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For the Kenyan politician, see Mohamed Hussein Ali
Mohammed Hussein Ali
محمد حسين علي
Place of birth Eldoret, Kenya
Allegiance Flag of Kenya Kenya
Service/branch Kenya Police
Years of service 1977–2009
Rank Major General
Commands held Police Commissioner
Other work Chief Executive Postal Corporation of Kenya

Major General Mohammed Hussein Ali (Somali language: Maxamed Xuuseeyn Cali , Arabic language: محمد حسين علي‎) (born in 1956 in Eldoret) is a Somali military commander. A citizen of Kenya, he was the former Commissioner of the Kenya Police. He is currently Chief Executive of the Postal Corporation of Kenya.

Early life[]

Ali was born in 1956 in Eldoret, Kenya. His family belongs to the Sheekhaal, an ethnic Somali clan.

Ali went to Uasin Gishu School and then to Kolanya Boys High School in Busia District. He dropped out of high school after the death of his father to take care of his four younger siblings.

Career[]

Military[]

In 1977, Ali joined the Kenyan Army. He was eventually promoted to Brigadier in 2003 and to Major General in 2005. During his military career, he served as a military attaché in Zimbabwe and Uganda, and was commanding officer of the Western Brigade of the Kenya Army Paratrooper Battalion, as well as the Air Cavalry regiment in Embakasi. He is also a former chairman of the Ulinzi Stars football club.[1]

Police[]

Ali was appointed to the position of Commissioner of the Kenya Police in 2004 by the former President of Kenya, Mwai Kibaki,[2] whilst then holding the rank of Brigadier in the Kenya Army.[1] Ali was the first Police Commander to assume office from a post outside the police force.[1]

Anti-vice and corruption reform[]

Ali's first significant act upon his appointment was to disband the then feared Kenya Police Reserve, and to draft new recruitment procedures. He also authorised a mass clear-out of the police's hierarchy in a move to reform the force, which had long had a poor reputation and faced accusations of corruption and criminal involvement. The reform constituted the largest shake up of the police since independence.[3]

Crackdown on the Mungiki sect[]

Starting 2007, Ali's charges in the Kenyan police began severely cracking down on the notorious Mungiki sect, a local politico-religious group and banned criminal organisation known for, among other things, decapitating policemen.[4] For this perceived excessive use of force on its part, the police drew heavy criticism from human rights groups, particularly over the deaths of several hundred youth in its custody without trial over alleged links to the sect.[5][6]

2008 Post-election crisis[]

In 2008, controversy also surrounded the Kenyan police's response to the violence that rocked the country following a disputed presidential election, especially regarding a 'shoot to kill' order that is alleged to have come out of Ali's office. According to a report investigating the Post election violence, gunshot wounds most likely from police guns were the biggest single cause of death amongst the fatalities.[7] On 15 December 2010, Ali was named in a summons by the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, Luis Moreno-Ocampo, in relation to his putative role in the events that followed the 2007 elections. The ICC prosecution alleges that Ali authorised the use of excessive force and facilitated attacks against supporters of the opposition Orange Democratic Movement during the period's post-election violence.[8] 0n 23 January 2012 the ICC pre-trial chamber led by Judge Ekatrina Trendafilova ruled that there was not enough evidence against Mr Ali on the above to sustain the charges.

The Alston Report[]

In 2009, Major General Ali was in the news again when a report by UN special reporter Philip Alston into extrajudical killings recommended that he was a stumbling block to police reform and should resign.[9] This was despite at least one observer describing him in the Nairobi Chronicle as "without doubt, the most effective police chief Kenya has seen in a long time." While never shying away from making use of all of the available means open to him as head of Kenya's police, during his time as Commissioner, Ali, among other things, re-equipped the police with new patrol trucks and vehicles and trucks, secured modern policing equipment for his charges, revitalised the police over the long-term by increasing the recruitment of officers, and improved the sharing of information between the police and the public.[10]

Postal Corporation[]

On 8 September 2009, Ali was transferred from his position as Police Commissioner to Chief Executive of the Postal Corporation of Kenya.[11]

References[]

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The original article can be found at Mohammed Hussein Ali and the edit history here.
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