial, and released
Ochuodho.
Police immediately rearrested Ochuodho, took a statement regarding
the case, and then released him on bail. On November 30, eight charges of
malicious damage to property and two assault charges were withdrawn;
however, the case remained under investigation at year's end.
The
Attorney General's constitutional power to discontinue proceedings in
private prosecution cases was a problem. Arguing that citizens must first notify
his office before initiating private prosecution, Attorney General Amos
Wako has used this authority on a number of occasions to terminate cases
against government officials.
No action
was taken during the year to implement the recommendations of the 1998
Kwach Commission, which the Chief Justice appointed to report on the
problems of the judiciary. The Kwach Commission cited "corruption,
incompetence, neglect of duty, theft, drunkenness, lateness, sexual
harassment, and racketeering" as common problems in the judiciary. The Commission
recommended amending the Constitution to allow for the removal of
incompetent judges, introducing a code of ethics, improving the
independence of the judiciary, overhauling the Judicial Services
Commission (the administrative branch of the judiciary), and shifting
prosecutorial responsibilities from the police to the judiciary. Upon receipt
of the report, the Chief Justice in late 1998 appointed another commission
to investigate modalities of implementing the Kwach Commission's
recommendations for improving the judiciary. No action was
taken on those recommendations by year's end.
The court
system consists of a Court of Appeals, a High Court, and two levels of
magistrate courts, where most criminal and civil cases originate. The Chief
Justice is a member of both the Court of Appeals and the High Court, which
undercuts the principle of judicial review. Military personnel are tried by military
courts-martial, and verdicts may be appealed through military court
channels.
The Chief Justice appoints attorneys for military personnel on a
case-by-case basis.
The
country has Islamic courts that resolve disputes, adjudicate inheritance
questions and marital issues, and handle other civil matters where all
parties are Muslim and accept the court's jurisdiction. The
Constitution provides for these courts, and states that "jurisdiction of a
Kadhi's court shall extend to the determination of questions of Muslim law
relating to personal status, marriage, divorce, or inheritance in
proceedings in which all the parties profess the Muslim religion." The courts
have functioned in the country for numerous years. There are no
other customary or traditional courts in the country. However, the
national courts use the customary law of an ethnic group as a guide in
civil matters so long as it does not conflict with statutory law. This is done
most often in cases that involve marriage, death, and inheritance issues
and in which there is an original contract founded in customary law. For example,
if a couple married under national law, then their divorce is adjudicated
under national law, but if they married under customary law, then their
divorce is adjudicated under customary law. Citizens may choose between national and
customary law when they enter into marriage or other contracts; however,
thereafter the courts determine which kind of law governs the enforcement
of the contract.
Some women's organizations seek to eliminate customary law because
they feel it is biased in favor of men (see Section 5).
Civilians
are tried publicly, although some testimony may be given in closed
session.
The law provides for a presumption of innocence, and for defendants
to have the right to attend their trial, to confront witnesses, and to
present witnesses and evidence. Civilians also can appeal a verdict to
the High Court and ultimately to the Court of Appeals. Judges hear
all cases.
In treason and murder cases, the deputy registrar of the High Court
can appoint three assessors to sit with the High Court judge. The assessors
are taken from all walks of life and receive a sitting allowance for the
case.
Although the assessors render a verdict, their judgment is not
binding.
Lawyers can object to the appointments of specific
assessors.
Defendants do not have the right to
government-provided legal counsel, except in capital cases. For lesser
charges, free legal aid rarely is available, and then only in Nairobi and
other major cities. As a result, poor persons may be
convicted for lack of an articulate defense. Although
defendants have access to an attorney in advance of trial, defense lawyers
do not always have access to government-held evidence. The Government
can plead the State Security Secrets Clause as a basis for withholding
evidence, and local officials sometimes classify documents to the hide the
guilt of government officials. Court fees for filing and hearing cases
are high for ordinary citizens. The daily rate of at least $25 (2,000
shillings) for arguing a civil case before a judge is beyond the reach of
most citizens.
Critics
of the Government--politicians, journalists, lawyers, and students--have
been harassed through abuse of the legal process. Authorities
continued to arrest opposition M.P.'s and journalists during the year (see
Sections 1.d. and 2.a.), and a number of opposition M.P.'s, student
leaders, and human rights activists still had one or more court cases
pending during the year. Some of these cases often have been
pending for months or even years.
There
were no reports of political prisoners.
f. Arbitrary
Interference with Privacy, Family, Home, or Correspondence
At times
authorities infringed on citizens' privacy rights. Although the
Constitution provides that "no person shall be subjected to the search of
his person or his property or the entry by others on his premises", it
permits searches without warrants "to promote the public benefit." The Police Act
permits police to enter a home forcibly if the time required to obtain a
search warrant would "prejudice" their investigation. Although
security officers generally obtain search warrants, they occasionally
conduct searches without warrants to apprehend suspected criminals or to
seize property believed to be stolen. Citizens frequently accuse police
officers of soliciting bribes during searches or of falsely arresting
individuals to extract bribes (see Section 1.d.). Unlike in
previous years, there were no reports that Nairobi police searched offices
of the media without warrants. According
to MUHURI, on January 18 in Mombasa, police allegedly raided the house of
Abdillahi Mohamed Mashuhuri and detained Mashuhuri and five of his
colleagues (see Sections 1.a., 1.c., and 1.d.).
In April
the Communications Commission of Kenya (CCK) sealed the offices of Citizen
Radio and Television and confiscated equipment (see Sections 1.d. and
2.a.) On
May 20, police officers raided offices of The People newspaper, reportedly
to take statements from two senior editors who had written a story
alleging a connection between the Office of the President and troubles in
the hotel businesses of opposition politician Kenneth Matiba (see Section
2.a.).
The
police continued to conduct massive warrantless searches ("sweeps") for
illegal immigrants and firearms in residential neighborhoods of major
cities (see Section 2.d.). The KHRC recorded 1,950 arrests during
sweeps in 2000 (see Section 1.d.). Residents complained that police who
entered homes on the pretense of searching for weapons often asked for
radio, television, and video receipts and permits and demanded bribes to
refrain from confiscating those items in the absence of such documents.
During one such sweep in May, police arrested approximately 1,400
suspects; Nairobi Police Chief Geoffrey Mwathe announced that he had
directed a "massive operation to pick up all known criminals for known
offenses and unknown offenses" and admitted that some innocent people were
"likely to suffer."
Security
forces monitored closely the activities of dissidents, following or
otherwise harassing them. They employed various means of
surveillance, including a network of informants to monitor the activities
of opposition politicians and human rights advocates. Some
opposition leaders, students, journalists, and others continued to report
that the Government subjected them to surveillance and telephone wiretaps;
however, there were no reports of interference with written correspondence
during the year.
Members
of the coastal Bajuni, Mijikenda, and Digo communities accused the
Government of denying them their rights to land (see Section 5).
Section 2
Respect for Civil Liberties, Including:
a. Freedom of
Speech and Press
The
Constitution provides for freedom of speech and of the press; however, the
Government broadly interprets existing laws to restrict free
expression.
The Government continued to harass, beat, and arrest elements of
the media during the year (see Sections 1.c. and 1.d.), and various media
and human rights organizations criticized police for such actions during
rallies and demonstrations in 2000. The print media has been relatively
independent for decades and since 1992 has multiplied and become more
outspoken; there was further liberalization of the electronic media during
the year, including radio, television, and Internet communications. The developing
regulatory framework for broadcast media allowed abuse and manipulation in
the issuance, withholding, and revoking of broadcast permits and
frequencies.
Police repeatedly dispersed demonstrators to prevent criticism of
the Government, and journalists covering such events often were present
during the dispersals (see Sections 1.c., 1.d., and 2.b.). In spite of
these pressures, the press, civic organizations, and the opposition
continued to present their views to the public, particularly in the print
media.
Government pressure led journalists to practice some
self-censorship.
Following
an opposition rally in Central Province on April 28 that led to the arrest
of two M.P.'s on charges of incitement, President Moi ordered the police
to monitor and record all public speeches by politicians at political
rallies (see Sections 1.d. and 2.b.). The order was regarded widely as an
attempt to restrict political speech by threatening to arrest those whose
speech could be interpreted by the Government as inflammatory.
Following
an opposition rally on April 28 that police earlier had attempted to
cancel for "security concerns," police arrested two DP M.P.'s, Maina
Kamanda and David Manyara (see Sections 1.d. and 2.b.). Kamanda was
charged with treason for allegedly threatening the life of President Moi
during a speech at the meeting. The Government-controlled Kenya
Broadcasting Corporation (KBC) broadcast a video that showed Kamanda
saying that President Moi should be shot if he did not leave office after
his current term ended; however, a Kenya Television Network (KTN) news
video of the same event indicated that the tape shown on KBC had excluded
three words.
Kamanda actually had said that Kamanda himself should be shot if he
(Kamanda) were to agree to another term for Moi. Kamanda later
was released and the treason charge was dropped; however, he was charged
with the lesser offense of "incitement."
On the
whole, the print media remained candid and independent. The mainstream
print media include four daily newspapers that report on national
politics.
The largest newspaper, the Nation, is independent and often
publishes articles critical of government policies. The second
largest newspaper, the East African Standard, is controlled by an
investment group with close ties to the Government and the ruling KANU
party. It
is generally, although not automatically, supportive of the
Government.
The third daily newspaper, The People, formerly a weekly, is owned
by an opposition politician and is highly critical of the Government. The fourth
daily, the Kenya Times, which has a small circulation, reflects KANU party
views.
There also are numerous independent tabloid or "gutter"
periodicals, which appear irregularly and are highly critical of the
Government.
