By Human Rights Watch Press
Published December 14, 2014
Kenyan lawmakers should reject far-reaching security amendments that would limit the rights of arrested and accused people, and restrict freedoms of expression and assembly.
In a statement to the media on December 14, 2014 that calls on parliamentarians to reject the Security Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2014, Human Rights Watch (HRW) and Amnesty International (AI) caution that the “amendments could return Kenya to the police state of the 1980s and 1990s, and nullify recent progress on protecting human rights.”
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“The hastily offered security bill infringes on many basic rights and freedoms protected in Kenya’s constitution and international human rights law,” says Leslie Lefkow, deputy Africa director at Human Rights Watch. “Authorities need to focus on how Kenyan security agencies have long violated human rights with impunity, and not empower these forces further.”
Human rights organisations, including the constitutional Kenya National Commission on Human Rights (NCHR), opposition party lawmakers, and the Independent Policing Oversight Authority (IPOA) have objected to the hasty way in which the bill was introduced. Supporters have sought an exception to standard procedures to accelerate the bill’s passage.
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Kenya’s constitution requires a referendum before any new law that limits rights protected under chapter four of the constitution can be adopted. But no referendum was proposed for this bill. The bill was offered for parliamentary debate within hours, leaving no time for public scrutiny and comment. The bill’s amendments have also been described as ‘minor,’ which exempts it from lengthy procedures and scrutiny that would have been required had it been introduced as a substantive bill.
“The cumulative effect of the amendments could return Kenya to the police state of the 1980s and 90s, and nullify recent progress on protecting human rights,” says Lynne Muthoni Wanyeki, regional director for East Africa, the Horn, and the Great Lakes at Amnesty International. “Parliament needs to reject these amendments, stand behind Kenya’s constitution, and pass measures aimed at making police and the military more effective and accountable.”
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On December 11, 2014, the Parliamentary Committee on National Security and Administration sent to parliament the Security Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2014. The bill contains a wide array of amendments to 21 laws and could be adopted by parliament in the coming days.
Kenya’s security forces have been long criticised for their violations of human rights. The Anti-Terrorism Police Unit (ATPU), in particular, has been linked to enforced disappearances and extrajudicial killings in the context of counter-terrorism operations and operations aimed at Al-Shabaab.
On December 8, 2014 Al Jazeera aired a report in which anonymous members of the ATPU were interviewed saying they had participated in the extrajudicial killing and forced disappearance of suspects. Kenyan authorities have not evidently investigated these allegations or made any serious efforts to hold those responsible to account.
Articles 62 through 66 of the bill amending the National Intelligence Security Act broaden the powers of security officials to arrest and detain people and could violate due process rights. The bill expands the powers of the National Intelligence Service (NIS) to stop and detain suspects, search and seize private property, and monitor communications without a court warrant.
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Other amendments that propose alarming changes to current legislation include:
a). Article 18, to enable police to extend pre-charge detention for up to 90 days with court authorisation, well beyond the 24-hour limit that Kenyan law currently allows; b). Article 19, to allow prosecutors to not disclose evidence to the accused if “the evidence is sensitive and not in the public interest to disclose.â€; c). Article 66, to enable NIS officers to carry out “covert operations,” broadly defined as “measures aimed at neutralizing threats against national security.”
Several other provisions introduce new, broadly defined offenses that could be used against people who associate, knowingly or not, with terrorist suspects, the organisations say. For example, article 72, section 9(a), on ‘facilitation of terrorist acts’ punishes ‘a person who advocates, glorifies, advises, incites, or facilitates’ acts of terrorism. This language could be used against the lawyers of suspects, some Kenyan lawyers fear, or to limit speech. The offense is punishable with up to 20 years in prison.
Article 73, section 12(a)(2), creates a presumption that the “unlawful possession of improvised explosive devices, assault rifles, rockets propelled grenades or grenades shall be presumed to be for terrorist purposes†– placing the burden on the defendant to prove they were not using the weapon for terrorist purposes. The law provides punishment of up to 20 years in prison for anyone who uses a weapon for purposes of terrorism in committing an offense.
The bill also would amend Kenya’s refugee laws, including article 58, which would cap the number of refugees in Kenya at 150,000 and compel refugees and their families to stay only in designated camps while their applications for asylum are processed.
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The proposal could result in forced return, or refoulement, of asylum seekers when the upper limit of refugees and asylum seekers is reached. Kenya, which now hosts more than 600,000 refugees, could be forced to expel refugees and asylum seekers to comply with this provision. The provisions contravene both Kenya’s Refugee Act of 2006 and international law, including the Organization of African Unity (OAU) Convention Governing the Specific Aspects Relating to Refugee Problems in Africa, which prohibit denying refugees and asylum seekers entry into the country.
The security bill includes provisions that would make it harder to expose and criticise violations by security forces, the human rights groups argue.
Article 75, section 30(a) of the bill would punish with up to 14 years in prison anyone who “publishes or utters a statement that is likely to be understood as directly or indirectly encouraging or inducing another person to commit or prepare to commit an act of terrorism.†This overly broad provision could be interpreted to apply to social media or any other public forum.
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The bill expands the understanding of “radicalisation†to possibly include activism, with article 73, section 12(d), describing “a person who adopts or promotes an extreme belief system for the purpose of facilitating ideologically based violence to advance political, religious and social change.†The unclear language could be interpreted to prosecute political and human rights activists, with sentences of up to 30 years.
Article 75, sections 30(f)(1) and (2), also broadly prohibit broadcasting any information likely to undermine investigations or security operations without police authorization and prohibits publishing or broadcasting photographs of victims of a terrorist attack without police consent.
The security bill would limit basic rights to freedom of assembly and association with vague provisions subject to abuse, the groups say. The proposals create even greater concern considering the current hostility toward nongovernmental organizations working on governance and human rights in Kenya.
Article 4 would authorise the cabinet secretary for interior, a presidential appointee, to decide when and where public meetings can be held. Kenya has a history of retaining executive control over public gatherings that was used to restrict freedom of peaceful assembly during the Moi government.
The bill in article 107 would amend the Public Benefits Organisations (PBOs) Act, 2013, giving full discretion to the authority responsible for registration of organisations to classify organisations and, in consultation with the cabinet secretary, to review the classification.
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