Nairobi businesswoman seeks to block reinstatement of police officers over alleged torture

People standing outside the Eastleigh North Police Station. PHOTO | COURTESY

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A Nairobi businesswoman, Mahammud Ayni Hussein, has moved to
court seeking orders to stop the reinstatement of two police officers she
accuses of subjecting her to torture, unlawful detention, and abuse of
authority.
The officers are Chief Inspector Rebecca Njeri Muraya, who was
the Officer Commanding Station (OCS) at Eastleigh North Police Station, and her
colleague Sergeant Abdisalam Ahmed.
The two were previously charged in court but the case was
later withdrawn by the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions (ODPP).
In her application filed under a certificate of urgency,
Hussein wants the court to bar the National Police Service Commission (NPSC)
and the Internal Affairs Unit from restoring the duo to active duty.
She argues that their reinstatement, following the withdrawal
of the charges, would expose her to further harm.
Through lawyers from FIDA-Kenya and International Justice
Mission (IJM), Hussein has also applied for leave to institute judicial review
proceedings for orders of prohibition and certiorari.
She is further seeking permission to conduct private
prosecutions against the two officers before a different Magistrate, citing the
seriousness of the alleged violations.
“The petitioner underwent torture at the hands of the 1st and
2nd respondents. Should they be allowed back to active police duty without
sanctions, she will suffer irreparably as nothing shall stop them from further
abusing their authority,” the notice of motion states.
The application lists multiple State institutions and
oversight bodies as respondents and interested parties, including the Attorney
General, the Director of Public Prosecutions, the Kenya National Commission on
Human Rights, IPOA, the Ombudsman, and the NPSC.
Hussein wants the matter certified as urgent and heard ex
parte in the first instance, citing her safety and the risk of continued
violations of her constitutional rights.
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