Reporting in these tabloids ran the gamut from revealing insider
reports to unsubstantiated rumor-mongering. While all Kenyan newspapers suffered
financially to varying degrees because of the prolonged economic and
business downturn, the Government no longer openly pressured businesses
against advertising with opposition media during the year.
Unlike in
previous years, the Government did not pressure businesses against
advertising with opposition media during the year. While there
was no overt official government pressure on journalists, individual
journalists reported that they were pressured by government officials and
other influential persons to avoid reporting on issues that could harm the
interests of these persons or expose their alleged wrongdoings. Some editors
and journalists reportedly practiced self-censorship because of government
pressure or bribes; there also were credible reports of journalists
accepting payments to report or withhold certain stories, some of which
were fabricated.
The
Government attempted to intimidate the pro-opposition press with arrests
and pressure, and by selective prosecution of journalists under a
colonial-era section of the Penal Code that criminalizes the publication
of information likely to cause fear or alarm. Reports that
police beat and arrested journalists continued during the year (see
Sections 1.c., 1.d., and 2.b.). In December 2000, police arrested
Arwings Odera, a freelance journalist who had published a series of
articles alleging corruption in government-backed projects, including the
foreign-funded hydroelectric power project in Sondu-Miriu. On January 2,
Odera was charged with publishing false information, trespassing,
incitement to violence, and resisting arrest; he was released later in
January.
Police reportedly also had shot and injured Odera in his car in
December 2000; in January he was released on bail and in July he fled to
South Africa for fear of his life (see Sections 1.c. and 1.d.).
On May
20, police officers raided offices of The People, reportedly to take
statements from two senior editors who had written a story alleging a
connection between the Office of the President and troubles in the hotel
businesses of opposition politician Kenneth Matiba (see Section
1.f.). In
November the court tried and acquitted Aola Ooko, a correspondent for the
Agence France Presse, who was arrested in March 2000 for fabricating
allegations against the police in Mombasa.
In
February 2000, John Wandetto, a journalist for The People who was arrested
in 1999, received an 18-month jail sentence for writing a report that
"risked causing alarm." During the year, Wandetto appealed the
sentence to the High Court, which ruled in his favor; he was
released.
In April
2000, police arrested and beat Mohammed Sheikh, a journalist for The
People.
Sheikh was released on bail and filed a complaint; the Government
claimed that it was unaware of Sheikh's complaint and that Sheikh could
not be found. The case
against Simbi Kisumba, a journalist for The People, who was arrested in
2000 for publishing an article that criticized the police, remained
pending at year's end.
There
were no developments in the December 2000 arrest and detention of several
journalists at an MWM rally.
The
Government continued to loosen its control over electronic broadcast media
in and around Nairobi, while maintaining its dominance of broadcast
services to regional towns and rural areas, where the majority of the
country's population live. KBC is the oldest broadcaster and the
only one with a national network of broadcast and cable television, AM and
FM radio, and short-wave broadcasts. KBC remained the only domestic source of
current information for most persons outside the Nairobi area; stations
operated by other media companies, including 12 radio stations, operate
primarily in Nairobi and its outlying areas. The
Government controls KBC, and KBC's monopoly on broadcasting nationally
continued to limit severely the ability of opposition leaders and other
critics of the Government to communicate with the electorate outside the
capital.
KBC stations do not criticize the Government and give a large share
of news time to government or KANU party functions and little coverage to
opposition activities. During the 1997 elections, the Electoral
Commission directed KBC to accord equal treatment to all political
parties; however, this directive has never been implemented fully. KBC news
coverage remains biased in favor of KANU and President Moi. In addition
the KBC's limited coverage of the opposition generally was negative,
compared with uniformly positive coverage of KANU. Opposition
politicians accused the Government of using similar tactics in the 1999
by-elections.
KTN, a
subsidiary of the East African Standard group of newspapers that is owned
by KANU supporters, airs news programs with more balanced political
coverage than KBC. KTN broadcasts in Nairobi and
Mombasa.
Stellavision also is owned by KANU supporters and operates in
collaboration with TV Africa and SKY TV of London. Stellavision
does not air local news, relying instead on rebroadcasts of SKY TV and
British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) world news; it broadcasts in
Kisumu, Mombasa, and Nairobi. Other TV stations in operation in
Nairobi are Nation-TV, associated with the Nation newspaper group, and
Family, a Christian-oriented broadcaster. Citizen TV and Citizen Radio, which
broadcast generally objective news programs, ceased operations during the
year. By
year's end, Citizen Radio resumed its broadcasts to much of the central
areas of the country; Citizen TV, which formerly broadcast to the Nairobi
area, remained closed. Family TV and Radio broadcasts in the
Nairobi metropolitan area; Nation Television also broadcasts in Mombasa,
providing independent media coverage.
The
following radio stations also broadcast in Nairobi: Nation, Kameme, BBC,
Voice of America (VOA), Capital, Family, Kiss, Iqra, Metro East, and
Sounds Asia.
In addition to KBC, Sauti ya Rehema, a non-denominational religious
radio station broadcasting in Kiswahili, English, and other local
languages in Eldoret, and the Mombasa-based Christian-oriented Baraka FM
radio broadcasting in Kiswahili and English transmit outside of
Nairobi.
In June
rebroadcasts of VOA programming on FM radio began in Nairobi; in 2000 the
Government issued a permit to VOA to broadcast locally. VOA requests
for similar broadcast access to Mombasa were not approved.
The
Government, through the CCK, continued to delay action on a number of
radio and television license applications on the grounds that it was
reorganizing and regularizing its licensing procedures. The Ministry
of Information, Transport, and Communication continued to argue that it
was waiting for the recommendations on media liberalization from the
Attorney General's Task Force on Press Law. That Task Force made its initial report
in December 1998; however, it still has several outstanding issues to
resolve, including the manner of selection of the 13-member Media
Commission, which would act as an independent body issuing broadcast
licenses.
In April the Government announced that a policy on broadcast
licensing would be issued to ensure transparency in licensing procedures;
however, no such policy was issued by year's end. The CCK
regulates frequency allocations, while the Ministry of Transport and
Communications issues licenses. The Ministry has licensed 33
organizations (6 of which are KBC companies) to broadcast, and the CCK has
allocated frequencies to a total of 9 television and 18 radio stations,
although some were not broadcasting at year's end. In 1999 Nation
Media Group received authorization for radio broadcasts in Nairobi,
Mombasa, Kisumu, and Nakuru, and began radio and television transmission
to Nairobi.
Nation Media also sued the Government for permission to broadcast
radio and television nationwide, but the case was still before the courts
at year's end.
In 1998 the Ministry approved radio and television broadcast
licenses for a Muslim group and for a Christian group, and in 1999, the
Ministry licensed an Islamic radio station and three Catholic television
stations.
In 2000 the Supreme Council of Kenya Muslims (SUPKEM) began
test-running Iqra Radio Station, which provides information, educational
programming, and entertainment for Muslim audiences in Nairobi; Iqra was
operational fully at year's end. In June the Government announced that it
would not issue any more licenses to broadcast in Nairobi until new
policies were in place. According to the Ministry, there were
120 applications for Radio/TV licenses pending at year's end.
Private
organizations that have been issued frequencies to broadcast but have not
done so include the Pentecostal Church, Pete Aviation, and Maritime Media
Services.
The Catholic Church, which reportedly has been allocated radio and
television frequencies for Nairobi, had not begun broadcasting by year's
end. It
reportedly wants a nation-wide frequency, while the Government insists on
region-by-region allocation of locally based broadcasters. The Government
also licensed and provided frequencies to the East African Television
Network (EATN), the only recipient of a national frequency other than KBC;
however, a dispute arose with the Government after EATN formed a
partnership with Nation Media. The Government blocked EATN from using
the frequencies and the case was pending in the courts at year's end.
In
January the CCK ordered the shutdown of Citizen Radio and Television
broadcast for unpaid licensing fees and improper use of communications
equipment.
Citizen claimed that the shutdown, which only affected its
operations outside Nairobi, was motivated politically. Citizen, which
began broadcasting in 1999, appealed the order in the courts and continued
broadcasting in Nairobi; however, in 2000 the court upheld the CCK's order
and Citizen again appealed to the highest court, the Court of Appeal. In April after
Citizen moved its broadcast equipment from borrowed space on
government-controlled towers to a new location on the outskirts of
Nairobi, the CCK sealed Citizen's offices, confiscated equipment, and
detained its owner (see Section 1.d.). Citizen appealed the Government's
action, and the court ruled that the CCK had acted properly in seizing
equipment.
The CCK subsequently stripped Royal Media, the parent company of
Citizen, of its broadcast licenses. Citizen's owner appealed that ruling;
the appeal was pending at year's end. In April
2000, during a speech to Parliament, Julius Sunkuli, the Minister of State
in the Office of the President, criticized ethnic vernacular radio
stations as being tribal and a detriment to national unity (see Section
5). In
August 2000, President Moi's request that the Attorney General draft a law
to force radio stations to broadcast only in English or Kiswahili drew
negative public reaction, which caused several Government officials to
deny that the Government intended to ban vernacular broadcasting. No such law
was implemented by year's end.
Representatives of the international media remained
free to operate; 120 international correspondents work in Kenya, and
approximately 100 media organizations report out of Nairobi without
official interference. A number
of publications remained banned, including such works as "The Quotations
of Chairman Mao Zedong" and Salman Rushdie's "Satanic Verses."
Sedition
is not a ground for censorship of publications; however, the Prohibited
Publications Review Board reviews publication bans. Public
officials use libel laws to attack publications directly critical of
actions by government officials. In October 2000, a ruling in a libel
case involving a government minister ordered that printers and
distributors are to be held equally responsible with publishers and
authors for libelous content in publications and books. Further
interpretation of libel laws and related legislation also has made retail
stores equally liable should the material in question be found
libelous.
