CJ Koome calls for efficient investigations and fast tracking of SGBV cases

Partners Roundtable Forum explores a collaborative approach in enhancing the administration and access to justice for children
20th December 2023
Zambia Anti-Corruption Commission meets NCAJ to benchmark on best practices in efficient handling of corruption cases
20th December 2023

CJ Koome calls for efficient investigations and fast tracking of SGBV cases
Chief Justice Martha Koome has called for enhanced efficiency in investigating incidents of Sexual and Gender-Based Violence, and elimination of delays in hearing and determination of the cases in court.

The CJ expressed concern over statistics by the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics’ (KNBS) ‘Demographic and Health Survey’ (2014) that indicated that 45 per cent of women and girls aged between 15 and 49 have experienced physical violence, while 14 per cent have experienced sexual violence in their lifetime.

“This situation is alarming and unacceptable given the serious toll that SGBV inflicts on survivors. SGBV causes physical, psychological, and emotional harm to our women, men, girls, and boys and often leads to stigma, discrimination, and social exclusion,” she said at the start of the inaugural Sexual and Gender-Based Violence National Conference.

The two-day conference is taking place in Nairobi under the theme: ‘Enhancing Administration and Access to Justice for Victims of SGBV.’

The Chief Justice underscored the importance of proficiency in interventions by agencies in the justice sector, which is the key that bridges the gap between survivors’ trauma and hope for a better tomorrow.

“We must focus on enhancing our capacity to manage and protect evidence – the irrefutable voice that speaks the truth about an incident. This calls for familiarity with witnesses and proper handling of evidence according to best practice standards,” emphasised CJ Koome.

She added that justice actor’s frontline teams must adopt Active Case Management methods to identify and mitigate barriers to access to justice including reducing delays in investigations, hearing and determination of cases.

The CJ said that a proper knowledge of gender dynamics and a compassionate, respectful and trauma-informed approach should be the foundation upon which trust will be built with the victims.

“I want to reassure Kenyans that we remain committed to enhancing our efficiency and effectiveness in dealing with SGBV cases from upstream at the police level to downstream after sentencing and reintegration.”

She recalled that the Judiciary launched the Social Transformation through Access to Justice SGBV Court Strategy in June this year to guide the process of rolling out trauma-informed courts that will ensure expeditious and tailor-made justice to survivors.

She also said the Judiciary has rolled out 12 specialised Sexual and Gender-Based Violence courts across the country targeting hot spot areas, following the success of the pilot court in Shanzu, Mombasa.

 

Skip to content