Four women subjected to sexual assault in the violence that followed Kenya's disputed 2007 election are set to receive compensations after a judge ruled that the country had violated their rights when it failed to investigate their cases.
The court on Thursday,
December 10, ordered the government to pay $36,000 (£27,000) to each one of the
four ladies that were assaulted.
More than 1,000 people
died and 500,000 fled from their homes in the inter-ethnic violence that began
in late December 2007 following Kenya's election.
The violence broke out
after then-President Mwai Kibaki was declared the winner of the 2007 election.
His main rival Raila Odinga said the poll was rigged.
Current Kenyan
President Uhuru Kenyatta, who supported Mr Kibaki and his deputy William Ruto
who backed Mr Odinga - were charged by the International Criminal Court with
crimes against humanity after they were accused of fuelling the violence.
Both denied the
charges, which were later dropped.
Activists believe
Thursday's judgment could be a precedent for hundreds of others who were abused
in the wake of the election.
Despite some cases of
the post electoral violence going to the International Criminal Court, there
have been very few prosecutions relating to the unrest after it happened
Rights advocacy group,
Physicians for Human Rights, helped the girls with their legal cases saying it
hoped to "secure justice for the survivors".
It said that the
ruling was the "first time in Kenya that post-election sexual violence had
been legitimately recognised".
"Three of the
four to receive compensation were assaulted by members of the security forces
and so in effect their rights to life and security were infringed by the state
itself"Justice Weldon Korir said in the ruling.
The fourth woman was
attacked by an ordinary citizen, but the judge ruled that the state had
violated her rights when the police failed to investigate her complaint.
There were four other
people involved in the case, but Justice Korir said that as they had not
reported their cases to the police, the state could not be found at fault.
"This is a
historic day for survivors of the rampant sexual violence perpetrated in the
aftermath of the 2007 election, who have waited for accountability for far too
long," said Naitore Nyamu, head of the Kenya office of Physicians for
Human Rights.
"The court's
decision will reverberate widely for the prevention, investigation and
prosecution of sexual and gender-based violence in Kenya and around the
world."
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