In June
President Moi and Nicholas Biwott, Minister for Trade and Industry, sued a
former U.S. Ambassador accredited to the country and a bookstore that
carried the Ambassador's book for libel over allegations in the book that
the President and Biwott were involved in the 1991 murder of Foreign
Minister Robert Ouko. In August the President and Biwott
successfully blocked The Nation newspaper from publishing excerpts from
the book.
Also in August, a court ordered The Nation to stop publishing
further reports on corruption charges, filed with a regional court,
against a company partly owned by one of the President's sons.
The
Government does not restrict access to the Internet. There were
approximately 20 domestic Internet service providers (ISP's), which
generally are privately owned. Internet access was limited only by
economic and infrastructural factors, and was fairly widespread in urban
areas.
Although liberalization of Internet communications continued,
Internet access in the country continued to be limited by Telkom. All ISP's are
required to use the communications parastatal to connect to the
Internet.
There were no reports of Telkom interfering with the content of
Internet transmissions. Telkom was slated for privatization
during the year; however, no action was taken by year's end.
Despite
constitutional provisions for free speech, the Government and school
administrators continued to limit academic freedom. There were six
private universities and six universities owned, subsidized, and
administered by the Government. Most post-secondary students attended
Government-run institutions, partly because of their lower fees. President Moi,
as chancellor of all state universities, appoints the vice chancellors,
who manage the institutions under the supervision of the Ministry of
Education.
A number of student activists have been expelled from universities
in recent years because of political activities, and most have been
refused readmission. Students claim that the Government
interferes in student elections to ensure sympathetic student leaders.
Student
protests and riots occurred frequently during the year, and police
forcibly dispersed several protests after they became violent, which
resulted in injuries.
Fighting
between the Orma and Pokomo communities forced 20 schools to close in
March (see Section 5).
b. Freedom of
Peaceful Assembly and Association The
Constitution provides for freedom of assembly; however, the Government
restricts this right in practice. Organizers must notify the local police
in advance of planned public meetings; however, authorities continued to
disrupt public demonstrations about which the police had been duly
informed in advance. Government officials claimed that the
organizers lacked authorization to hold public gatherings, although there
no longer appeared to be any legal basis for requiring specific
authorization.
In 2000 President Moi repeated his 1999 statements that government
officials should deny "permits" (for public demonstrations) to politicians
who use public rallies to abuse other leaders; however, officials have
legal authority to cancel planned public gatherings only if there are
simultaneous meetings previously scheduled for the same venue, or if there
are specific security threats. The President's 2000 statement barring
MWM from holding public meetings has been aggressively enforced, although
there is no apparent legal basis for this policy (see Sections 1.c. and
1.d.).
Moi said that licenses would only be given to registered political
parties, and that the Government would ban events by any "lobby groups,
some religious organizations, and nongovernmental organizations whose aims
and operations were sinister." Government and opposition politicians
often threaten political opponents not to attend or organize gatherings in
certain constituencies.
Following
an opposition rally on April 28 that police earlier had attempted to
cancel for "security concerns," police arrested two DP M.P.'s, Maina
Kamanda and David Manyara (see Sections 1.d. and 2.a.). Kamanda was
charged with treason for allegedly threatening the life of President Moi
during a speech at the meeting. Kamanda later was released and the
treason charge was dropped; however, he was charged with the lesser
offense of "incitement," the same charge on which Manyara was arrested a
few days later for a speech he gave at the same rally.
Police
forcibly disrupted public assemblies, including some political protest
demonstrations (see Sections 1.c. and 1.d.). On July 22 in
Kapsabet town, police prevented Michael Wamalwa, FORD/Kenya party leader
and presidential candidate, from addressing a gathering and used tear gas
to forcibly disperse the crowd (see Section 1.c.). Newspapers
quoted police as saying they had acted on "instructions from above;" rally
organizers claimed to have notified police in advance as required by law.
Police
continued to attempt to prevent and forcibly disrupt rallies by the
MWM. On
February 4, police beat and arrested James Orengo when he notified them of
a planned MWM rally; on February 8, police declared the planned rally
illegal, forcibly prevented it, and arrested numerous persons (see
Sections 1.c. and 1.d.). Also on February 8, police arrested five
persons in Kisumu, where the MWM attempted to hold another rally. On July 7,
police beat and arrested Orengo and Wangari Maathai at a rally to
commemorate the 10th anniversary of the multiparty movement (see Sections
1.c. and 1.d.).
Organizers had notified police in advance and had received public
assurances from Marsden Madoka, Minister for Internal Security, that the
rally would be allowed. Police claimed to be acting on "new
information" and "security concerns."
On
October 20, police arrested 71 members of the RPP group, prominent
activist Kivutha Kibwana, and members of other NGO's for holding an
illegal meeting to commemorate Kenyatta Day (see Sections 1.c. and
1.d.).
Police reportedly used tear gas during the arrests and beat some of
the detainees.
On October 21, members of the RPP converged on the police station
where the detainees were being held to call for their release. Police
officers responded with tear gas and beat the RPP members with batons and
hockey sticks.
In 2000
President Moi was quoted widely in the press calling for action against
the Mungiki cultural and political group, and police disrupted several of
the group's meetings and marches during the year (see Sections 1.c. and
2.c.). On
April 18, police used tear gas and batons to forcibly disperse a march by
Mungiki members in front of Parliament. The Mungiki were protesting the alleged
killing by police of one of their members; six persons reportedly were
arrested and numerous persons were injured (see Sections 1.c. and
1.d.).
During the year, authorities began allowing the Mungiki to hold
public meetings without interference; however, in November the police
initiated a crackdown and arrested several members of the group, including
Mungiki leader Ibrahim Waruinge (see Section 1.d.).
Student
protests and riots occurred frequently during the year, and police
forcibly dispersed several protests after they became violent, which
resulted in injuries.
Violent
incidents continued between progovernment supporters and opposition
supporters during the year; political parties reportedly use gangs of
young followers to harass other parties and to prevent them from holding
meetings or events. On May 20, youths, reportedly acting on
behalf of KANU, disrupted a rally by hurling gasoline bombs at the stage
on which the leader of the official opposition, Mwai Kibaki of the DP, and
several other M.P.'s were sitting. No action was taken against the youths
by year's end.
The
Government continued to use the Societies Act to restrict freedom of
association.
The act requires that every association be registered or exempted
from registration by the Registrar of Societies. Since 1997 the
Government has acted on some long-pending applications for political party
registration, increasing the number of registered political parties from
23 to 40.
However, the Government continued to refuse to reverse its 1994
denial of registration of the Islamic Party of Kenya (IPK), which was
involved in a number of violent confrontations with police in 1992. The United
Democratic Movement political party has awaited registration since 1998;
however, it still was not registered at year's end, and the group that was
advocating for its registration largely has disbanded.
The
Government continued to criticize publicly and to intimidate NGO's, many
of which it accuses of being "subversive" and of working with the
opposition to overthrow the Government. The Government NGO Coordination Board
under the NGO Act registers NGO's. The Government used this structure to
put pressure on the nongovernmental National NGO Council. In 1999 the
Office of the President instructed all district governments to monitor
NGO's within their districts with a view to ensuring that NGO's either
advance government-approved objectives or cease to operate; however, NGO's
did not report an increase in government monitoring during the year. President Moi
repeatedly attacked NGO's in public speeches throughout the year, saying
they were in the pay of foreigners intent on destabilizing the country,
but offered no evidence to back these charges.
c. Freedom of
Religion
The
Constitution provides for freedom of religion, and the Government
generally respects this right in practice; however, while groups generally
were allowed to worship freely, the Government at times interfered with
other activities by religious groups.
The
Government requires religious organizations to register with the Registrar
of Societies, which reports to the Office of the Attorney General. The Government
allows traditional indigenous religious organizations to register,
although many choose not to do so. Once registered religious organizations
enjoy tax-free status, and clergy are not subject to duty on purchased
goods.
Religious organizations generally receive equal treatment from the
Government; however, some small splinter groups have found it difficult to
register due to their inability to define their status as more than an
offshoot of a larger religious organization. The Government
has not granted registration to the Tent of the Living God, a small Kikuyu
religious group banned during the single party-era; however, with the
arrival of a multiparty system in 1992, membership in the Tent of the
Living God has greatly diminished. Some members of the group were believed
to have joined the Mungiki.
The
Government refused to reverse its 1994 denial of registration of the
Islamic Party of Kenya (IPK) on the grounds that the IPK was a
religious-based party, and had been involved in a number of violent
confrontations with police in 1992.
Following
the discovery of "cult" killings in Uganda in 2000, William Ruto,
Assistant Minister in the Office of the President, said that the
Government would crack down on religious groups that endanger the safety
of their adherents; however, there was no reported harassment of religious
groups, and no action was taken by the end of the year.
In late
August, Marsden Madoka, former Minister for Internal Security, reportedly
stated that the Government intended to take more than 341 schools, which
are mainly under the control of the Presbyterian, Anglican, and Catholic
churches, and hand over control to the African Independent Pentecostal
Church of Africa (AIPCA). No action had been taken by year's end.
In April
the High Court allowed the Buru Buru Church of God in Nairobi to reopen;
in June 2000, local authorities blocked entry to the church ostensibly to
prevent fighting between rival factions in the church.
Foreign
missionary groups of nearly every faith operate in the country. The Government
generally has permitted them to assist the poor and establish schools and
hospitals.
The missionaries openly promote their religious beliefs and have
encountered little resistance; however, some missionary groups expressed
concern following the 1999 release of the report of the Presidential
Commission of Inquiry into Devil Worship. The Commission's widely publicized
report included numerous reports of ritual murder, human sacrifice, and
cannibalism, and feats of magic allegedly done by using powers acquired
through such acts. It also reported that "Satanists" had
infiltrated nonindigenous religious groups and other organizations, making
them "doorways" to Satanism. The Commission is no longer functioning,
and the Government took no action to follow up on the report.
