Nahashon Mutua had previously tried to pin the
death on an inmate
Kenya's High Court has
sentenced a senior policeman to death for the murder of a detainee - one of two
cases resulting in rare officer convictions.
In a separate case, five
senior police officers were found responsible for the death of a six-month-old
baby hit over the head by riot police.
Kenya's police have previously
faced accusations of impunity over killings.
Nahashon Mutua received a
death sentence for fatally beating detainee Martin Koome with a metal bar in
2013.
Mutua was the officer in
charge at a police station in the capital, Nairobi, when Koome was brought in
following a domestic fight.
The officer had tried to frame
an inmate for the murder but he was convicted in December and sentenced to
death on Thursday.
What is the reaction in Kenya?
Ferdinand Omondi, BBC News, Nairobi
Nahashon Mutua's death
sentence trended on Kenyan social media within minutes of his sentencing. Not
many Kenyans would have expected the outcome. Policemen in Kenya have got away
with it before: brutal beatings, torture and even broad daylight killings, some
caught on camera.
The state stubbornly refuses
to acknowledge it as a widespread problem; dismissing the cases as individual
bad apples. But all the hard work of human rights groups, public pressure and
the six-year-old Independent Police Oversight Authority (Ipoa) is beginning to
bear fruit.
More officers are getting
charged and prosecutors are beginning to win cases. The civilian-led Ipoa is
getting plaudits for holding police officers accountable, and many Kenyans hope
this new trend will be a deterrent.
Amnesty International says
justice has prevailed against extrajudicial killings, but maintains it does not
support the death penalty, which is still part of Kenyan law.
Why was Martin Koome arrested and what happened?
Chief Inspector Mutua was the
officer in charge of Ruaraka police station when a suspect, Martin Koome
Manyara, was brought in following a domestic brawl, back in December 2013.
Neighbours who heard the
incident reported the matter to the police.
During the case, the court
heard how Mutua had tried covering up the murder several times, including
faking a report, freeing suspects present during the night of the incident and
even charging one cellmate, Kelvin Odhiambo, with the murder of Koome.
It was Mr Odhiambo who sought
the help of the oversight authority who eventually uncovered Mutua's behaviour.
Charges against Mr Odhiambo were dropped and he turned state witness.
What about the other police brutality case today?
In another courtroom on the
same day, five police commanders were found responsible for the death of baby
Samantha Pendo.
Samantha was beaten on the
head in the middle of clashes between police and demonstrators in Kisumu, in
the west of Kenya, after Uhuru Kenyatta was announced as the winner of the
presidential election in 2017. She died in hospital three days later.
What do we know about how police act in Kenya?
In September, the
BBC's Africa Eye investigative unit highlighted police impunity in Kenya, covering the story of
a notorious officer who became national news after mobile footage showed him
gunning down two apparently unarmed men in broad daylight.
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