Kenyan police are not co-operating with investigations by a government-funded watchdog into violent deaths following last month’s election, two sources with direct knowledge of the probes said.
The head of the Independent Police Oversight Authority (IPOA) told Reuters in mid-August it was fast-tracking investigations of all deaths and injuries which the police were alleged by rights groups to be responsible for after the August 8 national ballot.
Macharia Njeru attended autopsies of a young girl and a baby and called the probes into those deaths “priority cases”.
But the sources told Reuters police had to date not transferred any documents or evidence to IPOA, mandated to investigate cases reported by individuals or police or referred to them by human rights organisations.
“The big frustration of IPOA is the police do not share information critical to investigations into police misconduct, one of the sources said. “… (But) officers feel IPOA is there to harass them.”
Police are required by law to co-operate with civilian-run IPOA. Spokesman for the force, Charles Owino, did not respond to phone calls.
Interior Minister Fred Matiang‘i last month denied accusations of police brutality. He said “criminal elements”, not legitimate political protesters, had caused trouble after the election that provoked a police response.
Protests broke out after the election board announced incumbent President Uhuru Kenyatta had won by 1.4 million votes. Opposition leader Raila Odinga disputed the result and took his case to the Supreme Court, which scrapped the result and ordered a new poll within 60 days.
The state-funded Kenya National Commission on Human Rights said at least 28 people were killed in shootings in the days after the results were announced. It believes the killings were linked to police.
Evidence relevant to the investigations could include documents such as police deployment plans and operational orders as well as internal reports into alleged misconduct by officers or units, one source said.
An IPOA spokeswoman said the monitor did not discuss ongoing investigations with the media.
The authority became operational in 2012 and has so far secured the conviction of two police officers for the 2014 murder of a teenage girl in a coastal Kenyan town.
In its annual reports for 2014 to 2016, it listed “suspicion by the police”, delays in response to requests for information and lack of co-operation from some officers as factors impeding its operations.