Faith Odhiambo resigns from Ruto's protest victim compensation panel

LSK President Faith Odhiambo. | FILE

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After weeks of mounting pressure, Law Society of Kenya (LSK)
President Faith Odhiambo has resigned from her position as vice chair of
the government-appointed Panel of Experts on Compensation of Victims of
Demonstrations and Public Protests.
In a statement shared with Citizen Digital on Monday, Odhiambo
said she had tendered her “formal and immediate resignation” to the Head of
Public Service, citing the need to safeguard LSK's independence and unity amid ongoing legal and constitutional challenges.
The panel, established through an August 25 Kenya Gazette
notice, was tasked with recommending compensation for victims of police
brutality and violence during youth-led anti-government protests this year and
last year, in which over 120 people were killed and hundreds more injured.
Odhiambo on Monday said she had accepted the role because it offered a
chance to reform Kenya’s legal and institutional framework for victim
reparations, which she described as “inadequate in addressing historic crises
of police overreach.”
But she noted last month’s court order suspending the
panel’s operations, making it impossible to meet its 120-day mandate.
“As things stand, the time-bound mandate of the panel has been stopped by our courts, and the proposed tenure is likely to lapse before the matter is resolved,” she said.
“Victims continue to reach out to me in
total frustration over when their requests for an audience with the panel will be
honoured.”
Instead, Odhiambo said, she would focus on advocating for
victims through the Law Society, which is representing several families affected by police
violence during the 2023 cost-of-living demonstrations.
“Our team of advocates is already in court in Kisumu for one
of the cases involving victims of police excesses,” she said. “We will seek the
Judiciary’s intervention to expedite these matters to a conclusion.”
The LSK president said the lawyers’ body is now focused on
memorializing victims, identifying unreported cases, urging the Chief Justice
to fast-track related court cases, and petitioning Parliament to strengthen
laws protecting demonstrators and victims of police abuse.
“We must treat reparations for victims with the same
seriousness with which we treat repercussions for perpetrators. May justice
remain our shield and defender,” she said.
Odhimabo was heavily criticised for accepting President
William Ruto’s appointment to the panel, which many saw as a betrayal, as
she had until then been celebrated for leading the fight for police brutality victims’
justice.
“I
have in no way betrayed your trust,” she defended herself on September 4 during her
swearing-in, “access to criminal justice remains critical
to me in our quest to promote and protect the rule of law as an essential
element in the enjoyment of the fundamental human rights and freedoms.”
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