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KIMEU: Why policing reform can no longer be delayed in Kenya

The philosophy of community policing must transition from a buzzword to a core operational principle, fostering genuine trust and collaboration.

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by SAMUEL KIMEU

Star-blogs03 September 2025 - 17:00
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In Summary


  • Continuous professional development, encompassing comprehensive training on human rights, gender sensitivity, and de-escalation techniques, is paramount.
  • The philosophy of community policing must transition from a buzzword to a core operational principle, fostering genuine trust and collaboration.

National Police Service pass out parade. FILE

The scene was etched into the national consciousness, a fleeting moment captured on a phone camera that spoke volumes about Kenya's enduring challenges.

A young boy, 11 years old, in Turkana, a fifth-grader by his own account, was hunched diligently over his books, his small figure illuminated solely by the harsh, solitary glow of a street floodlight.

 It was late, past 10 pm, the kind of hour when most children his age are tucked safely in bed.

The person filming, startled by the sight, approached. But as the camera drew closer, the boy didn't look up with curiosity or a shy smile.

Instead, his eyes darted, his body tensed, and in a flash, he was on his feet, abandoning his precious bag and books and bolting into the darkness.

The videographer spoke to him reassuringly, asking him not to run away.

The boy stopped and told the stranger that he was doing his homework, that he was an orphan living with his destitute grandfather, that they had no lights at home, and that he did his homework here many times.

 "Why are you running?" the bewildered videographer called out. The boy, hesitant, eventually stopped, his voice small and trembling as he offered a chilling explanation: "I thought it was the police."

This single, raw exchange rips open a profound and deeply unsettling truth about Kenya.

In a region where the threat of wild animals is real, where the infamous bandits of the north cast a long, violent shadow, the greatest perceived enemy of a boy seeking an education under a floodlight in Lodwar was not the hyena lurking in the shadows, nor the armed criminal, but the very institution sworn to protect him.

 “I thought it was the police,” stuck with me!

This is the stark, absurd and heartbreaking reality of a policing philosophy that produces not trust and cooperation, but fear.

For decades, the DNA of Kenya's police force has remained largely unchanged from its colonial origins.

The British imperialists established a constabulary not to serve and safeguard the indigenous population, but to enforce their will, suppress dissent, and maintain order through coercive force.

They established a police force. It was an instrument of control, designed to instill obedience, not to build legitimacy and community partnerships.

Decades after the Union Jack was lowered, much of this imperialist shadow persists, manifesting in tactics and attitudes that are fundamentally antithetical to a democratic, rights-respecting society.

The consequence is a pervasive, almost instinctive, fear among ordinary citizens when confronted by law enforcement.

 This fear is not a figment of imagination; it is a lived reality for countless Kenyans, particularly those in marginalized communities, informal settlements, or rural areas like Turkana.

It is born from a history punctuated by documented instances of arbitrary arrests, extortion, police brutality, extrajudicial killings, and a chilling lack of accountability for most of such abuses.

 When the uniform that should represent safety instead evokes apprehension, the fundamental social contract between the state and its people is irrevocably damaged.

The weight of this fear is immense, its implications far-reaching.

It actively discourages citizens from reporting crimes, especially if the perpetrators are perceived to have connections within the police, or if the act of reporting itself might lead to further victimization.

This environment allows human rights violations by law enforcement to frequently go unpunished, fostering a culture of impunity that further erodes public confidence in the police and the state.

It stifles civic engagement, making communities hesitant to collaborate with authorities even on matters of their own safety and well-being.

For the Turkana boy, the floodlight offered a fragile, public sanctuary, a place where the visibility might, paradoxically, offer a sliver of protection from the very people he had been taught to fear in the shadows.

His flight was a silent indictment of a system that has failed to transform from a force into a service.

This deeply problematic situation is simply unsustainable for a nation that aspires to be a regional economic powerhouse, a stable democracy, a stabilising factor in the East and Horn of Africa and a champion of human rights.

It stands as a fundamental impediment to genuine development, social cohesion, and the full realization of the rights enshrined in Kenya's progressive constitution.

For the Turkana boy well wishers stepped in to transform his life fundamentally - to help him have a realistic aim at his dreams.

 For policing and the people of Kenya, where will the transformation come from? The time for incremental adjustments is over; it is long overdue for all stakeholders – the government, civil society, and crucially, the police service itself, particularly its leadership and the National Police Service Commission  – to collectively embark on a radical re-engineering of the police force into a genuine 21st-century police service.

This transformation demands a profound paradigm shift, shedding the last vestiges of the colonial police mentality.

It requires a fundamental re-orientation of training and doctrine, moving decisively away from paramilitary, control-oriented approaches towards a human rights-based, community-oriented philosophy.

Police officers must be trained to view citizens as partners in safety, not as subjects to be controlled and extorted, and to prioritize service delivery and protection over enforcement through coercion.

Hand in hand with this must come the establishment of truly robust and independent accountability mechanisms.

This means strengthening institutions like the Independent Policing Oversight Authority (IPOA) and ensuring that investigations into police misconduct are thorough, impartial, and lead to swift, transparent disciplinary actions and prosecutions where warranted.

Furthermore, genuine professionalisation and improved welfare for police officers are non-negotiable. Investing in better remuneration, adequate housing, and conducive working conditions can significantly reduce susceptibility to corruption and foster a greater commitment to professional standards.

Continuous professional development, encompassing comprehensive training on human rights, gender sensitivity, and de-escalation techniques, is paramount.

The philosophy of community policing must transition from a buzzword to a core operational principle, fostering genuine trust and collaboration.

This entails police officers becoming visible, approachable, and deeply integrated into local communities, working hand-in-hand with residents to identify and resolve local problems.

Finally, leveraging modern technology can significantly improve policing efficiency, transparency, and accountability, from modernising record-keeping to enhancing forensic capabilities and utilising data analytics for smarter resource deployment.

The image of the Turkana boy under the floodlight, his fear laid bare, must serve as a powerful and urgent catalyst for this transformation.

It is not merely about extending electricity grids to every corner of the nation, vital as that is. It is about ensuring that when the lights do come on, the chilling shadow of fear cast by the very protectors of the law has dissipated.

It is about building a police service that inspires confidence, safeguards rights, and genuinely serves the people of Kenya, allowing every child, regardless of their circumstances, to pursue their dreams without the chilling spectre of arbitrary authority.

Only when this fundamental trust is established can Kenya truly step into its future, unburdened by the ghosts of its colonial authoritarian past.

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