Practicing witchcraft reportedly is a criminal offense
under colonial-era laws; however, persons generally are prosecuted for
this offense only in conjunction with some other offense, such as
murder.
Witchcraft traditionally has been a common explanation for diseases
for which the causes were unknown. The practice of witchcraft is understood
widely to encompass attempts to harm others not only by magic, but also by
conventional means such as poisons. Although many traditional indigenous
religions include or accommodate belief in the efficacy of witchcraft,
they generally approve of harmful witchcraft only for defensive or
retaliatory purposes and purport to offer protection against
it.
Muslim
leaders continued to charge that the Government is hostile toward
Muslims.
Muslims complain that non-Muslims receive better treatment when
requesting citizenship documents. According to Muslim leaders, government
authorities scrutinize more rigorously the identification cards of persons
with Muslim surnames and require them to present additional documentation
of their citizenship (i.e., birth certificates of parents and, sometimes,
grandparents).
The Government has singled out the overwhelmingly Muslim ethnic
Somalis as the only group whose members are required to carry an
additional form of identification to prove citizenship. Ethnic Somalis
must produce upon demand their Kenyan identification card and a second
identification card verifying screening; both cards are required to apply
for a passport.
This heightened scrutiny appears to be due to an attempt to deter
illegal immigration, rather than due to the religious affiliation of
ethnic Somalis.
Muslim leaders claim that since the August 1998 bombing of the U.S.
Embassy in Nairobi, government discrimination against their community has
worsened.
Following the September 11 terrorists attacks in the U.S., the
immigration office in the predominately Muslim city of Mombasa required
that applicants for birth certificates or passports had to include their
grandparents' national documents with their applications (see Section
2.d.).
In May
Muslims protested the reported allocation of a public plot of land to a
private developer in Mombasa. The grounds traditionally have been used
for celebrating Islamic events. Following the protests, the Government
apparently has ceased developing plans to allocate the land, and the land
remained public as of the end of the period covered by this report. Police
forcibly disrupted several meetings of the Mungiki religious and political
group during the year (see Section 1.c.).
The
Government historically has been unsympathetic to tribal religious groups
that have engendered protest movements. The Government frequently harassed and
periodically arrested and detained members of the Mungiki, a small,
controversial, cultural and political movement based in part on Kikuyu
ethnic traditions. Mungiki espouses political views and
cultural practices that are controversial to mainstream society (see
Sections 1.c., 1.d., and 2.b.). While religion may have played a role in
the formation of the group, observers believe that it is not a key
characteristic of the group. The Mungiki do not adhere to any single
religion and members are free to choose their own religion; the group
includes Muslims and Christians. The number of Mungiki members is
unknown, but the group has a significant following among the unemployed
and other marginalized segments of society. The debate over the rights of the
Mungiki to practice their cultural traditions and advance their political
agenda is ongoing.
The case
of two police officers charged with the 1999 murder of five Muslim
worshippers in the Anas Bin Malik mosque in Chai village, near Mombasa,
remained pending before the court at year's end (see Section 1.a.).
In August
2000, Father John Anthony Kaiser, a Catholic priest working in the country
for more than 30 years, was found dead near Naivasha town. Father Kaiser
was a vocal human rights activist and a critic of key members of the
Government.
Although there was much public speculation to the contrary, an FBI
report, released in April, concluded that the evidence collected was most
consistent with suicide, and that it was unlikely that Father Kaiser had
been murdered.
The Catholic Church and some human rights groups have rejected the
FBI report and have called for further independent investigation. The Attorney
General did not respond to these demands by year's end.
In May
the Ufungamano Initiative, a group of Christian, Muslim, and Hindu leaders
formed as an alternative process to reform the Constitution, merged with
the Parliamentary constitutional review process (see Section
3).
d. Freedom of
Movement Within the Country, Foreign Travel, Emigration, and
Repatriation
By law
citizens may travel freely within the country, and there were no reported
violations of this right. However, police routinely stop vehicles
and check vehicles' safety and drivers' documents on roads throughout the
country.
Many vehicles often are in disrepair, and many drivers often lack
required documentation. Police often demand bribes at such
checkpoints.
Ethnic Somalis must produce upon demand their Kenyan identification
card and a second identification card verifying screening; both cards are
required to apply for a passport (see Section 2.c.). Following the
September 11 terrorists attacks in the U.S., the immigration office in the
predominately Muslim city of Mombasa required that applicants for birth
certificates or passports had to include their grandparents' national
documents with their applications. Sheikh Mohammed Dor, the Secretary
General of the Council of Imams and Preachers, criticized the action as
imposing "outrageous restrictions" on the country's Muslims.The
Government does not restrict emigration or foreign travel; however, the
law requires a woman to obtain her husband's or father's permission to
obtain a passport (see Section 5). However, in practice, adult women often
are able to circumvent this restriction by claiming to be unmarried. Civil servants
and M.P.'s must get government permission for international travel, which
generally is granted routinely. Unlike in the previous year, the
Government did not deny permission to some government ministers to travel.
On July
28, the Government closed its border with Somalia and banned cross-border
trade with Somalia, including air shipments for the second time in 2
years.
The Government claimed that it wanted to stop illegal weapons
flows; however, the effects of the ban were felt most immediately by
traders, other business people, and travelers. President Moi
vowed that he would not reopen the border until a new central Somali
government is formed. However, on November 1, the Government
officially was reopened the border with Somalia after it organized a
reconciliation conference in Nairobi between the Somali Transitional
National Government and the Somali Reconciliation and Restoration
Council. The
majority of the estimated 400,000 persons displaced or forced to relocate
during the early 1990's because of ethnic violence are believed to have
returned to their homes or moved elsewhere; however, some still were
waiting to return home at year's end. Many of the rural residents displaced by
the violent ethnic clashes in Rift Valley between 1991 and 1993 still have
not returned to their homes and remain displaced in urban areas. Some of the
several thousand persons displaced by ethnic clashes since then also have
not returned to their homes due to fear of renewed violence (see Section
5). The law
does not provide for the granting of refugee or asylum status in
accordance with the 1951 U.N. Convention Relating to the Status of
Refugees and its 1967 Protocol; however, in 1991 the Government drafted
legislation to establish a mechanism for granting refugee or asylum
status.
The drafting committee submitted the legislation to the Attorney
General's office for review in 2000; however, no further action was taken
by year's end.
The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) grants
refugee status to Somali refugees at the Dadaab camps and to Sudanese
refugees arriving at the Kakuma camp. A UNHCR eligibility committee in Nairobi
performs a similar function for individuals of other
nationalities. The
Government offers first asylum and provided it to the approximately
200,000 refugees registered by UNHCR who lived in official UNHCR
camps. An
undetermined number of refugees live outside the camps in cities and rural
areas.
Somalis accounted for approximately 80 percent of the total refugee
population, followed by large numbers of Sudanese and a scattered number
of other nationalities from across the region. A total of
12,310 refugees, most of whom were Somalis who only were in country for a
short period of time, were repatriated during the year, primarily to
Somalia and Tanzania. In January more than 2,200 Tanzanians
fled to the country from the Indian Ocean islands of Zanzibar and Pemba
following political unrest during the year. The majority of the refugees returned to
Tanzania in April and May following assurances they would not face charges
in Tanzania.
Police
performed nighttime sweeps in urban areas to round up illegal immigrants
and refugees (see Sections 1.d. and 1.f.).
During
the period between 1997 and 1999, the UNHCR, at the direction of the
Government, closed 5 refugee camps near the coastal city of Mombasa and
relocated more than 7,000 refugees against their wishes to camps near the
Somali and Sudanese borders. The Government requires all refugees to
reside at designated camps unless granted permission to live elsewhere in
the country, primarily to attend higher education, undergo medical
treatment, or avoid security threats at the camps. However, many
refugees live illegally outside the camps, especially in
Nairobi.
Incidents
of rape of women and girls in refugee camps continued to occur, especially
near the Dadaab camps (see Sections 1.c. and 5). More than 80
percent of such rapes occurred when women and girls collected firewood and
building materials outside the camps; however, reported rapes continued to
decline during the year.
Acts of
violence, including banditry and shootings, occur regularly near the
camps.
Refugees have been mistreated and abused by citizens of the country
and by residents of different refugee camps because of ethnic and
religious differences. Inter-clan violence frequently erupts
among rival Somali clans at the camps (see Section 5); Somali refugees who
marry non-Muslims also may be subjected to abuse by family
members. There
were no reports of the forced return of persons to a country where they
feared persecution.
Section 3
Respect for Political Rights: The Right of Citizens to Change
Their Government
The
Constitution provides citizens with the right to change their government
through free and fair multiparty elections; however, citizens are not
fully able to do so. The National Assembly continued to be
dominated by the same ruling party, KANU. The December 1997 general elections,
despite numerous logistical and other flaws, generally reflected the will
of the electorate. The elections were marked by much less
violence and intimidation, less fraud, and less overt use of government
resources to assist KANU candidates, than the 1992 polls. Due to greater
fragmentation, the opposition was perceived widely to pose less of a
challenge to Moi's reelection than it had in 1992. Opposition
candidates won 60 percent of the vote, but these votes were split among
four main and several fringe parties, thereby enabling Moi to win
reelection for another 5-year term and giving KANU a narrow majority in
the unicameral National Assembly. In June President Moi appointed NDP
leader Raila Odinga and three other NDP M.P.'s to his cabinet. KANU and NDP
have formed an alliance and are contemplating a full merger. At year's end,
KANU and NDP members held 139 of 222 seats in the unicameral National
Assembly.
By-elections were held during the year in several
constituencies.
