Abstract:
There has been an extensive and disturbing history of human rights violations in
Kenya from 1952 to 2013. The Kenyatta, Moi and Kibaki regimes presided over
shocking and ,sometimes,brutal human rights violations including abductions,
arbitrary arrests, detentions without trial, political executions, assassinations,
harassment, imprisonment, torture and other forms of oppression againist the
citizenry. These systemic methods of human rights violations were used to terrorize,
silence or otherwise neutralize those in opposition to the state system, and sometimes
carried out under inhumane laws. This study traces human rights violations in Kenya
from 1952 through the immediate post-independence period to 2013, demonstrating
that human rights violations were a sediment problem that involved different players
at different critical junctures. The study extends the possible repertoire of human
rights violations to also include other categories of rights, assessed structural
imbalances between the conflicting cultural identities of different ethnicities and the
discriminatory and persecutory citizenship documentation policies. This thesis
reconstructs the narrative of gross human rights violations and traces the roots of
Kenya’s sullied human rights record over the last six decades and also argues that
post-independence architecture failed to provide truth, justice and reparations to the
victims and in putting an end to a culture of impunity that became entrenched in
Kenyan society. The study is premised on the Kenyan state as a unit of analysis. The
main objective of this study was to examine the history of the role of the state on
human rights violations in Kenya from 1952 to 2013. To achieve this objective, the
study was informed by three theories: neopatrimonialism, the theory of the African
state and post colonialism as major tools of analysis of data in the political hierarchy
of the state in an attempt to critique human rights violations in Kenya. Thestudy
adopts a historical research design to investigate past historical events, examines their
description and interpretation as well as explaining the underlying causes of these
events and their influence of the role of the state on human rights violations in Kenya
from a historical context. Methodologically, the study utilizes both primary and
secondary sources of data. Primary data was collected from the archives and from
Oral interviews in the field. Data analysis was done through documentary review,
content analysis and direct quotations. After collection, data was grouped to form
chapters of the thesis. The study adds new knowledge to the history of human rights
violations to explain and gap up the scanty historiography of the role of the state on
historical human rights violations in Kenya. The study is also expected to influence
decision makers in development agencies.