
British ‘service person' arrested on suspicion of ‘raping' woman near army training camp in Kenya
ARMY 'RAPE' British 'service person' arrested on suspicion of 'raping' woman near army training camp in Kenya
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A BRITISH "service person" has reportedly been arrested on suspicion of raping a woman near an army training camp in Kenya.
The alleged rape happened last month, with the man arrested after a group of soldiers visited a bar in the area near the town of Nanyuki, BBC reports.
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The incident occurred close to the British Army Training Unit Kenya (Batuk)
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A Brit 'service person' has reportedly been arrested on suspicion of raping a woman near an army training camp in Kenya
Credit: Getty
Military cops have questioned the bar owner and security guards who were working the night of the incident that occurred close to the British Army Training Unit Kenya (Batuk), The Sunday Times reports.
According to the paper, the bar owner said: "They [soldiers] like this place and when I meet some of them in the supermarkets, they tell me they have been banned from coming here.
"Sometimes they get too drunk and I drop them at the gate for free."
An investigation is being carried out by the UK military police from the Defence Serious Crime Unit.
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The UK Ministry of Defence confirmed in a statement that a "service person" had been arrested in Kenya.
A MoD spokesperson said in a statement: "We can confirm the arrest of a Service person in Kenya.
"As the matter is the subject of an ongoing investigation by the Defence Serious Crime Command, we will not comment further."
A UK-Kenya defence cooperation agreement allows thousands of Brit soldiers to train in the East African country every year.
About 200 UK troops are based there permanently to train Kenyan soldiers.
Some Kenyan people have complained for a long time about the soldiers behaviour alongside the atmosphere around their training camp near the town of Nanyuki.
There was an outcry over the 2012 death of 21-year-old Agnes Wanjiru, who was last seen alive leaving a bar with British troops near their training camp.
Bloodcurdling moment ruthless soldier cocks his gun & presses it against woman's temple during restaurant brawl
Her body was tragically later found in a septic tank.
Wanjirus family has campaigned for years for the suspected perpetrator, a serving British soldier at the time, to be charged.
In April, UK Defense Secretary John Healey met with Wanjirus grieving family in Kenya and vowed to help the family secure the justice they deserve.
The British Army has launched an inquiry into allegations of unacceptable behavior by UK personnel in Kenya.
The MoD said in a statement that all British personnel in the country "have clear direction about how to behave, on and off duty, must complete mandatory training and attend compulsory briefings on conduct."
It added: "We will have zero tolerance for unacceptable behaviour."
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The barrister claimed he has never submitted this much evidence to the CCRC and 'if this is not referred back to the Court of Appeal then one has to question the purpose of the CCRC'. A new TV documentary, Lucy Letby: Beyond Reasonable Doubt?, released earlier this month, brought new details surrounding the high-profile case into the public domain. Within the show, new photos emerged of the serial killer partying at her friend's wedding while she was on bail for the murder of seven babies. The images were released by her friend Dawn, who did not want to use her surname, who said that she was so glad she was there' at her wedding. She was so sure of her friend's innocence that she sought permission from the authorities to invite Letby to her wedding while she was on bail. Dawn (pictured) has stood by Letby despite her conviction and remains convinced of her innocence. 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She reveals that, at sixth form college together, both trained in peer-support counselling and learned of a common method to deal with anxieties – to write down your worst fears and feelings. The documentary also hears from Karen Rees, former head of urgent care nursing at the Countess of Chester Hospital where Letby worked. Lucy Letby was devastated by the accusations against her, according to Karen Rees (pictured), former head of urgent care nursing at the Countess of Chester Hospital where Letby worked Sat in a car outside the hospital, Ms Rees said, 'I loved working here'. 'We were all shocked, really shocked,' she added, 'when I look back to when it all started, I don't think any of us thought that this storyline would ride out the way it has.' Between 2015 and 2016 nearly three times as many newborn babies had died than the normal numbers. Ms Rees said: I was made aware that the mortality rates appeared to be higher than they had been in the previous years. 'It was tough because everyone was trying, thinking please let us find a reason for this.' Letby was often accused of being cold and unfeeling during her trial for murder. But according to Ms Rees, she was in fact devastated by the accusations against her. Ms Rees recalled how Letby once told her: 'You're the only person that hasn't asked me, 'Have I purposely harmed anybody?'.' Meanwhile, Mr McDonald is shown in the documentary being questioned outside the CCRC offices in Birmingham by the Daily Mail's Liz Hull, who has covered the case from the beginning. He admits to camera that, despite the involvement of some of the most distinguished doctors in the world who say no crime was committed, an appeal may yet be refused on a technicality – that the objections to the guilty verdict could have been raised at the original trial, so it was not the court's fault that things went wrong. Hitchens said he believed the notes were written, as the documentary suggests, on the advice of Letby's counsellors and cannot be taken as sincere admissions of guilt The Trial of Lucy Letby: We leave no stone unturned in the case. Listen to the Mail's No.1 True Crime podcast everywhere now. Mr McDonald asks: 'If they dismiss this evidence, to say 'Well, it could have been called at trial... she's innocent but we are not going to take any notice of it because they could have done that, so we will let an innocent person stay in prison' – well, what is the logic of that?' Earlier this month, Peter Hitchens declared on the Daily Mail's True Crime Podcast that her case must be immediately 'reopened in the courts' following the release of the 'powerful' documentary. Mr Hitchens told Mail columnist Sarah Vine: 'I would think anybody who watched that documentary, whatever your feelings are, would think now it's time to reopen the case. 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