In January a by-election in South Mugirango, Nyanza Province, was
marred by vote buying, ballot-stuffing, and violence. The incumbent
candidate for FORD/Kenya won decisively. Vote buying and violence also marred the
by-election on the same day in January in Kapenguria, Rift Valley
Province; KANU retained the seat. In July KANU lost a seat in a
by-election for the first time when a DP candidate won the seat in Taveta,
Coast Province.
The by-election generally was perceived to be free of
irregularities; however, violence preceding the election resulted in the
death of a student. On November 9, a by-election was held in
Kilome following the August killing of KANU MP Anthony Ndilinge. The Kilome
race was marred by numerous reports of vote buying by all parties, which
the chairman of the electoral commission publicly condemned.
At the
local level, the President exercises sweeping power over the
administrative structure. The President appoints both the powerful
provincial and district commissioners and numerous district and
village officials. In elections many local officials
actively assist the ruling KANU.
At the
national level, the Constitution authorizes the President to dissolve the
legislature and prohibits debate on issues under consideration by the
courts.
This prohibition, in conjunction with a ruling by the Speaker of
the Assembly that some aspects of the President's conduct are
inappropriate topics for parliamentary debate, has limited the scope of
deliberation on a number of political issues. M.P.'s are
entitled to introduce legislation, but in practice it is generally the
Attorney General who does so. The President significantly influences
the legislative agenda. However, the National Assembly has the
power to hire its own staff and to vote its own budget, despite President
Moi's long-expressed opposition to it doing so. In November
2000, the National Assembly passed implementing legislation to establish
the Parliamentary Service Commission, which was exercising fully its power
to hire staff and establish budget by year's end. In August
opposition M.P.'s in the National Assembly successfully blocked a
constitutional amendment to establish an independent anti-corruption
authority, which was backed by KANU and the President. The opposition
claimed that the legislation did not give the proposed authority
sufficient independence and objected to an amnesty provision in the
legislation.
The
Government continued to use both physical beatings and arbitrary arrest
and prosecution to harass and intimidate opposition M.P.'s and to restrict
their freedom of speech and assembly (see Sections 1.c., 1.d., 1.e., 2.a.,
and 2.b.).
The Government's domination of domestic broadcast media, especially
outside major urban centers, continued to restrict severely the ability of
opposition politicians to communicate with citizens (see Section
2.a.).
In
December 2000, President Moi, acting as chairman of KANU, suspended six
M.P.'s for dissent, including Jimmy Angwenyi, Kipkalya Kones, Anthony
Kimeto, Cyrus Jirongo, and former Finance Minister Simeon Nyachae. The suspension
prevents the M.P.'s from bringing any motions sponsored by their party to
Parliament; however, they still can submit motions on their own and
participate in all Parliament activities. Reforms
adopted in 1997 addressed the lack of independence of the presidentially
appointed Electoral Commission, which oversees elections, by nearly
doubling its size to include members nominated by the
opposition.
Since
1996 a broad coalition of NGO's and religious organizations has mobilized
public opinion in support of a reform of the Constitution to reduce the
power of the presidency. In 1997 the National Assembly enacted
the Constitution of Kenya Review Act, which was amended in 1998 to create
a constitutional review commission to recommend changes in the
Constitution.
In 1999 the constitutional reform process stalled, when political
parties were unable to agree how seats on the commission should be divided
among the parties. In December 1999, the National Assembly
created a Parliamentary Select Committee to revise the existing act and
form a review commission; the Ufungamano Initiative, a church-led group,
formed the next day, creating a parallel process (see Section 2.c.). The
Government, although critical of the Ufungamano group, permitted it to
proceed with its constitutional review process. The Parliament
created a separate review commission in November 2000. During the
year the Constitution of Kenya Review Commission (CKRC) expanded and in
March, following many months of political wrangling and stalled efforts,
members of the Ufungamano Initiative agreed to take seats on the
CKRC. In
May the Ufungamano process merged with the parliamentary process; in June
the newly-created Constitutional Review Commission began work. The new
Commission is expected to have a draft constitution ready by October
2002.
In July
at the start of the CKRC hearings, the President declared that NGO's and
churches should not involve themselves with the review process and should
not engage in civic education. However, this directive was ignored; the
CKRC had accredited several NGO's to conduct civic education on the
process by year's end.
The
Government and police continued to harass and disrupt meetings of the MWM,
an organization backed by a coalition of both opposition and dissident
KANU M.P.'s that promotes opposition unity to achieve political and
constitutional reform. It is not a political party.
Elected
local councils exist, but the executive branch of the central Government
has not granted them adequate access to revenue and has restricted their
functions.
Although rural and municipal councils are authorized by law to
provide a wide range of health, education, and infrastructure services, in
practice their functions have been reduced to partial oversight of
schools, secondary and tertiary roads, markets, and natural resources such
as forests.
Most councils lack sufficient financial autonomy and revenues to
perform adequately even these limited functions. The
percentage of women in government and politics does not correspond to
their percentage of the population. Although there are no legal
restrictions, traditional attitudes circumscribe the role of women in
politics.
The National Assembly included six female M.P.'s (one elected and
five nominated), down from seven in the last session. The Women's
Political Caucus, formed in 1997, continued to lobby over matters of
concern to women and to increase the influence of women on government
policy. A
bill was introduced in 2000 to create a number of parliamentary seats
reserved for women; however, no action was taken on the legislation by
year's end. The
percentage of minorities in government and politics does not correspond to
their percentage of the population. Although the President's Cabinet
included persons from many ethnic groups, approximately one-third of the
ministers were either Kalenjin or Luhya. At year's end, there were only two
ministers from the country's largest ethnic group, the Kikuyu. However, in
1999 President Moi appointed a person affiliated with the Kikuyu ethnic
group as Vice President. In July Luos, the fourth largest ethnic
group, increased their presence in the Government with the appointment of
four NDP M.P.'s, all Luos, to the Cabinet. The President continued to rely on an
inner circle of advisors, drawn largely from his Kalenjin ethnic
group.
There is one nominated M.P. who is of Asian
origin. Section 4
Governmental Attitude Regarding International and Nongovernmental Investigation of Alleged Violations of
Human Rights
A number
of domestic and human rights groups generally operate without government
restriction, investigating and publishing their findings on human rights
cases.
Government officials are somewhat cooperative and responsive to
their views; however, there were numerous reports that less established
NGO's, particularly those in rural areas, were subjected to interference
from provincial administrators and security forces. The number of
human rights organizations continued to grow. These include
NGO's such as the KHRC, the Kenya Antirape Organization, the Legal Advice
Center, the Catholic Justice and Peace Commission, the National Council of
Churches of Kenya, the Center for Governance and Development, People
Against Torture, the Independent Medico-Legal Unit (IMLU), and the Release
Political Prisoners pressure group. An array of legal organizations,
including the International Commission of Jurists-Kenya, the International
Federation of Women Lawyers (FIDA), the Law Society of Kenya, and the
Public Law Institute, advocate human rights.
Several
NGO's maintain comprehensive files on human rights abuses. A number of
attorneys represent the indigent and human rights defendants without
compensation, although they can handle only a small percentage of those
who need assistance, and are concentrated chiefly in Nairobi and other
large cities.
The
President has instructed government officials to monitor NGO's carefully,
and government officials including the President continued to intimidate,
and threatened to disrupt human rights and other organizations and NGO's
(see Section 2.b.). According to a 1999 KBC report,
President Moi said that he would reveal a list of names of subversive
NGO's and their antisocial activities; however, the President did not
release such a list during the year, and none was expected.
The
Government allowed human rights organizations to witness some autopsies of
persons who died in police custody. The Attorney General's Office generally
responded in detail to foreign embassies' human rights
inquiries.
The KHRC
produces a "Quarterly Human Rights Report" (formerly the "Quarterly
Repression Report") that catalogs the human rights situation in the
country, as well as special reports on pressing human rights
problems.
The Institute for Education in Democracy and other NGO's monitor
elections in cooperation with the Electoral Commission and diplomatic
missions.
The
10-member SCHR established in 1996 is empowered to "investigate alleged
violations of constitutional freedoms," including abuse of power by public
officials.
It is tasked with drafting recommendations on human rights problems
and providing these to the government agencies under whose purview the
problems fall.
However, it is subordinate to the Office of the President, its
chairman is a longstanding KANU loyalist, and it has received sufficient
funds to fill only 8 of its 27 authorized staff positions. Although it
had been accused of being relatively inactive in the past, in June the
SCHR produced a thorough report on the death of six prisoners from
King'ong'o prison in Nyeri (see Section 1.a.). The National
Assembly was considering draft legislation, drafted by the Attorney
General and the SCHR with the help of NGO's and civil society, that would
grant the SCHR greater autonomy and independence; the legislation was
pending at year's end.
In 1998
the Parliament passed a resolution to create an Ombudsman's office that
would be charged with addressing complaints about inefficiency,
corruption, nepotism, and abuse of power by public servants; however, the
Attorney General had not drafted a bill to turn the resolution into law by
year's end.
Section 5
Discrimination Based on Race, Sex, Religion, Disability, Language, or Social Status
The
Constitution prohibits discrimination on the basis of a person's "race,
tribe, place of origin or residence or other local connection, political
opinions, color, or creed;" however, government authorities did not
enforce effectively many of these provisions. There is
credible evidence that the Government sponsored large-scale ethnic
violence during the early 1990's, and there were some indications that
some government officials have at least tolerated and in some instances
instigated ethnic violence on a smaller scale since that time.
Women
Domestic
violence against women is a serious and widespread problem. According to
the Government, 1,199 cases of rape were reported to the police in Nairobi
during the year, compared with 1,148 in 2000. The available
statistics probably underreport the number of incidents, as social mores
deter women from going outside their families or ethnic groups to report
sexual abuse.
