ELECTION PREPARATIONS

Slums on radar as state monitors violence-prone zones ahead of polls

Matiang'i says the country’s policing capacity had grown 10 times better than it was a decade ago

In Summary

• A security monitoring and rapid response strategy specifically designed for informal settlements in Nairobi and other major towns was already in place.

• Matiangí said a hotspot policing strategy based on a heat map showing insecurity prone areas is also undergoing progressive reviews.

Interior CS Fred Matiang'i in Nairobi on June 2
Interior CS Fred Matiang'i in Nairobi on June 2

The government is paying special attention to slums and other areas prone to political violence ahead of the August polls.

Interior CC Fred Matiang’i said security agencies are continuously monitoring the situation in places prone to lawlessness and crime during the election season.

He said a security monitoring and rapid response strategy designed for informal settlements in Nairobi and other major towns was already in place.

The CS made the revelations while addressing members of the Rotary Club in Nairobi on Thursday.

He was responding to concerns raised by members of the Rotary Club over alleged extrajudicial killings and ethnic flare-ups in informal settlements.

“Extrajudicial killing is a policy that has been adopted by some countries but it is not part of our policing philosophy. We are strictly bound by the law to arrest a suspect and arraign them before a competent court of law. No one needs to worry about informal settlements.”

The CS said the country’s policing capacity had grown 10 times better than it was a decade ago in tandem with reforms to align the sector with the citizen’s needs.

Matiang'i said a hotspot policing strategy based on a heat map showing insecurity-prone areas is undergoing progressive reviews.

“We want to keep on improving. So far, there is nothing that can warrant the raising of the level of alert in the country. We have a functional early warning system that begins at the community level and a robust information sharing structure and wananchi themselves have been key cogs in this framework.”

The CS said security agencies have been resourced with, among other utilities, 2,700 vehicles recently procured to enhance the operational and logistical capacity of national government administrators across the country.

“We have built strong inter-agency collaboration and reduced the ratio of police to civilians from 1 to 900 down to 1 to 600. We also have very strong international partners who are working with us on security management.”

Matiang'i said the ongoing security operations and economic responses have reduced the cattle rustling menace by almost 75 per cent.

He urged for more cooperation from elected leaders in enlightening and empowering the youth to discourage them from getting involved in crime.

 

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