Kenya Prisons has rolled out an awareness-raising programme to target their staff on issues of violent extremism.
Officials rolled out a programme Tuesday as part of efforts to contain the menace.
The Countering Violent Extremism in Prisons Program in Kenya was established in 2015 as a close partnership between the Kenya National Counter Terrorism Centre, the Kenya Prison Service, and the Global Center on Cooperative Security.
As prison services around the world look to optimize their approach to securely managing and rehabilitating terrorism-related offenders, a key consideration is whether prison staff have the understanding and skills to address this challenge effectively, said an official under the Global Centre on Cooperative Security.
Commissioner General of Kenya Prisons Brig John Warioba said over 30,000 prison staff and new recruits have been trained across all of Kenya’s prisons and there is increased institution-wide understanding of preventing and managing violent extremism.
“KPS has acquired a team of 80 experienced trainers stationed across the country and the KPS training college has integrated CVE-P training curriculum for recruits,” he said.
“We have increased information-sharing and coordination on terrorism concerns between prison stations and KPS headquarters.”
The event was attended by Principal Secretary for Prisons Salome Wairimu, director NCTC Rosalinda Nyawira and representatives from various embassies that supported the program.
Those present said they had identified the need to establish an institution-wide understanding of and approach to the issue of violent extremism across the prison service, from senior leaders to recruits.
To build this baseline, experts from the NCTC, KPS, and Global Center developed and piloted the CVE-P Awareness Raising Course, and worked with carefully selected and trained KPS officers to deliver it to all 30,000 existing officers and recruits at more than 130 prisons.
The course was developed to cover the essential topics and issues that prison staff at all prison facilities should understand to prevent, recognize, and respond to violent extremism in prisons while upholding human rights standards and professional practice.
The targeted group was provided with the skills and equipment needed to deliver the course to their colleagues effectively.
This included the development of a CVE-P Trainer Manual to standardize and ensure the consistent delivery of the training.
The programme has been piloted, reviewed, and tested for effectiveness.
“Analysis of learning outcomes and monitoring data demonstrate that the course delivered by KPS trainers facilitates increases in understanding on key topics around preventing and managing violent extremism among prison staff,” Wairimu said.
She said the implementation of the training across all prisons in Kenya involved coordination at all levels of the KPS.
Briefing sessions established the buy-in, procedures, and ownership needed to facilitate hundreds of trainings across Kenya’s eight administrative regions, in addition to KPS and its training college.
She added quality control and monitoring data collected during every training showed positive results from prison staff on the applicability, usefulness, and anticipated impact of the training.
“The combined effect of the training and the coordination of the program across the Kenyan prison system has also generated a marked increase in information-sharing on terrorism cases and concerns between prison stations and headquarters,” Warioba said.