A study by Kangemi Women Empowerment Centre, a small group based in
one of Nairobi's largest low-income communities, claimed that three out of
five women in the community were victims of domestic violence, and that
one-third of the women had suffered sexual abuse. The study
noted that the abused women rarely reported the violations, because they
believed perpetrators would not be punished, and no protective or remedial
action would be taken. Although the validity of the study is
unproven, the basic figures support other published figures and anecdotal
evidence.
The law
carries penalties of up to life imprisonment for rape, although actual
sentences usually are no more than 10 years. The rate of
prosecution remains low because of cultural inhibitions against publicly
discussing sex, fear of retribution, disinclination of police to intervene
in domestic disputes, and unavailability of doctors who otherwise might
provide the necessary evidence for conviction. Moreover, wife
beating is prevalent and largely condoned by much of society. Traditional
culture permits a man to discipline his wife by physical means and is
ambivalent about the seriousness of spousal rape. There is no
law specifically prohibiting spousal rape. Throughout the year, the media continued
to report on violence against women, including widespread spousal
abuse.
Since
1994 FIDA has collaborated with the police to stop domestic violence. Police
typically view violence against women as a family matter, not a
crime.
FIDA has trained more than 800 police officers about gender
issues.
There
continued to be incidents of rape of refugee Somali women at the Dadaab
refugee camps (see Section 2.d.). According to the UNHCR, refugee women
reported 70 rapes during the first 11 months of the year, compared with 82
rapes in 2000.
Female
genital mutilation (FGM), which is condemned widely by international
health experts as damaging to both physical and psychological health, is
practiced by certain ethnic groups and remains widespread, particularly in
rural areas.
The press reported severe injuries to several girls from the
practice of FGM.
According to a December 8 report by the Government and UNICEF, 38
percent of women nationwide have undergone FGM. The percentage
of girls undergoing the procedure is as high as 80 to 90 percent in some
districts of Eastern, Nyanza, and Rift Valley provinces, according to the
women's rights organization Maendeleo Ya Wanawake ("Development of Women"
in Swahili).
FGM usually is performed at an early age. President Moi
has issued two presidential decrees banning FGM, and the Government
prohibits government-controlled hospitals and clinics from practicing
it. In
December the Children's Bill, which bans FGM on girls under the age of 18,
was passed and signed into law. In an attempt to end FGM, some members
of the Marakwet and Maasai ethnic groups instituted new "no cut"
initiation rites for girls entering adulthood. According to
statistics compiled by a group of NGO's in Marakwet, only 169 girls were
subjected to FGM in 1999, compared with 12,000 girls during the same month
in the 4 previous years.
Women
experience a wide range of discriminatory practices, limiting their
political and economic rights and relegating them to second class
citizenship.
The Constitution extends equal protection of rights and freedoms to
men and women, but only in 1997 was the Constitution amended to include a
specific prohibition of discrimination on grounds of gender. However,
constitutional provisions allow only males to transmit automatically
citizenship to their children. The Government has not passed domestic
enabling legislation to implement international conventions on women's
rights; however, the Attorney General submitted to Parliament three bills
designed to protect women's rights--The Domestic Violence (Family
Protection) Bill; The National Commission on Gender and Development Bill;
and The Equality Bill--all were pending at year's end. The Task Force
on Laws Relating to Women, established by the Attorney General in 1993,
has produced a draft report; however, it was not published by year's end.
Prostitution is illegal; however, it is a problem and
is perpetuated by poverty. Prostitution has contributed to the
spread of HIV/AIDS, which affected approximately 14 percent of the
population.
Women
continue to face both legal and actual discrimination in other areas. For example, a
married woman legally is required to obtain the consent of her husband
before obtaining a national identity card or a passport (see Section
2.d.).
The Law
of Succession, which governs inheritance rights, provides for equal
consideration of male and female children; however, in practice most
inheritance problems do not come before the courts. Women often
are excluded from inheritance settlements, particularly if married, or
given smaller shares than male claimants are. Moreover, a
widow cannot be the sole administrator of her husband's estate unless she
has her children's consent. Most customary law disadvantages women,
particularly in property rights and inheritance. For example,
under the customary law of most ethnic groups, a woman cannot inherit land
and must live on the land as a guest of males who are relatives by blood
or marriage.
Women
make up approximately 75 percent of the agricultural work force and have
become active in urban small businesses. Nonetheless, the average monthly income
of women is approximately two-thirds that of men, and women hold only an
estimated 5 percent of land titles. Women have difficulty moving into
nontraditional fields, are promoted more slowly than men, and bear the
brunt of layoffs. Societal discrimination is most apparent
in rural areas.
Maendeleo
Ya Wanawake, the nation's best known women's rights and welfare
organization, was established as a nonpolitical NGO during the colonial
era, but is aligned closely with the ruling party. A growing
number of women's organizations are active in the field of women's rights,
including FIDA, the National Council of Women of Kenya, the National
Commission on the Status of Women, the Education Center for Women in
Democracy, and the League of Kenyan Women Voters.
Children
The
system of free education in the early years of the country's independence
has given way to a "cost-sharing" education system in which students pay
both tuition and other costs. These are a heavy burden on most
families.
Although the law mandates that schooling be available for all
children up through grade 12 and that it be compulsory, there is a very
high dropout rate in part because of large educational expenses. The East
African Standard newspaper reported in March that 8,000 girls drop out of
school each year due to pregnancy. There are an estimated 4 million
children between 6 and 14 years of age who are out of school. The legally
mandated universal schooling also does not occur in practice because of a
shortage of schools. Levels of education for boys and girls
differ widely.
Although the number of boys and girls in school is roughly equal at
the primary level, boys substantially outnumber girls in higher
education.
Rural families are more reluctant to invest in educating girls than
in educating boys, especially at the higher levels. Seventy percent
of illiterate persons in the country are female. During the
year, corporal punishment of students was banned formally; however, it
reportedly did not cease completely in practice.
The
health care system for school children, which once provided periodic
medical checkups and free milk, is defunct. In December Parliament passed the
Children's Bill, which has provisions to ensure children's welfare and
provide them with basic rights.
FGM is
practiced commonly on girls by certain ethnic groups, particularly in
rural areas (see Section 5, Women).
Economic
displacement and the spread of HIV/AIDS continued to affect the problem of
homeless street children. The number of Nairobi's street children
was more than 60,000 in 2000, an estimated 20 percent increase from
1999.
These children often are involved in theft, drug trafficking,
assault, trespassing, and property damage. According to a 1997 Human Rights Watch
report, street children face harassment as well as physical and sexual
abuse from the police and within the juvenile justice system. They are held
in extremely harsh conditions in crowded police station cells, often
without toilets or bedding, with little food, and inadequate supplies (see
Section 1.c.).
They often are incarcerated with adults and frequently beaten by
police. Child
rape and molestation continued. There were frequent press reports of
rapes of young girls by middle-aged or older rapists. There were
repeated reports of molestation or rape of children by schoolteachers,
mostly in rural areas. Legally, a man does not "rape" a girl
under age 14 if he has sexual intercourse with her against her will; he
commits the lesser offense of "defilement." The penalty for the felony of rape can
be life imprisonment, while the penalty for defilement is up to 5 years'
imprisonment.
Men convicted of rape normally receive prison sentences of between
5 and 20 years, plus several strokes of the cane.
In 2000
teachers at the Top Station Primary School in Kitale allegedly raped
several students during the year. In a letter to the Minister of
Education, FIDA demanded that the Government fire these teachers. The
authorities investigated the allegations and charged one teacher; however,
in May 2000, he was acquitted for lack of evidence. The Government
reported that the medical reports did not support the charge.
Child
prostitution is a major problem in Nairobi and Mombasa, often connected
with the tourist trade (see Section 6.d.). Child prostitution has grown
considerably due both to economic contraction and to the increase in the
number of children orphaned because of the spread of HIV/AIDS.
Unlike in
the previous year, there were no reports that children were killed for
body parts by persons practicing healing rituals associated with
traditional religions.
Child
labor, including forced and bonded labor, occurs (see Sections 6.c. and
6.d.).
Persons
with Disabilities
Government policies do not discriminate against
persons with disabilities in employment, education, or in the provision of
other state services; however, persons with disabilities frequently are
denied drivers' licenses. There are no mandated provisions of
accessibility for persons with disabilities to public buildings or
transportation.
KTN broadcasts some news programs in sign language. A bill to
address problems faced by persons with disabilities was pending before
Parliament at year's end. The bill aims to outlaw discrimination
against persons with disabilities and to assist them through provisions
such as mandatory education for children with disabilities.
In August
the African Medical Research Foundation of Kenya (AMREF) released a study
entitled "Sexual Abuse of People with Learning Disabilities." According to
the study, there is a high prevalence of rape of persons with
disabilities; one survey indicated that numerous rapes occur daily in
Makueni District in Eastern Province.
Religious
Minorities
There
generally is a great level of tolerance among religious groups; however,
there were a few instances of violence between Christian and Muslim
groups, and Muslims continued to perceive themselves treated as
second-class citizens in a predominantly Christian country. Intermarriage
between members of Christian denominations is common and interfaith prayer
services occur frequently. Intermarriage between Muslims and
Christians, although less frequent, also is socially acceptable, and
mosques and Christian churches can be found on the same city blocks.
For years
Muslims and Christians have held an open debate over their respective
places in society. Each group claims to have a larger
number of adherents than is plausible, and some Muslim groups believe that
the Government and business communities deliberately have impeded
development in predominantly Muslim areas. Some Muslim leaders claim that
discrimination against Muslims has resulted in a greater incidence of
poverty among Muslims than among other religious groups; however, there is
no statistical evidence to support this claim. At times the
debate has undermined mutual trust.
