World News | A Kenyan Court Says 2022 Shooting Death of a Pakistani Journalist by Police in Nairobi Was Unlawful

Get latest articles and stories on World at LatestLY. A Kenyan court on Monday ruled that the 2022 shooting death of a Pakistani journalist by police in Nairobi was unlawful and unconstitutional, a lawyer and his family said.

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Islamabad, Jul 8 (AP) A Kenyan court on Monday ruled that the 2022 shooting death of a Pakistani journalist by police in Nairobi was unlawful and unconstitutional, a lawyer and his family said.

Justice Stella Mutuku in the ruling in Nairobi also faulted Kenya's attorney general and the director of public prosecutions for laxity in investigating the shooting of Arshad Sharif, after police opened fire at his car at a roadblock checkpoint.

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Sharif's family has accused an elite Kenyan police unit of intentionally killing Sharif. The 50-year-old journalist had fled Pakistan earlier that year to avoid arrest at home on charges of maligning Pakistan's national institutions.

A panel of Pakistani investigators in December 2022 concluded that the killing of Sharif was a “planned assassination”. Their report suggested that the bullet that fatally wounded Sharif was fired from either inside the car or from close range.

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Kenyan authorities are still investigating the killing and none of the police officers linked to the shooting has been arrested or charged.

In Monday's verdict, the court asked Kenyan authorities to conclude their probe of the officers. The court also ordered the government to compensate Sharif's family 10 million Kenyan shillings (USD 78,000).

Dudley Ochiel, a lawyer for Sharif's widow, Javeria Siddique, said the ruling was a “big win for the man's family and friends in Kenya, Pakistan and all over the world”.

Ochiel said he expects the public prosecutor to file a case against two officers suspected of fatally shooting Sharif at the roadblock.

The killing shook Pakistan and days later, thousands came out for Sharif's funeral.

Pakistan has said no state institution was involved in his death.

Siddique, who filed a complaint against Kenyan police together with Kenyan journalists' unions, said although she knew that her husband would not come back, “at least now everyone knows that he was killed intentionally”.

Police had initially blamed the shooting on “mistaken identity” during a search for a similar car involved in a child abduction case. (AP)

(The above story is verified and authored by Press Trust of India (PTI) staff. PTI, India’s premier news agency, employs more than 400 journalists and 500 stringers to cover almost every district and small town in India.. The views appearing in the above post do not reflect the opinions of LatestLY)

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