The cash cow of the Kenyan police
Badrudeen Shariff

Badrudeen Shariff looks into some of the reasons for police corruption and
unfair treatment of Somalis in Kenya – and questions whether giving fair
treatment to police in the first place would not prevent such problems.

A story is told of two Somali women who visited Kijabe hospital for medical
treatment. At the gate, they met a uniformed watchman. They underwent the
usual security check up and proceeded to finish their business in the
hospital. As they were waiting to start their journey back home, the
watchman approached them and asked “Mama ni saa ngapi? (Mum, what is the
time?). One of the women opened her purse and handed him a Ksh500 note. The
watchman was surprised and delighted. He then said, “Asante sana mama,
lakini nilikuwa nataka kujua ni saa ngapi?”(Thank you mum, but I was asking
about the time). The women looked at each other and concluded that he was
not satisfied with the amount already given. They added another Ksh1000. The
watchman walked away surprised at the womens’ generosity. Unbeknown to him,
the women were refugees from the camps, who had come to Nairobi through a
UNCHR program. And they had assumed he was a police officer asking for a
bribe.

The story reveals the uneasy relationship between the security apparatus and
Somalis in Kenya. A mutual mistrust dates back to Kenyan independence, when
the state ostracized the Somalis as third-class citizens. For a Somali to
obtain a service from any government office, money must exchange hands. This
is now an accepted norm. I remember when I was applying for a passport; I
attached all my documents as required. The immigration officer started
asking me questions such as: “What is your name? Which school did you go
to?” I was incensed and told him that the information he was seeking was on
the papershe held.. He replied, “These mean nothing; you could have obtained
them from river road”. Eventually, and only after a fight, i obtained my
travel document, but until today I have problems at the airport due to that
passport: they had then used my documents to issue a new passport to someone
who must have paid them, and issued me with a replacement passport. Even the
dates of its first issue and its replacement are almost the same, raising
suspicions. I am also regarded as a frequent traveller since I have a
replacement passport, but there are no records to show that.

I had a similar story with the national identity card. When the people with
whom I had applied were collecting theirs, I came to the registration
offices to collect mine. To my surprise, my file had not even been forwarded
to Nairobi. The reason I was given was that I had not signed. It did not
matter that everyone else had “xxxxxx” in the place of a signature. Nobody
had told me to sign anywhere. Only God knows the noise I made. This is
simply one of the ways that officials make the process hard, to convince you
to part with something - and I knew I was paying for not having paid a
bribe.

So when I see Kenyans cheering the police crackdown and mass arrests in
Eastleigh, which have targeted the Somali community in order to “flush out”
terrorists, I cringe in pain. Any sane person would support an operation to
rid criminals from our midst. But I can bet my life that the operation in
Eastliegh will not rid us of any criminal. It is just a means for the police
to extort money from both the criminals, and the innocent majority. Have you
ever asked yourself why the police are always so trigger happy to conduct
swoops in Eastleigh and Northern Kenya? It is all about money, and the
perceived lower status of Somali citizens. In Baragoi, 40 police officers
were massacred in a single day. Nothing was done. To the opposite extreme,
in northern Kenya, one officer is killed and somehow that justifies the
massacre of locals and collective punishment.

Most of those who were arrested paid for their freedom. The criminals would
havebeen the first ones to pay up because they have financiers. Many people
were not arrested from the outset, because they knew what they were expected
to do. They paid up before “tufike mbele”. I know of someone who paid
Ksh20,000 despite having all the requisite documents to show his
citizenship. Most of those in the concentration camps in Kasarani are the
poor who could not afford to bribe their way out.
The officers taking part in the operation are “kurutus” who had their pass
out parade just a day before. They are young men and women who swore in
front of the president to be of service to their country and people. I saw
them yesterday with new and neatly pressed police uniforms. They had cheeky
smiles on their faces and to the undiscerning eye, they looked happy in
their service. I don’t know why, but maybe it was the allure of earning
handsomely in their first assignment. Using new officers for such an
operation was wrong. They have started their service on the wrong footing.
They have tasted the sweetness of bribes, and they will never look back.

Rape, looting and harassments have been reported. We may not be able to
verify all the reports, but it just takes one to look at what our officers
did at the Westgate shopping mall in September. In the middle of a disaster,
after a shooting by disguised gunmen, and in the glare of local and
international media and with CCTV cameras mounted in the mall, our officers
shamelessly looted the place. The government denied everything despite the
overwhelming evidence. So there is very little to make me doubt when I hear
that police officers in the ongoing operation found a lady alone in the
middle of the night, and started harassing her sexually while mocking her:
“Mrembo mzuri kama wewe unakaa peke yako”(How come you are alone and you are
such a beauty).

Injustice anywhere is injustice everywhere. Those who killed innocent
worshippers in churches need to be brought to book. It is the best we can
hope for at the moment. But injustice cannot count as justice for another
injustice.

Inspector General Kimiayo and his cohorts should stop abusing our
intelligence and playing with our lives. If what they are telling us is
true, where were they when Alshabab was migrating to Eastleigh? Why can’t
somebody take responsibility? Why are we not asking questions instead of
following these guys blindly? These are things that can be solved through
proper intelligence and policework. But unfortunately, as journalist
Boniface Mwangi said, intelligence gathering requires police officers with
intelligence. Instead, we hire our officers based on a lack, rather than an
abundance, of intelligence.. To have proper security we need to improve the
conditions of officers who currently earn peanuts and live in squalor.
Otherwise, they will continue taking bribes and harassing the innocent while
working in league with criminals.

* Badrudeen Shariff blogs at  <http://badrudeenshareef.blogspot.com/>
http://badrudeenshareef.blogspot.com/

 

EM

On the 49th Parallel          

 

            Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni and Dr. Kiiza Besigye Uganda is in anarchy"
           Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni na Dk. Kiiza Besigye Uganda ni katika machafuko"

 

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