In the
past, the misuse of authority by mainly Christian security forces in the
northeast, which largely is Muslim and in which banditry is widespread,
contributed to Muslim mistrust. However, during the year, there was
greater inclusion of Muslims in security forces and provincial
administrations; for example, a Muslim was appointed Provincial
Commissioner in the Northeast Province.
There
were a few instances of tension and violence between adherents of
different religions. In September Muslim youths were
suspected of responsibility for burning down two wooden churches in
Isolo.
Muslim leaders criticized the attacks and met in an attempt to
diffuse tensions and allay concerns of Christians in the area. Police
officers did not believe the fire to be religiously motivated.
A number
of incidents took place in November and December 2000, when a land dispute
led to violence between Muslims and Christians in a densely populated
neighborhood in Nairobi. At least one person was killed and
numerous persons were injured in the riots. Two days of violent clashes resulted in
the burning of several buildings, including a mosque and two
churches.
Muslim leaders apologized for the violence and clarified that the
dispute originated over land and was not religiously motivated. Following the
riots, religious leaders on both sides cited police inaction as a reason
for the spread of the violence.
Unlike in
the previous year, there were no reports of ritual murders associated with
aspects of traditional indigenous religions.
Occasionally mobs killed members of their communities
on suspicion that they practiced witchcraft; however, there were no
statistics available on the number of such deaths during the year. On August 5 in
Nyamira, Jethiter Mboga was slashed to death by three of his brothers for
"bewitching" their mother; his brothers went into hiding after the murder
(see Section 1.a.).
National/Racial/Ethnic Minorities
The
country's population is divided into more than 40 ethnic groups, among
which there were frequent and credible allegations of discrimination, as
well as frequent interethnic violence. In general each ethnic group has a
distinct primary language and is concentrated in a distinct region;
however, the languages of some groups are very similar to the languages of
related ethnic groups. In private business and in the public
sector, members of virtually all ethnic groups commonly discriminated in
favor of other members of the same group when able to do so. Neighborhoods
in large cities tended to be segregated ethnically, although interethnic
marriage has become fairly common in urban areas. Political
cleavages tended to correlate with ethnic cleavages (see Section
3).
Unofficial results of the 1999 census indicated that
the Kikuyu constitute 21 percent of the population, and the Luhya were
estimated to constitute 16 percent, the Kalenjin 12 percent, the Luo 11
percent, and the Kamba 10 percent of the population.
Ethnic-regional differences continue to pose obstacles
to political and economic liberalization. Members of President Moi's Kalenjin
ethnic group (a coalition of nine small ethnic groups) and other
traditionally pastoral Nilotic ethnic groups are represented
disproportionately and hold key positions in the Government, the ruling
KANU party, the GSU, and the Presidential Escort. Many members
of these groups appear to believe that economic and political
liberalization would be likely to harm their groups, and to favor other
groups.
The Kikuyu and the closely related Kamba, Meru, and Embu groups
make up more than one-third of the country's population; members of these
groups also dominate much of private commerce and industry and have tended
to support opposition parties since they were legalized in 1992. The Kikuyu,
the largest, best-educated, and most prosperous ethnic group, dominated
the country under its first president, Jomo Kenyatta, a Kikuyu.
In 1999 a
presidential Commission on Ethnic Clashes, a government-appointed panel of
three judges formed in 1998, submitted to President Moi its report on the
cause of ethnic clashes that occurred in the Rift Valley in 1992 and 1997,
the Coast province in 1997, and the areas of Molo and Laikipia in
1998.
Many of the hearings were public, and witnesses often directly
accused local politicians of abetting the combatants, although they rarely
provided other than hearsay evidence. However, key churches and NGO's claim
that a number of witnesses were prevented from testifying, especially
after, half way through the investigation, the Government replaced the
Commission's aggressive prosecutor. The Government still had not released
the report or announced that it was taking any formal action on its
findings by year's end.
Attacks
and revenge counterattacks continued between ethnic groups throughout the
country, resulting in an average of 50 to 75 deaths per month (see Section
1.a.).
Significant conflict occurred between ethnic Pokots and Marakwets,
between Pokots and Turkanas, between Turkanas and Samburus, between
Maasais and Kisiis, between Orma and Pokomos, between Boranas and Somalis,
and among various Somali clans. Many factors contributed to interethnic
conflicts, including the proliferation of guns, the commercialization of
traditional cattle rustling, the weakening of state authority, the
emergence of local militia leaders, the development of a modern
warrior/bandit culture (distinct from the traditional culture),
irresponsible local political leadership, shrinking economic prospects for
affected groups, a regional drought, and the inability or unwillingness of
security forces to stem the violence.
Numerous
persons were killed during ethnic fighting between the Kisii and Maasai
communities in the southwestern part of the country. On May 9,
Maasai raiders shot and killed four Kisii youths. During the
weekend of May 12, six Kisii were killed in attacks that some residents
claimed were instigated by the police. On July 29, security officers shot and
killed a primary school teacher during a fight between Kisii and Maasai
youths (see Section 1.a.).
Clashes
between the Orma and Pokomo communities in Tana River District in Coast
Province also claimed many lives. Twenty schools were closed after 13
persons were killed in 2 weeks of fighting between the communities in
March. It
was unknown whether the schools had reopened by year's end. In mid-July
five people reportedly were killed in fighting that started after Pokomo
rivals stoned to death two Orma men.
On August
21, 300 armed Pokot cattle raiders attacked a village in Turkana District;
six people reportedly were killed. More than 7,000 livestock were
stolen.
Members
of the coastal Bajuni, Mijikenda, and Digo communities accused the
Government of denying them their rights to land, and of favoring members
of inland "up-country" ethnic groups, who migrated to the coast largely
during the period when Kenyatta was president.
The
Government has singled out the overwhelmingly Muslim ethnic Somalis as the
only group whose members are required to carry an additional form of
identification to prove that they are citizens. The continued
presence of and at times criminal activities by Somali refugees have
exacerbated the problems faced by citizens of Somali ethnicity (see
Sections 2.c. and 2.d.).
There is
widespread resentment among citizens of African ethnicity toward Asians
living in the country. The Asian community constitutes between
0.5 and 1 percent of the total population and consists of second and third
generation Asians with full citizenship and a smaller body of recent
immigrants.
Many persons of African descent resent those of Asian descent for
their affluence, and for their reluctance to assimilate African culture
and to employ blacks, particularly in management positions. They also see
Asians as taking jobs and commercial opportunities away from
Africans.
The involvement of some Asians in corrupt activities along with
government officials further fuels popular resentment. Politicians,
both opposition and ruling party, from time to time appeal to majority
prejudices by attacking Asian citizens, accusing them of exploiting and
usurping the natural inheritance of African citizens. Chenge
Mbitiru, DP M.P. from Laikipia West, has called Asians "the greatest
economic enemies" of the country and in 2000 called for "Kenyans" to
isolate "Asians" unless the government acts to constrain them. The M.P.
reportedly said that President Moi should consider expelling Asians "or
allow the Kenyan people to force them to leave through mass action." However, no
action was taken in response to the M.P.'s statements, and he did not make
any subsequent similar statements. Police
conducted sweeps for illegal immigrants (see Sections 1.f. and 2.d.).
Section 6
Worker Rights
a. The Right of
Association
The law
provides that all workers are free to join unions of their choice;
however, the Police Act prohibits members of the national police force
from joining unions. Workers employed in export processing
zone (EPZ) firms and those who work in many small firms face dismissal if
they join unions. On December 10, the Labor Commissioner
registered the Union of Kenya Civil Servants, which granted civil servants
the right to join unions for the first time since 1980. The law
provides that as few as seven workers may establish a union, so long as
the objectives of the union do not contravene the law and no union is
representing the employees in question already.
Unions
must apply to and be granted registration by the Government. The Government
also may deregister a union, but the Registrar of Trade Unions must give
the union 60 days to challenge the deregistration notice. An appeal of
the Registrar's final decision may be brought before the High Court.
There
were 41 unions representing approximately 600,000 workers, approximately
one-third of the country's formal-sector work force. All but 5 of
these unions, representing approximately 250,000 workers, are affiliated
with the one approved national federation--the Central Organization of
Trade Unions (COTU). The largest non-COTU union is the
240,000-member Kenya National Union of Teachers (KNUT). The COTU
leadership generally does not pursue workers' rights vigorously; however,
most affiliates chose to remain rather than give up its even minimal
support.
As a result, most union activity takes place at the shop steward
level and not at the industrial level where most labor-related decisions
are made.
This places the average worker at a disadvantage in disputes with
management.
Many COTU unions evolved into de facto ethnic groupings; however,
this was no longer the case during the year.
The
Government created COTU in 1965 as the successor to the Kenya Federation
of Labor and the Kenya African Workers' Congress. COTU's
constitution gives the President the power to remove COTU's three senior
leaders from office and grants nonvoting membership on the executive board
to representatives of the Ministry of Labor and of KANU. Although the
board is composed of the leadership of affiliated unions, it is common for
political parties, especially KANU, to provide funding and other support
for the election of senior union officials. In August
Frances Atwoli, the leader of the Agriculture and Plantation Workers
Union, was elected Secretary General of COTU. Atwoli, who
replaced the incumbent of 15 years, pledged to end corruption within the
union and to remove the provisions in COTU's constitution that grant seats
on COTU's board to government and ruling party officials.
The law
permits workers to strike, provided that 21 days have elapsed following
the submission of a written letter to the Minister of Labor. By law members
of the military services, police, prison guards, and members of the
National Youth Service may not strike. Other civil servants, like their private
sector counterparts, can strike following the 21-day notice period (28
days if it is an essential service, such as water, health, education, or
air traffic control). During this 21-day period, the Minister
may mediate the dispute, nominate an arbitrator, or refer the matter to
the Industrial Court, a body of five judges appointed by the President,
for binding arbitration. Once a dispute is referred to mediation,
factfinding, or arbitration, any subsequent strike is illegal. Moreover, the
act gives the Minister of Labor broad discretionary power to determine the
legality of any strike.
