By Abdullahi Abdi
Published November 8, 2017

The Regulator wrote to the director of criminal investigations with a request to shut down the offices of the Africa Centre for Open Governance (AfriCOG) and arrest its directors.Kenyan authorities are cracking down on civil society groups critical of the election process.

On November 3, 2017–three days prior to the deadline for filing petitions against the repeat presidential election results on November 6, 2017–the Kenya Non-Governmental Organizations Co-ordination Board, the regulatory authority for nongovernmental groups, summoned three civil society organisations – Inuka Kenya, Katiba Institute, and Muslims for Human Rights (MUHURI) – to respond to allegations of money laundering and employing foreigners without valid work permits, among other reasons.

And on November 6, the board banned the operations of “Kura Yangu, Sauti Yangu” (“My Vote, My Voice”), an election campaign initiative by a coalition of civil society groups, and “We the People,” a citizen’s alliance that focuses on good governance, for allegedly operating illegal bank accounts and funding political operations in Kenya.

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These organisations say they were targeted because of their work. The head of MUHURI said his organisation was targeted because of its involvement in filing elections petitions. He believed the board’s action amounted to a “witch-hunt.”

The civil society regulator suspended the activities of the International Development Law Organisation (IDLO), an organisation engaged in funding the judiciary including programmes concerning the handling of election disputes.This is not the first time the board has targeted civil society organisations that were critical of the government or that challenged the credibility of results during this election season.

On August 14, days after Uhuru Kenyatta was initially declared the winner of the now-annulled August 8 presidential election, the board announced it had cancelled the registration of the Kenya Human Rights Commission (KHRC), one of the oldest human rights groups in Kenya citing alleged tax evasion and other issues.

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Kenya Non-Governmental Organizations Co-ordination Board, the regulatory authority for nongovernmental groups, summoned three civil society organizations – Inuka Kenya, Katiba Institute, and Muslims for Human Rights (MUHURI) – to respond to allegations of money laundering and employing foreigners without valid work permits, among other reasons.A day later, the board wrote to the director of criminal investigations with a request to shut down the offices of the Africa Centre for Open Governance (AfriCOG) and arrest its directors. AfriCOG is an organisation that specialises in governance issues and has criticised Kenyan authorities for corruption. A high court judge in Nairobi temporarily stopped the board from shutting down AfriCOG and the acting interior cabinet secretary, Fred Matiang’i, put on hold the deregistration of the two groups, pending further investigations.

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The Government banned banned the operations of, “Kura Yangu, Sauti Yangu" on November 6, 2017.Then on October 5, the board also suspended the activities of the International Development Law Organisation (IDLO), an organisation engaged in funding the judiciary including programmes concerning the handling of election disputes.

The recent crackdown is part of a wider repression of civil society in Kenya in recent years. The government urgently needs to change course and instead of harassing these organizations, should respect their rights and their role in meaningful dialogue.

A Human Rights Watch article.