New brooms but tired sweepers: Sad tale of our justice system

For a long time, Kenyans have been treated to juvenile drama whenever a matter of public interest is taken to court.

At some point it became so bad that even the police, that maligned sector of public service, started showing signs of desperation. They could investigate a crime, arrest suspects and present them in court only for prosecutors to come and bungle the case with their unimaginable incompetence.

The poor prosecution was so inept that it became contagious, giving a bad name for every section of the criminal justice system. We have so many murderers, thieves and rapists roaming our streets free not because they have not been caught but because the then Director of Public Prosecution (DPP) did a shoddy job with them when they were arraigned that the courts had no choice but to acquit them.

The dumb prosecutors made our courts a cleaning system for criminals. This ineptitude at the prosecution level, made the police resort to what came to be popularly referred to as extra-judicial killing of suspects. The officers would apprehend dangerous criminals, at great risk to their own safety, only to have them back in the streets laughing at them after they are released from remand cells because of “lack of evidence”, a euphemism for poor prosecuting.

In most cases, it would end with the criminals killing the police officers for attempting to arrest them. Eventually, the law enforcers opted for the easier option: round up the lawbreakers, gather them at predetermined killing fields and shoot them dead.

It saved time and eliminated repeat offenders while delivering justice. The downside was some crude officers started using this excuse to extort and settle personal scores and in the process killing innocent people.

To the more current issue, and the seemingly main reason Noordin Haji was appointed DPP, the war against grand corruption requires an extremely effective criminal justice system to succeed. So much has been said about how the Judiciary has been the weak link in slaying the graft dragon, but has it?

In a situation like ours, where billions of shillings are stolen, it will be a bit too ambitious to expect an under-staffed, under-trained public prosecutor to give a fair fight, and win a legal battle against looters who can buy the best lawyers in town. If the prosecutor is not bought off by the billions, he will most probably be dwarfed by his law professor that the corrupt is likely to have hired to represent him.

The end result will be, as has been the case in most scandals, that the corrupt will emerge free and more emboldened to ride roughshod over the public and its resources.
The move to arm the public prosecutions with more and higher-calibre arsenal could therefore not come at a more opportune moment in the nation’s history.
But it should not stop there.
The entire criminal justice system needs a re-look. And a re-fix. 

The Judiciary is a different cup of tea, it will be revisited some other day. Other than, the ODPP, the other cog in the system that requires urgent staffing solution is the investigations - the department headed by another new broom.
When George Kinoti was picked as the director of the Department of Criminal Investigations of the police, many breathed a sigh of hope. Mr Kinoti is one police officer whose time in the service has been coloured with rare successes. In all the sections he has served, he left a mark. But for the few months he has been on Kiambu Road as the commander, the former Anti-Banking Fraud officer is looking increasingly overwhelmed.

The Directorate of Criminal Investigations requires massive staff reorganisation and retraining if it is to inspire the confidence the appointment of Kinoti evoked among the citizenry. In the meantime, who, again, heads the other two departments of the police, the Administration and the Regular Police?
President Uhuru Kenyatta should revisit these sectors to ensure justice works in this country. 


- The writer comments on topical issues. 
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