News
Top Lawyers Unite to Oust Justice Wasilwa After Police Recruitment Ruling
“She rules first, then defends later.” – Ahmednasir Abdullahi
Police Recruitment Nightmare Just the Tip of a Massive Scandal Iceberg!
Kenya’s legal fraternity is in turmoil after a coalition of top lawyers launched an unprecedented campaign to force Justice Hellen Wasilwa out of office.
Her latest ruling, which halted the recruitment of 10,000 police officers, has ignited a judicial firestorm and exposed deeper cracks within the country’s courts.
Justice Wasilwa’s controversial decision, delivered on October 30, declared that the National Police Service Commission (NPSC) had no constitutional authority to recruit officers.
She ruled that the Inspector General alone holds that power.
The outcome froze one of the most anticipated national recruitments, throwing the country’s security plans into chaos and sparking public outrage at a time when crime rates are rising.
Senior Counsel Ahmednasir Abdullahi, a fierce critic of judicial corruption, announced he will personally petition the Judicial Service Commission next week to remove Justice Wasilwa from office.
He accuses her of repeated constitutional violations, abuse of power, and shielding herself from accountability through endless court stays.
In a blistering statement, he called her latest decision a “judicial coup” that undermines the rule of law and endangers national security.
Former Law Society of Kenya President Nelson Havi has joined the charge, branding Wasilwa “the most compromised judge in Kenya’s modern history.” He alleges she has a habit of reversing her own judgments under suspicious circumstances and entertaining last-minute applications that mysteriously benefit powerful litigants. For the first time in years, the two high-profile lawyers have united behind one mission — to end what they call “a reign of impunity” within the Judiciary.
“Justice Wasilwa has turned judicial discretion into a personal weapon,” Ahmednasir declared. “She rules first, then defends later. The JSC must act, or it becomes complicit.”
The alliance is already mobilizing multiple petitions and gathering evidence from lawyers who claim to have witnessed irregular interventions in her court.
Legal analysts, among them constitutional scholar Joshua Malidzo Nyawa, have torn apart her 86-page ruling, calling it a “copy-paste job” that ignores both constitutional interpretation and established appellate precedent.
Nyawa warned that the judgment strips the NPSC of its constitutional mandate and weakens institutional checks and balances within the police service.
Another lawyer, Miracle Mudeyi, described the ruling as “a constitutional absurdity,” saying it rewrites Article 246 of the 2010 Constitution, which explicitly grants NPSC the power to recruit and promote officers.
“If upheld,” Mudeyi warned, “this ruling gives a single office unprecedented control over police hiring — the very abuse the 2010 reforms were meant to prevent.”
Inside the security sector, the fallout has been immediate
Police colleges have suspended training intakes, and senior officers warn of operational gaps as thousands of planned deployments stall. Officials within the Interior Ministry privately say the judgment has disrupted manpower projections at a time when insecurity in Nairobi, Kisumu, and Mombasa is on the rise.
Justice Wasilwa has long been a magnet for controversy. In 2017, she ordered the jailing of top doctors’ union officials during a nationwide strike, a decision that drew fierce criticism from civil society.
In February 2025, she narrowly escaped suspension after a petition accused her of irregular involvement in a high-value hotel property dispute in Kericho. Several pending complaints at the JSC have been frozen by court orders she obtained, effectively shielding her from disciplinary action.
“We cannot have judges operating above the law,” Havi said in a recent media appearance. “When judgments become tools for favors and reversals come after phone calls, justice ceases to exist.”
The Judicial Service Commission now faces growing pressure to act decisively.
Insiders say several petitions against Wasilwa have been lodged but never progressed to the tribunal stage, largely due to procedural delays and fears of political backlash.
Chief Justice Martha Koome is walking a tightrope, balancing the constitutional independence of judges against public demands for accountability.
Meanwhile, the NPSC, through the Attorney General’s office, has already filed a notice of appeal at the Court of Appeal seeking to overturn Wasilwa’s ruling.
Government lawyers argue that her interpretation undermines the principle of civilian oversight over the police service and could lead to a dangerous centralization of power within the Inspector General’s office.
A stay order to resume recruitment is expected to be filed next week.
Justice Wasilwa has not responded to the new wave of attacks. In past affidavits, she has defended her record as fair and rooted in law, insisting that no judge should be punished for issuing unpopular decisions.
Her allies within the bench argue that external pressure from powerful lawyers risks turning the Judiciary into a hostage of public sentiment.
But this is no ordinary storm. The battle over one ruling has now become a test of judicial credibility in Kenya’s democratic order.
The Ahmednasir–Havi alliance represents a rare convergence of influence and intent — two of the most visible legal minds uniting to bring down a sitting judge.
Whether the JSC acts or not, the message is clear: the era of silent judicial controversies may be coming to an end.
As the nation waits for the next legal move, the stakes could not be higher. The fate of a single judge now carries implications for how far judicial accountability can go — and whether Kenya’s courts can still claim to serve justice without fear or favor.
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