East African School of Human Rights

We welcome you to the Blog for the East African School of Human Rights. We shall post our opinions, perspectives and positions on contemporary challenges to human rights, democracy and conflict resolution in Eastern Africa, The Great Lakes Region and the Horn of Africa Region. We shall also post summaries of our our Sub Regional Policy Dialogues on a range of subjects ranging from Corruption and human rights, Piracy in the Indian Ocean, the reconstruction of State and Society in the Sudan ( both North and South), Kenya and the challenges of closing the Post Election imbroglio, human rights and democracy in Eastern Africa, the unfolding developments after a largely flawed electoral process in Uganda as well as situational analysis on upcoming events in the Sub region. We encourage constructive current debates on these issues...and others

Monday 26 September 2011

National Intelligence Bill 2011-Why Kenyans Must reject this Draconian Law


National Intelligence Service Bill: Resist this Draconian Piece of Law

by

Atunga Atuti O. J.

It is not lost on Kenyans that once upon a time when we were working on a final draft of the constitution ahead of the referendum some clever fellow who we never got to know inserted the words...subject to National Security...which would have altered the spirit and effect of the Bill of Rights in the New Constitution. What the clever fellow failed to do is now being effect through the back door. This attempt is the NI SBill. The National Security Intelligence Service Bill is a dangerous piece of Law! The provisions of this piece of proposed legislation has been drafted like we never promulgated a new constitution that we never transited from the days of the “nyayo errors” that we never learnt from the lessons of history. We also never learnt from others including the lessons of fumbled American intelligence cook-up that landed entire world in meaningless and endless wars that the world is trying to extricate itself from essentially we never learnt anything!

The National Intelligence service Bill if enacted in its present form will create an Institution operating in its own realm, created on its own former images, opaque in its operations and answerable to none other than itself! All these on our TAXES and in an era when the rest of the world is moving towards democratic control over security agencies.

The Bill seeks to create an institution that that derogates from and claws back the principles of national security as provided in the Constitution. According to the Constitution,  National security shall be premised on  the protection from external and internal threats  to Kenya, her sovereignty, people, their rights, freedoms, property, peace and stability, prosperity and other national interests.  The Constitution further provides that the pursuit of national security must comply with the law, utmost respect for the rule of law, democracy, human rights and freedoms. In a nutshell, national security is subject to the authority of the constitution and parliament. The envisaged institution is a threat to these fundamental provisions rather than a guarantor of the same.

Whereas the functions as provided in the proposed law in many respects tally with the provision of the constitution in respect to the NSI Service, there are a number of clauses especially those relating to the limitation of rights, oversight, operational transparency and accountability that are wanting. While we appreciate the need to strike a balance between the rights of people working   for the Agency as provided in the Constitution and the need to safeguard the sensitivity and confidentiality of information they will come across in the course of their work. The provisions on limitations of rights do not meet the Constitutional threshold in accordance to Art 24 in terms of their specificity.

There also are a number of reasons why this is a dangerous piece of legislation and seeks to negate the provisions of the Constitution and thus must be rejected: first it has been drafted with the singular aim of perpetuating the institution as it exists today. It does not present much progression in tandem with the New Constitution. There are limited oversight provisions regarding the recruitment of the Director General. This in a way explains why the president re-appointed the current Director General without following the spirit and letter of the constitution pertaining to such appointments. In many respects the procedures for the appointment of the Director General in the Bill do not meet the constitutional threshold for such recruitment.

As pertains to oversight, even though the constitution is clear that the National Intelligence Service (NIS) is subject to the constitution and parliament as per Art. 238 (2a), the Bill seeks to institute  a procedure where it will "vet" MPs who will sit on  a proposed oversight committee to be known as Parliamentary Intelligence Oversight Committee (PIOC). Even though Article 38 recognizes that this committee shall be constituted in accordance with parliamentary standing orders, this provision is oblivious to the fact that Parliament operates on its own rules and standing orders and is not subject to the direction of any body. But even then the same article states that members of that parliamentary committee shall be subject to vetting (Art. 38 (3) by same institution over which the committee is supposed to exercise oversight! The Bill further seeks to legislate that the NIS and its Director General are not subject to any court, tribunal or commission of inquiry (Article 40 (2). How can an Institution that subsists on tax payers funding be insulated from public accountability and scrutiny? If this were the case, would we have known what information was available long before the madness of December 2007 and January 2008? Would we have known the various acts of omission and commission the NSIS and other Agencies engaged in and how useful the intelligence in their possession and further actions would have been in avoiding the Post Election Violence?

In regard to information held by the Service, Article 39 provides that the Director General will make decisions on what information and classified documents are to be kept and what is to be destroyed and the procedures thereof shall be made by the Director General. What will stop the Director General from being at the peck and call of certain interests if s/he has unfettered authority and final word on the destruction of documentation? It should be noted that there are established best practices from around the world on the preservation of documentation and their eventual de-classification. There is no mechanism to insulate the Service from the whims of a rogue Director in respect to preservation of the integrity of the institution and it's accumulated institutional resources, memory and documentation. Whatever information the Service will gather constitutes part of our national treasure, heritage and history and should be preserved. What will stop an outgoing Director General from prescribing the destruction of all information gathered in his or her tenure of service?  There are a lot of advances in ICT that can enable the Service to archive most if not all the information and documentation than the s  discretionary  destruction of  information gathered at tax payers expense.

The Bill does not mention at all that officers in this Service will have police powers neither does it provide for the procedures for interaction with the public.  But, there is a curious provision, in Part III Article 20, which prohibits the service from “torture or any other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment”. Though in the face of it this is a mundane provision, nowhere in the Bill is the service allowed detention or custodial powers. How then can the proposed law purport to prohibit the Service from torture? The mischief in this is the possibility that the service runs what has now come to be referred to "safe houses"-illegal detention centers that are not covered by any law. There is evidence in the public domain regarding the cooperation between Kenya and Foreign Intelligence services. It is also instructive to note that there is evidence that  Americans have been running such facilities around the World that are now a cause of international furore where torture and other inhumane acts took place. Such facilities would not be allowed to operate in US soil hence they had to be established elsewhere. Has the service been complacent in these acts in association with foreign powers? Is there more than we know in the fight against terrorism? If the entire Bill does not mention any custodial facilities-at what point will citizens and others come into contact with the service to the extent of being tortured? Will the agency have police powers? Will it be dealing directly with public on a day today basis and if so what will be the nature of such interactions and under what Law?

But more worrying is the tone and choice of words that the drafters of the Bill have used. Take for example the following two instances: Art 38(4) the committee shall conduct its functions within a ring of secrecy… and Art. 40 (2) gives absolute immunity  to the Director General and his officers from disclosing information in any proceedings in a court, tribunal, commission of inquiry or any other body....All these on your TAXES. So the bigger question is what Agency does this proposed piece of law intend to create?

It is for these reasons and in the interests of living to the spirit and letter of the Constitution, participation, transparency and accountability and of disabusing this institution of its past hangovers of secrecy, torture and acting like a law unto itself that WE must reject this law.

+++++
Atunga Atuti O.J. is the Chief Executive Officer of The East African School of Human Rights (email: eajournal@email.com)