Kenya court finds three police guilty of killing rights lawyer
Gulf Times
Family members of killed human rights lawyer Willie Kimani, his client and a taxi driver, also murdered, speak to the media after a court found three police officers and their civilian informant guilty of the crime, at the Milimani Law Courts in Nairobi, yesterday.
A Kenyan court yesterday found three police officers and an informer guilty of murdering a human rights lawyer, his client and their driver, six years after the killings triggered angry protests.The bodies of lawyer Willie Kimani — who had criticised police abuse — as well as his client Josephat Mwenda and driver Joseph Muiruri were found wrapped in sacks and dumped in a river outside Nairobi in June 2016.The torture and killing of the three men sparked fury in Kenya, where many people fear the police.Yesterday, high court judge Jessie Lessit ruled that three officers as well as a police informer were guilty of murder.A fourth policeman was acquitted.“I am satisfied that there was no other reasonable hypothesis that can be made on the basis of the evidence before me except that of guilt,” she said.Kimani was defending a motorbike taxi driver who accused policeman Fredrick Leliman of shooting him for no reason at a traffic stop in 2015.Leliman was among the three officers found guilty in yesterday’s verdict.The charge carries a maximum penalty of death.The sentencing will be announced on September 3, the International Justice Mission (IJM), the global legal aid group which Kimani worked for, told AFP.When authorities found his body, Kimani’s wrists were bound with rope, three of his fingers had been chopped off and his eyes appeared to have been gouged out.Police in Kenya have been accused in the past of running hit squads targeting those — including activists and lawyers — investigating alleged rights abuses by police.“Willie, Joseph and Josephat met their untimely death while courageously pursuing justice and seeking accountability for excessive use of force by our law enforcement agents,” IJM’s country director Benson Shamala said.“This important decision will send a strong message to rogue police officers who abuse their powers that they will be held accountable under the law.”