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Kenya Flags Forgery of Travel Documents as the Biggest Cross-Border Threat

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Kenyan authorities have singled out the forgery of travel documents as the country’s biggest cross-border security concern.

In the past year, fake passports and identification documents accounted for 40 percent of the crimes apprehended at the border points in Suam, Malaba and Busia.

The government has pledged to reign in on the issue with finality. Principal Secretary for Internal Security Dr Raymond Omollo said the cases were recorded from June 2022 to June 2023 alone, and that more measures have been put in place to protect Kenya’s reputation and defend the integrity of its immigration policies.

Speaking in Lwakhakha Port of Entry and Exit, Dr Omollo stated that law enforcement agencies are under strict instructions to enforce the existing laws and policies, adding that more support will be dedicated to the multi-agency teams working at the border facilities to effectively flag out such cases in the best interest of the country.

Read: Court To Start Hearing Case Of Somali National In Forgery Charges

“It is in my interest and all of us that our points of entry and exit must work. That doesn’t require us to do anything out of the ordinary or something beyond what we are already doing. We must sustain and support the multi-agency approach to operations at the border point,” the PS noted after assessing the facility.

Drug trafficking has also been flagged as a major threat across the country’s borders, with seizures of narcotics accounting for about 21 percent of the criminal cases recorded during the same period.
Security officials have so far nabbed different packages of heroin, cannabis and cocaine destined to different parts in the region and beyond.

Omollo directed officials deployed in the areas to step up their vigilance and inspection to bring down the cases to near-zero.

“The individuals and various agencies who need to do specific tasks in this regard must be able to do their bit.”

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Counterfeits and contrabands, including sugar, maize, alcohol, ethanol and pharmaceutical drugs represented 15 percent of confiscations made by border control authorities, with 12 wanted criminals captured within that period.

Omollo further reiterated the government’s commitment to facilitating smooth and secure movement of people and goods across Kenya’s borders, in an effort to open more opportunities for legitimate economic activities for people in the East African region.

“We should be having flawless movement. In the next two months, what we’ll be expecting is an update and we’ll be doing a follow up,” the PS stated.

On Tuesday, Dr Omollo led a government delegation on a similar assessment tour of the One Stop Border Post in Suam, which is 86 percent complete.

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