• About US
  • Our Work
Friday, May 9, 2025
  • Login
Journalists For Justice (JFJ)
  • Home
  • Communities of Justice
  • Opinion & Analysis
  • Human Rights
  • Elections
  • About US
  • Our Work
  • Careers
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Communities of Justice
  • Opinion & Analysis
  • Human Rights
  • Elections
  • About US
  • Our Work
  • Careers
No Result
View All Result
Journalists For Justice (JFJ)
No Result
View All Result

Case of victim of mistaken identity during “War on Terror” begins before the Kenyan High Court

byJournalists For Justice
September 9, 2015
in Victim Networks
Reading Time: 4 mins read
27
A A
8
SHARES
90
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Whatsapp

A Kenyan High Court judge is set to hear On Monday, September 14th, the High Court of Kenya is due to hear for the first time the case of a victim of mistaken identity during “War on Terror” in 2007. 

Judge Isaac Lenaola is due in court on Monday for a mention of Kamilya Mohammedi  Tuweni , a businesswoman and mother of three from the United Arab Emirates who, after apparently being mistaken to be an Al-Qaeda operative, was kidnapped and then rendered to Somalia and Ethiopia by Kenyan counterterrorism forces in 2007 in the context of a sweeping operation against Somali “terrorist suspects” that the Kenyan government orchestrated that year.

She will give evidence by video link from London, where she is a client of our UK-based legal human rights organisation REDRESS. The hearing shall take place in Safaricom headquarters.

The case of Tuweni shines light on the illegalities committed during the so-called ‘War on Terror’ by Kenya’s Anti-Terrorism Police Unit and other security forces who violated basic human rights in conjunction with the USA’s CIA during a large operation that took place between December 2006 and February 2007 and which resulted in the rendition of nearly a hundred people in Kenya to Somalia on the suspicion that they were involved in terrorist activities.

RelatedPosts

Sudan government criticised for crackdown on journalists and rights defenders

Human rights groups renew justice calls for victims of enforced disappearances in Bangladesh

143,000 Burundian refugees to return home

Tuweni filed a complaint on 11 June 2009 before the High Court of Kenya against the Commissioner of Police and the Attorney General in their official capacities but her case has taken a long time to get to court, partly because of administrative difficulties within the court system.

Arrested on 9 January 2007 whilst on a business trip to Kenya to explore the possibility of starting a tea and coffee business in Oman,  she was shuttled between three East African countries (Kenya, Somalia and Ethiopia) by her captors for two and a half months, during which time she endured beatings; was asked for bribes; was threatened with rape; narrowly escaped being sold for drugs; was held in a jail full of holes in a war zone in Somalia while airstrikes were coming closer; and was forced to sleep outside of a secret base unprotected from the freezing cold.

Tuweni was finally released on 23 March 2007 in Ethiopia and became reunited with her family in the UAE on 25 March 2007, after arranging for her own ticket to fly home. To this day, she does not know why she was arrested. She was never charged with any crime during her 72-day ordeal and was never made aware of the reasons behind her detention, except for a hint she received from a Kenyan police officer, soon after arriving at the police headquarters in Nairobi, when he greeted her with a “Welcome, Al Qaeda”. Her case attracted considerable media attention in the UAE at the time. She asked the Kenyan court to be allowed to give evidence by video and the court agreed, as she is too afraid to ever set foot in Kenya again.

“Mrs Tuweni suffered the most appalling ill-treatment.  The need to fight terrorism is not a sufficient reason to ignore the rule of law. There is no justification for the treatment she received outside legal proceedings required by Kenyan domestic law,” said Carla Ferstman, Director of REDRESS. “We hope that Kenya remedies the immense suffering and damage that it has caused to her and her family, and also grasps this opportunity to help curb further counterterrorism abuses and complete its police reforms currently underway.”

A former employee of the telecommunications company Etisalat, Tuweni still suffers from nightmares about what happened, finds it difficult to sleep and feels very anxious. She is also scared when she sees police officers and when she travels abroad, and has not been able to go back to work because her reputation has been damaged.

In her claim, Tuweni is seeking a clear finding of Kenya having being responsible for her awful treatment, including a formal apology from the Kenyan government, as well as financial compensation for the violations of her rights whilst in the unlawful custody of Kenyan, Somali and Ethiopian authorities. In Kenya she is being represented by senior human rights lawyer Mr Samwel Mohochi, Managing Partner at Mohochi  and Company Advocates, briefed by REDRESS.

“Even though I am not a Kenyan citizen, I thought I would be afforded the basic protection any individual as a suspect would be entitled to. Instead, even my most basic rights were violated, leaving me at the mercy of my captors, who took this opportunity to abuse me as they pleased during my whole detention,” said Tuweni.

Mrs Tuweni’s redacted affidavit is available here.  Her redacted petition to the Court dated 11 June 2009 can be found here:.  The respondents’ redacted replying affidavit from 27 August 2014 is available here:  See here for more information.

Share3Tweet2Send
Previous Post

Survivor still haunted by fear her sons watched her being gangraped

Next Post

Bensouda concludes her Prosecution case in Ruto and Sang trials

Next Post

Bensouda concludes her Prosecution case in Ruto and Sang trials

Please login to join discussion

Recent Posts

  • Dilemma of ICC-wanted Netanyahu’s visit high on the agenda of new leadership in Germany
  • Michael Correa’s US conviction brings into sharp focus the slow pace of transitional justice in The Gambia
  • Genocide marks 31 years and the clock is ticking for six Rwandans held in Niger
  • Impunity continues to rob Sudanese victims of peace and justice
  • No easy road to ICC justice for Kenya’s victims of abduction and extrajudicial killing

About

We call out impunity wherever it occurs; we advocate justice for all victims of atrocity crimes; and we work with people of goodwill everywhere who share our values.

Twitter Facebook Instagram LinkedIn

Archives by Month:

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Communities of Justice
  • Opinion & Analysis
  • Human Rights
  • Elections
  • About US
  • Our Work
  • Careers

Copyright © 2019. Journalists for Justice has asserted its right to be recognized as creators and owners of the content here. Reproduction in part or in whole is permitted on condition that JFJ is acknowledged and notified.