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Kenya's sexual offences law unjust to boys, Chief Justice says

Friday May 17 2019
CJ

Chief Justice David Maraga at the Supreme Court on November 20, 2017. He said the Kenyan criminal justice system is biased against the boy-child in issues of sexual offences. PHOTO | FILE | NATION MEDIA GROUP

By NATION AFRICA

The Kenyan criminal justice system is biased against the boy-child in issues of sexual offences at a time when gender-based violence cases are on the rise, Chief Justice David Maraga has said.

The CJ made the remarks during the launch of a two-day peer learning seminar on criminal justice system on gender-based violence.

He said the issue has been exacerbated by gaps in the criminal justice system and expressed dissatisfaction in the manner in which a bill to decriminalise teenage sex was handled in Parliament.

“There is an obvious injustice of filling up the jails with teenage offenders who get intimate with fellow teenagers as they experiment in their adolescence,” Mr Maraga said.

He explained how the Federation of Women Lawyers (FIDA) tried to address the issue by presenting a memorandum on the bill which proposed amendment on the Sexual Offences Act in the National Assembly two years ago but in vain.

“The proposal was intended to clarify principles of law and to incorporate values and principals as enshrined in the Constitution of Kenya 2010. Fida had noted the problematic Section Eight of the Sexual Offences Act, which criminalises sex among teenagers, and had proposed that the section be amended along the Romeo and Juliet right so as to reduce the number of teenage boys going to jail,” Mr Maraga said.

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Fida wanted the courts to have the discretion in sentencing where sexual offences are between minors, he said, but the bill was shot down.

This needs to be seriously thought about, the CJ said.

Mr Maraga lauded the Court of Appeal for setting a precedent in one of the cases.

“Luckily, our courts are responding appropriately, for example when the Court of Appeal held that it is unconstitutional to criminalise sexual acts among teenagers,” he said.

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