In past
years, the Minister used this power to declare strikes by bank workers and
teachers illegal, although the required notice had been given; however,
there were no such incidents during the year. In 1997 the
KNUT called a nationwide strike, which the Government quickly settled with
pay increases of more than 200 percent spread more than 5 years, rather
than risk antagonizing the influential teachers before the election. The
Government's failure to implement the second of the promised pay hikes
resulted in a 1998 KNUT strike, which the Government declared
illegal.
The strike ended after 15 days when the Government refused to
renegotiate.
In 2000 Dr. Gitu, the Ministry of Labor's Permanent Secretary,
admitted that the Government should not have agreed to pay the 1997 salary
package for teachers. The Government and the KNUT remain in
sporadic negotiation regarding the implementation of the agreed-upon
salaries; however, the contracted pay hikes have not been paid, and
relations between the KNUT and the Government continue to be poor.
In 2000,
the last year for which statistics are available, there were 41 strikes
involving 17,794 workers and resulting in the loss of 51,171 cumulative
days of work.
Most strikes were due to unpaid wage arrears and involved local
government and manufacturing workers. During the year, there were several
strikes; most lasted 1 or 2 days, and some involved violence on the part
of the strikers, usually in an attempt to keep other workers off the
job.
There were no reports that strikers were dispersed
forcibly.
Workers'
rights groups continue to raise the general problem of the Government's
harshness towards labor with the International Labor Organization's (ILO)
Committee on Freedom of Association. In June the Government inaugurated a
tripartite Labor Law Reform Task Force (labor, government, and private
sector) to conduct workshops on ILO core labor standards.
The COTU
is affiliated internationally with both the Organization of African Trade
Union Unity and the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions. Many of its
affiliates are linked to international trade secretariats.
b. The Right to
Organize and Bargain Collectively
While not
having the force of law, the Industrial Relations Charter, executed by the
Government, the COTU, and the Federation of Kenya Employers, gives workers
the right to engage in legitimate trade union organizational
activities.
Both the Trade Disputes Act and the charter authorize collective
bargaining between unions and employers. Wages and conditions of employment are
established in negotiations between unions and management. The Government
permits wage increases of up to 100 percent and renegotiation of
collective agreements; however, the law allows employers in ailing
industries to dismiss workers regardless of the provisions of their
collective bargaining agreements. Collective bargaining agreements must be
registered with the Industrial Court in order to ensure adherence to these
guidelines.
The law
prohibits employers from intimidating workers. Employees
wrongfully dismissed for union activities can take their cases to the
Industrial Court, and many have been awarded damages in the form of back
pay--reinstatement is not a common remedy. More often aggrieved workers have found
alternative employment in the lengthy period prior to the hearing of their
cases.
With the
exception of the Factories Act, all labor laws, including the right to
organize and bargain collectively, apply in the EPZ's (see Section
6.e.).
However, the EPZ Authority and the Government grant many exemptions
to applicable laws. For example, the Government waived
aspects of the law that prevent women from working in industrial
activities at night. In practice workers in EPZ firms may
face dismissal if they join unions (see Section 6.a.). In August the
Textile and Tailors Union alleged widespread intimidation of workers
seeking to unionize at a foreign-owned EPZ firm; however, the employer
stated that the union had forged the signatures of workers supporting
unionization.
The leader of the union was arrested, and the case was pending
before the court at year's end.
c. Prohibition of
Forced or Compulsory Labor
The
Constitution proscribes slavery, servitude, and forced labor; however,
under the Chiefs' Authority Act, a local authority can require persons to
perform community services in an emergency. The ILO Committee of Experts has found
that these and other provisions of the law contravene ILO Conventions 29
and 105 concerning forced labor. The law remains in effect; however,
attempts by chiefs to institute arbitrary community service during the
year were overruled by the Government. Some observers allege that prison
officials use free prison labor for personal profit (see Section
1.c.).
The
Constitution prohibits forced and bonded labor by children; however, there
reportedly were instances during the year, especially in rural areas, of
children being loaned out as workers to pay off family debts. d.
Status of Child Labor Practices and Minimum Age for
Employment
The
employment in industry of children under the age of 16 is illegal;
however, the law does not apply to the agricultural sector, where
approximately 70 percent of the labor force is employed, nor to children
serving as apprentices under the terms of the Industrial Training
Act.
Ministry of Labor officers nominally enforce the minimum age
statute, and the Government is making efforts to eliminate child labor,
working closely with the COTU and the ILO's International Program for the
Elimination of Child Labor. According to an unpublished survey by
the Central Bureau of Statistics, there are 1.9 million children who work
in the country, 1.4 million of whom are employed full time and 500,000 of
whom work while attending school; however, the number of child laborers
may be as high as 5 million. The problem has received considerable
media attention for several years.
Children
often work as domestic servants in private homes. There are many
instances of children working in the informal sector, mostly in family
businesses.
Children usually assist parents on family plots rather than seek
employment on their own. However, deteriorating economic
conditions and the effects of the HIV/AIDS pandemic have given rise to
more child labor in the informal sector, which is difficult to monitor and
control.
During the year, there were reports of abuse of children serving as
domestic employees. A significant number of workers on
coffee, sugar, and rice plantations are children, who usually work in
family units.
In addition a large number of underage children were active in the
sex industry (see Section 5) and in the salt harvesting industry along the
coast. In
view of the high levels of adult unemployment and underemployment, the
employment of children in the formal industrial wage sector in violation
of the Employment Act is less common but not unknown.
On July
5, Parliament ratified ILO Convention 182 on the worst forms of child
labor; implementing regulations were being drafted at year's end. In September
the Ministry of Labor created a Child Labor Office under the Directorate
of Occupational Health and Safety Services. Many NGO's also are active in this
area. An
ILO-sponsored COTU program has facilitated the return of 562 child
laborers to school and trained 1,100 shop stewards on the prevention of
child labor since 1997. An NGO working with COTU and the
Agriculture and Plantation Workers Union has facilitated the return of
another 962 child laborers to school since 1999.
The law
prohibits forced and bonded labor by children; however, there reportedly
were instances in which it occurred, primarily in rural areas, as a form
of family debt repayment.
e. Acceptable
Conditions of Work
The legal
minimum wage for blue-collar workers in the wage sector has 12 separate
scales, varying by location, age, and skill level; however, in many
industries the minimum wage equals the maximum wage. The lowest
minimum wage is $42 (3,288 shillings) per month in the largest urban areas
and $25 (1,535 shillings) in rural areas. Workers covered by a collective
bargaining agreement (CBA) generally receive a better wage and benefit
package than those not covered, including an average of $90 (7,303
shillings) per month, a mandated housing allowance of 15 percent, and
traditional benefits such as a transport allowance or a "house owner
occupier" allowance.
The
minimum wage is insufficient to provide a decent standard of living for a
worker and family. Most workers relied on second jobs,
subsistence farming, informal sector opportunities, or the extended family
for additional support.
The law
limits the normal workweek to 52 hours, although nighttime employees may
be employed for up to 60 hours per week. Some categories of workers have a
shorter workweek. As is the case with respect to minimum
wage limitations, the law specifically excludes agricultural workers. An employee in
the nonagricultural sector is entitled to 1 rest day per week. There also are
provisions for 21 days of annual leave and sick leave. The law also
provides that the total hours worked (regular time plus overtime) in any
2-week period for night workers not exceed 144 hours; the limit is 120
hours for other workers. The Ministry of Labor is responsible for
enforcing these regulations, and there were few reports of
violations.
Workers in some enterprises claimed that employers forced them to
work extra hours without overtime pay. Foreign workers are covered by the same
legislation and work rules as citizens.
The
Factories Act sets forth detailed health and safety standards; however, a
1990 decree by the Minister of Finance excludes EPZ's from the Act's
provisions (see Section 6.b.). The Ministry of Labor's Directorate of
Occupational Health and Safety Services (DOHSS) have the authority to
inspect factories and work sites; however, the DOHSS lacks statutory
authority to inspect factories in the EPZ's. Labor and
NGO's continued to criticize health and safety conditions in the
EPZ's.
The 65
DOHSS health and safety inspectors may issue notices enjoining employers
from practices or activities that involve a risk of serious personal
injury.
Such notices can be appealed to the Factories Appeals Court, a body
of four members, one of whom must be a High Court judge. The number of
factory inspections has increased significantly since 1992. The law
stipulates that factories that employ at least 20 persons have a health
and safety committee with representation from workers. However,
according to the Government, less than half of even the very largest
factories have instituted health and safety committees. Workers are
not forced by law to remain in hazardous conditions; however, many would
be reluctant to remove themselves because of the high unemployment problem
and the resulting risk of loss of their job.
The law
protects both legal and illegal foreign workers.
f. Trafficking in
Persons
Although
there are no laws that specifically prohibit trafficking in persons, there
are applicable laws against kidnaping and abduction that potentially could
be used to prosecute traffickers. In January authorities arrested and
deported six Sudanese on suspicion of running an operation to smuggle
Kenyans to the Middle East for work. In previous years, there were unverified
reports that citizens were trafficked to Saudi Arabia under the guise of
employment opportunities, and that South Asians were trafficked into the
country to work in sweatshops. In 1999 the People newspaper published
an article about the experiences of several Kenyan women who had been
misled into accepting jobs in the Middle East, only to work in what they
described as "modern slavery."
The
Government does not have any programs that specifically target
trafficking; however, several NGO's provide service to persons who may
have been victims of trafficking. | |||||