Kenya Report Alleges UK Troops Committed Rights Abuses
A parliamentary inquiry found persistent sexual violence, environmental harm, and lack of accountability by British troops, urging urgent revisions to Kenya-UK defence agreements.
- This week, Kenya's parliamentary Committee on Defence, Intelligence and Foreign Relations published a 94-page report after a two-year inquiry accusing the British Army Training Unit in Kenya of ethical breaches, rights violations and environmental negligence.
- The panel cited oral and written submissions from affected civilians, victims, community leaders, civil society organisations and public agencies, revealing a disturbing pattern of abuse in Laikipia and Samburu counties.
- Documenting incidents, the report describes Agnes Wanjiru's 2012 murder and a 1997 case where `30 women were gang-raped at knife-point`, along with harms from unexploded ordnance and toxic waste.
- Last month, British authorities arrested Robert Purkiss, who denies charges and faces extradition to Kenya, while the UK Ministry of Defence said it regrets issues and will investigate new allegations if evidence arises.
- With accountability in question, the panel warned the defence cooperation agreement between Kenya and the UK is "structurally flawed" and BATUK has "persistently" invoked diplomatic immunity, blocking justice for victims.
24 Articles
24 Articles
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Sexual abuse to war crimes: What British troops have been accused of
A Kenyan Parliamentary report on the conduct of the UK troops stationed in the military base close to the town of Nanyuki, alleged harrowing details of human rights violations, environmental destruction and sexual abuse by British soldiers.
A devastating report also denounces "serious negligence" in the handling of munitions and "serious environmental violations", and alludes to events allegedly committed during "decades" Read
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