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Torture and Rape in the Kenyan Occupied Somali territories

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Kenya's police have denied claims of torture and rape when they disarmed rival clan militias last year.

 

Human Rights Watch says there should be an inquiry into the "collective punishment" of civilians in Mandera.

 

The US-based organisation said its research showed thousands of people had been tortured and women had been raped.

 

But police spokesman Eric Kiraithe told the BBC there had been no torture or beatings and asked HRW to produce evidence to back up its findings.

 

"Certainly we should look into the laws in this country which allow any street boy to come here and publish very disparaging lies about our internal security forces," he told the BBC's Network Africa programme.

 

Earlier this year a UN investigator into allegations of extrajudicial killings elsewhere in Kenya, Philip Alston, said the police were a "law unto themselves".

 

'Not a case of bad apples'

 

A woman who was raped in Elele:

"One held my head on the ground, and the other one started raping me.

 

I fainted because I was pregnant and when I woke up I just found myself damaged from the rape.

 

I ran to the bush where our livestock are. I went with the five children that I could see. After three days, I found the rest of my kids in the bush.

 

I came back after six weeks to give birth in Elele. I haven't seen any doctor or hospital."

 

Source: Human Rights Watch

According to Human Rights Watch, a joint police and military operation to disarm the warring militias in the north-eastern town of Mandera took place between 25 October and 28 October 2008.

 

It followed deadly clashes between the local Garre and Murulle clans, which had killed 21 people earlier in the year.

 

"Unfortunately, that joint operation pursued a brutal strategy of basically rounding up all of the civilians in various villages and then, in a sense, collectively punishing them," the report's author Ben Rawlence told the BBC.

 

"Requiring them to turn over weapons, to disclose the whereabouts of the militias who've been fighting, torturing thousands of people and raping some women… destroying property and causing between 20,000 and 30,000 people to flee the area."

 

In February, Human Rights Watch researchers visited five of the towns and say they documented consistent accounts from more than 90 victims.

 

The interviewees said security forces entered early in the morning and rounded up all of the men they could find.

 

They were made to lie on the ground for hours and were beaten with rifle butts, sticks, canes and iron rods.

 

"In front of the police station, they made us lie down. They were beating us with sticks, rungus [clubs], anything. They weren't saying anything except beating us and then: 'Bring the gun or you'll die,'" a victim in El Wak said.

 

Other said the security forces twisted, crushed or ripped open their testicles.

 

"This is not a question of a few bad apples disobeying orders," Kenneth Roth, Human Rights Watch's executive director said.

 

"This operation was the result of a strategy devised by senior officials to use brutal force against Kenyan citizens."

 

Mr Kiraithe has denied previous accusations of police brutality and said if Human Rights Watch had evidence of torture in the Mandera district, the organisation should hand it over.

 

"We have well over five institutions in this country prepared to carry out public prosecutions and ensure that justice is done," Mr Kiraithe said.

 

The region around Mandera is prone to conflicts between rival clans, often for control of scarce water and pastures.

 

The area is largely inhabited by Somali-speaking nomads.

 

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Meiji   

The injustices commited against the Somali civilians of Kenya continues unabated since the independence of Kenya in 1963. The Kenyan authorities are solely responsible for these injustices.

 

On another note:

 

The pastoral way of life is systematically undermining the Somali nation in overcoming petty differences in the face of state-led atrocities directed against the Somalis.

 

It followed deadly clashes between the local Garre and Murulle clans

Such petty conflicts are a result of the pastoral way of life which forces Somali groups to become hostile towards each other since the meagre resources can not sustain large population size.

 

With the prospect of global warming and recurring droughts we can expect more of such conflicts between Somali pastoral groups which only reduces the total Somali population size in Kenya and thus aides the Kenyan authorities who would love to see the total subjugation of the Somali people in Kenya.

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