From Victims to Community Defenders’
By Mothers
of Victims and Survivors Network
Reviewed by
Margaretta wa Gacheru
How long can
our Kenya government and the international community turn a blind eye to the
impunity, cold-blooded criminality, and sheer human cruelty of our national
police?
That is the
question one has to ask after reading the new book by the Mothers of Victims
and Survivors Network entitled ‘From Victims to Community Defenders.’
Published as
a project of the Mathare Social Justice Centre, the book encapsulates countless
horrors enacted by officers ostensibly employed to protect members of the
public. But in reality, they do the exact opposite
The book
features 35 tragic stories of impunity, including the daylight murders of the
mothers’ sons and husbands, nephews and cousins. There are also a few fathers
and brothers who have joined the Network, usually after having had a loved one
‘disappeared’ or reappeared in the mortuary without fanfare.
The stories,
accompanied by photographs of survivors by the British photojournalist Ed Ram,
might seem unthinkable since the sheer lawlessness of the police makes the
Mafia look like Boy Scouts. It’s the first-hand accounts of the Mothers Network
that give the book its credibility and also advance MSJC’s agenda to document
what are known as EJEs, ‘extra-judicial executions’ in Kenya’s informal
settlements.
Such stories
cannot help but arouse human sympathy for these indefensible daily deeds that
go on around the clock in Nairobi’s informal settlements as well as in other
urban centres around Mombasa, Kisumu, Nakuru and elsewhere. The stories are
also meant to serve as documented evidence that can hold up in court when MSJC
and the Mothers file cases against the police.
But if the
book doesn’t convert the reader into also becoming a ‘community defender’ him/herself,
which it could do, then one can visit the Circle Art Gallery where professional
photographer Ed Ram has taken and displayed a series of striking portraits of
many of the women and men who are members of the Mothers Network. Circle Art is
also one venue where the book is for sale. Otherwise, they can be obtained at
MSJC itself.
Most of Ram’s
sharp black and white portraits convey the sense of tragedy, stoicism, and loss
that these women and men have endured since the demise of their loved one. In
some cases, mothers have lost more than one son. In others, if a son survived
being shot, as in the case of 12-year-old Collins, he may be traumatized for
the rest of his life. And often, the loved one who died may have also been the
family breadwinner, which de facto has made the Mothers Network not just a
source of solace and psychological comfort for the survivors. It has also
become a means of sustaining those who have been left behind.
The one
portrait in the book that conveys a courageous look of defiance, anger, and
desire to fight back is that of Lucy Wambui, who coincidentally is the one who
started up the Mothers Network in 2017. She has been spearheading the Network’s
outreach ever since.
Lucy lost
her husband Christopher Maina when she was eight and a half months pregnant and
just days after they had moved out of Mathare and found a house in Githurai.
But as he still had casual jobs near their old home, he had returned to Mathare
on the fateful day that he died inexplicably at the hand of police. Lucy calls
the man who killed her spouse a ‘serial killer cop’ and even names him in the
book. But she has yet to see justice done on her family’s behalf.
If Lucy and
the other 34 stories don’t touch your heart, then one must see the nine-minute
video created by Ram for MSJC and being shown at Circle Art. It goes straight
to the point and lays out the challenge that every person in the settlements
face, apparently because they are poor, vulnerable, and easy prey for men who
have gotten used to using their guns with impunity. But it does so as a clarion
call to get involved after feeling the righteous indignation that is
inescapable if one has an iota of feelings for the residents of Nairobi who
deserve humane treatment from the police.
The beauty
of the video entitled ‘MSJC: The Start of a Movement’ is that it captures the fearless
spirit of Mathare youth as well as of MSJC. That spirit is best expressed by one
of the MSJC researcher, Juliet Wanjira who says in the film, ‘When you lose
your fear, They lose their power.’
MSJC was
started in 2015 by Gacheke Gachihi.
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