Pregnancy is no crime: Rethink police training
Opinion
By
Dr Harun Issack Hassan
| May 16, 2026
The recent termination of training for several police recruits by the National Police Service (NPS), including female recruits found to be pregnant, has sparked constitutional, legal, and ethical questions.
Pregnancy is neither misconduct nor a criminal act. It is a natural biological and social reality protected under both Kenyan law and international human rights frameworks. Our Constitution is explicit on matters of equality, dignity, and non‑discrimination.
Article 27 guarantees equality before the law and prohibits discrimination based on sex, pregnancy, marital status, or health condition.
Article 28 protects the inherent dignity of every person, while Article 41 recognises the right to fair labour practices. These constitutional guarantees apply to all individuals, including police recruits undergoing training within state institutions. The Employment Act, 2007, further reinforces these protections.
Section 5 prohibits discrimination in employment and training opportunities based on pregnancy. Kenyan labour jurisprudence consistently recognises pregnancy as a protected condition, ensuring women are not penalised in recruitment, retention, or advancement due to motherhood or reproductive status.
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Globally, international conventions ratified by Kenya reinforce these principles. The Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) obligates states to eliminate discrimination against women in employment and professional training.
The International Labour Organisation (ILO) Maternity Protection Convention promotes workplace policies that safeguard pregnant workers rather than exclude them.
While the NPS must maintain discipline, physical fitness, and operational readiness, these objectives must be balanced against constitutional rights. Administrative decisions should be guided by proportionality, fairness, and human dignity.
Pregnancy may require adjustments in training schedules, medical support, or temporary deferment, but it should not automatically trigger expulsion or termination.
Kenyan courts have repeatedly affirmed that administrative action must comply with Article 47 of the Constitution, which guarantees fair administrative action. Any decision affecting recruits must therefore be lawful, reasonable, procedurally fair, and grounded in clear policy rather than arbitrary interpretation.
Equally concerning is the discontinuation of recruits whose legal matters remain unresolved and who have not been convicted by a court of law. The Constitution under Article 50(2)(a) protects the presumption of innocence until proven guilty. Administrative punishment without conviction risks undermining the rule of law and public confidence in national institutions.
Modern policing requires inclusivity, professionalism, and respect for human rights. Excluding pregnant recruits sends a troubling message that biological realities are incompatible with public service.
Such approaches risk discouraging qualified women from pursuing careers in law enforcement, thereby weakening efforts toward gender equity within the security sector.
The Inspector‑General of Police has an opportunity to lead institutional reform by reviewing recruitment and training policies to align them with constitutional standards and international best practices.
Rather than punitive exclusion, policy reforms should introduce structured maternity accommodation, deferred training options, medical assessment protocols, and transparent appeal mechanisms.
Kenya’s transformation into a rights‑based democracy demands institutions that embody fairness and inclusion. Pregnancy should never be weaponised as a basis for exclusion from national service. A police service that respects constitutional rights strengthens legitimacy, enhances morale, and builds public trust.
The question is not whether standards should exist; they must. The real question is whether those standards reflect justice, humanity, and constitutional fidelity. A modern police service must recognise that protecting human dignity begins within its own ranks.
Pregnancy is not a crime. It is a human condition deserving protection, respect, and policy sensitivity. Kenya must ensure those who volunteer to serve the nation are themselves protected by the laws and values they are sworn to uphold.
-The writer is a psychology professor and governance expert