Effects of Counter Terrorism on the Right to Privacy in Kenya
Abstract
The Republic of Kenya has in its young history been the victim of major terror attacks in the
capital city of Nairobi and Mombasa. The first terrorist attack took place in 1975 and
subsequently in 1981, 1998 and 2002 the first terror attack was domestic but the issue remains
unresolved to date while the 1981and 2002 were external attacks targeting Israeli hotels and an
Israeli airliner in Nairobi and Mombasa. The most significant attack was the US embassy
bombing of 1998 in Nairobi. The most recent however is the 21st September 2013 west gate
attack where unidentified gunmen attacked the west gate shopping mall in Nairobi. Following
the 11th September 2001 bombings and subsequent UN actions and resolutions including UN
resolutions 1373/01, 1377/01 and 1624/2005 constrained the Kenyan government to adopt
counterterrorism strategies that included, legislative reforms, institutional building, trainings and
bilateral and multilateral collaboration with like-minded states including the US and UK on the
actions(s). Kenya has reported thrice pursuant to resolution 1373 of 2001 and non with regards to
resolution on the 24th July 2002, 12th March 2003 and 2nd March 2004 and has not reported
ever since. This study shall examine and analyse the proactive, reactive, systematic counterterrorism
actions, challenges, and the lack of a clear effective counter-terrorism law in relation to
human rights concerns.
Publisher
University of Nairobi
Subject
Effects of counter terrorismRights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
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