close
close

Kenya has to investigate mutilated bodies thrown in his career: HRW

Kenya has to investigate mutilated bodies thrown in his career: HRW

Nairobi, Kenya – Human Rights Watch asked Kenya on Monday to end up on mutilated organisms found in a career last year and approach the statements that the police have blocked recovery efforts.

There were shock and disgust in July in the East -African country, when 10 butterflies and other parts of the unidentified body were recovered, especially by volunteers, from an abandoned career in Mahala Mukuru in the capital Nairobi.

The discovery came while Kenya was gathered by deadly government protests, the groups of rights provided for the brutality of the police and the abduction of the protesting protesters.

Authorities promised quick actions and quickly arrested a man who said he had confessed that he had killed and dismantle 42 women.

But about a month later, the suspect escaped police custody and disappeared without trace.

“No criminal prosecution has been initiated for bodies, nor for this escape,” said HRW and Mukuru Center for Social Justice in a common statement.

HRW said that career volunteers claimed that the police were forced to cease to take over the body parts.

“Instead of obstructing the finding of the bodies, the Kenya police should investigate promptly and in detail the circumstances that surround the dumping of a career,” said HRW researcher, Osieno Namwaya.

The organization for rights, working with the Community Center for Social Justice Mukuru, interviewed the families of the victims, activists, a police officer and residents.

Following the finding of the first carcasses, the residents stated that the Directorate of Criminal Information (DCI), the General Anti-Riot (GSU) service unit, and the police made a “concerted effort to stop, including the ordering of volunteers to stop or risk being charged with deaths.”

One volunteer claimed that he endured two attempts to kidnap it from his career activity.

“I know that if I had been arrested again, even routine, I could never go out in life. They marked me,” he said.

The discovery of the bodies in Mukuru shed a light on the police, while found only 100 meters (meters) by a police station.

The Kenya police guardian stated that last year he analyzed whether there was any police involvement or “failure to act to prevent” killings.