4/18/2024
Today from Hiiraan Online:  _
advertisements
Kenya tells US to back off over 'terror' law

Top official fends off criticism, saying new 'anti-terror' law is better than Washington's counter-'terrorism' measures.

The controversial measures extend the time police can hold "terror suspects" from 90 days to nearly a year



Monday, December 22, 2014

advertisements
A senior Kenyan official at the State House has criticised the United States for raising concerns about anew Kenyan law aimed at fighting "terrorism".

Munyori Buku said in a statement on the presidential website that Kenya's new law had checks and balances, unlike US security laws that have created the Guantanamo Bay detention centre and given the US Federal Bureau of Investigation and intelligence officers "a carte blanche in the fight against terrorism and biological warfare".

On Friday, President Uhuru Kenyatta signed the law his government says will help fight terorism. The president said the law will protect the lives of all citizens. But critics in Kenya have said it will be used to crush dissent by curbing civil liberties.

US State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said on Friday said the US was concerned about the move.

"We're...concerned about provisions that appear to limit freedom of assembly and media, and access to asylum for refugees.''

Kenya's main opposition group, the Coalition for Reforms and Democracy. said the real target of the new law was not terrorism but to reintroduce the police state and political hegemony, and would hand the president sweeping autocratic powers.

The controversial measures extend the time police can hold "terror suspects" from the current 90 days to nearly a year, increase sentences and give more powers to tap phones.

Journalists could face up to three years behind bars if their reports "undermine investigations or security operations relating to terrorism," or if they publish images of "terror victims" without permission from the police.

"This is a serious assault on the freedoms that Kenyans are enjoying today. We believe that the amendments are just a way of sugarcoating the bill," said opposition coalition leader Moses Wetangula, referring to minor changes made to the bill.


Munyori Buku's comments come a day after another attack on civilians along the Kenyan coast close to the border with Somalia.

Gunmen opened fire on a passenger bus on Sunday, but fled without injuring anyone.

The government of the East African nation has faced mounting calls to get tough on terrorism since 67 people were killed last year in an attack launched on the Westgate shopping mall in Nairobi by neighbouring Somalia's al-Shabab.

The armed group has vowed to step up attacks on Kenyan soil in retaliation for Kenya's military presence in Somalia as part of the African Union force supporting the country's fragile government



 





Click here