Interior PS Omollo expresses Gov’t regret over violence meted on anti-femicide protesters
Interior Principal Secretary Dr. Raymond
Omollo has expressed regret at the violence meted on peaceful anti-femicide protesters
in the Nairobi Central Business District (CBD) on Tuesday.
PS Omollo,
who spoke on Citizen TV’s JKLive Show on Wednesday, termed the violent scenes
by police officers to unharmed protesters as “unfortunate and unacceptable” on
the part of the government.
He
acknowledged the importance of the demos in line with sensitizing Kenyans
against femicide during the International
Human Rights Day, underscoring that those found culpable would face the law.
“I think
yesterday’s events were pretty much unfortunate and one happening on such an
important day definitely, just shows the challenge we have around policing and
looking at the people who were out there demonstrating,” said the PS.
“Of
course, we have had a series of concerns across the country over the last few
days on issues of femicide and for me it’s a question where we say things just
didn’t go right. It is not something we would want to say that is acceptable.
We have had conversations with the Inspector General of Police, and it is
regrettable and something that should not have happened in the first place.”
PS Omollo
added: “It is something that we highly regret. We have the internal processes
within the structure of police and what we expect is that anybody found
culpable definitely has to be taken through the legal process and established
protocols.”
In his
defence of the security organs, the PS urged Kenyans to treat the incident as a
disciplinary action similar to one given to a child by their parent.
According
to him, though the actions of the police may have initially been perceived as
correctional seeking to enforce law and order, their actions probably got out
of hand.
“You can
look at it from a point where as a parent you are trying to punish your child
but in the process, out of that enthusiasm you end up going overboard and
become highly uncontrollable,” he noted.
The
remarks by PS Omollo come as the government continues to face sharp criticism
over the incident where police officers in Nairobi lobbed teargas at
demonstrators protesting the alarming rise of femicide cases across the
country.
Videos
shared on social media showed protesters being roughed up and arrested in the CBD
by what appeared to be plainclothes police officers.
Protesters
also shared images of live bullets police reportedly fired at the peaceful
marchers.
In a
joint statement, Amnesty International Kenya, the Law Society of Kenya (LSK),
Human is My ID Alliance and the End Femicide KE Movement termed the incident a
grave violation of human rights.
The United States government through its Embassy in Nairobi
later came out to condemn the incident reiterating its support for the
Kenyan people's right to express their concerns and call for justice in the
face of growing violence against women.
The US slammed the move by police lamenting
that the incident occurred on International Human Rights Day, when people
around the world are called to reflect on and uphold human rights.
"Regrettable and concerning to see
police action against Kenyans exercising their constitutional rights to
assemble and protest peacefully," the statement read in part.
“On #InternationalHumanRightsDay and
every day, the United States supports efforts to #EndFemicideKE and protect the
human rights of all people.”
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