From: Papa Likondi
Yes Bob
I saw the story about three computers being stolen and wondered, kwani these guys operate without flash disks or CDs for Backup?
Bureeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee Kabisssssssssssaaaaaaaaa
On Thu, Oct 7, 2010 at 10:26 PM, Robert Alai wrote:
Guys
This Ndung’u Wainaina has staged another breakin. I told you that we have con NGOs in this country. They have been conning Kenyans that they have evidence linking whoever to whatever. We knew it was a ploy to get funding. Now they are staging robberies and breakins every now and then. Who in this day and age cannot backup data?
Please spare us this crap. This man should be arrested
ALai
Robbers strike at rights group offices in Nairobi
By NATION TEAM
Offices of a human rights organisation were broken into and information relating to election violence victims stolen.
The International Centre for Policy and Conflict lost three computers and a monitor in the break-in on Tuesday night.
The organisation said the doors to its ninth floor offices at Hazina Towers in Nairobi were not forced open and claimed “state security agents” staged the break-in.
Not petty criminals
Deputy director and head of programmes Paul Mwaura said all information on the election victims had been lost.
“They must have wanted to destroy all data relating to issues of criminal accountability and transitional justice which we are involved in. These were not petty criminals, these must be agents of the State,” Mr Mwaura said.
The organisation is lobbying for the prosecution of perpetrators of the violence in which 1,133 people died.
Earlier this year, the group arranged a meeting between victims of the violence and International Criminal Court chief prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo in Nairobi’s Kasarani area.
The centre has also been mobilising victims to tell their stories. Government spokesman Alfred Mutua dismissed the ICPC’s claims.
Dr Mutua said the new Constitution allowed police to obtain a warrant to search any premises.
“Those are figments of the imagination deliberately calculated to make the government look bad. Why should the police raid a private office when they can obtain a warrant to search it?” he asked.
And on Wednesday, the ICC lead investigator returned to the country following a decision by the government to appoint a judge to witness the taking of statements.
The official had left the country after the government delayed the process of taking statements from top civil servants who were in charge of security during the violence.
Sources said the ICC official will also visit IDP camps in the final leg of investigations before the arrival of Mr Moreno-Ocampo later this month.