What is the limit of money is one allowed to carry according to BBI?

Meria

Elder Lister
The Motorist Beaten by Traffic Police Lost Ksh150,000 During The Incidence
Francis Koigo says that after arrest, he was taken to Mwariki police station before being transferred to Nakuru later, leaving his vehicle on the road side.
When he came back for the car, he found that the money was missing.
 
The Motorist Beaten by Traffic Police Lost Ksh150,000 During The Incidence
Francis Koigo says that after arrest, he was taken to Mwariki police station before being transferred to Nakuru later, leaving his vehicle on the road side.
When he came back for the car, he found that the money was missing.
Poor kenyan ,
he ought to have put the money in mshwari ....next time anunue bunduki ,could have assisted .
 
There is the ideal world, and the real one,
There is the law, my friend, and there is common sense...

When you give a man an impossible task you are simply giving him a rope to hang himself with, that is what happens when you brand the police THE LAW rather than officers of the law

They are also human, give them a task they can successfully accomplish without having to deliberately and disproportionately hurt people, they may not say it openly but it hurts them too.

What we have achieved is make their vocation thankless and dehumanising, they are hated and ostracised, that is not fair.
 
When you give a man an impossible task you are simply giving him a rope to hang himself with, that is what happens when you brand the police THE LAW rather than officers of the law

They are also human, give them a task they can successfully accomplish without having to deliberately and disproportionately hurt people, they may not say it openly but it hurts them too.

What we have achieved is make their vocation thankless and dehumanising, they are hated and ostracised, that is not fair.
Without theorising too much, where is the borderline between reasonable and unreasonable force? Does it change depending on the suspect's reaction? Don't fall victim singing my rights, my rights.
 
Without theorising too much, where is the borderline between reasonable and unreasonable force? Does it change depending on the suspect's reaction? Don't fall victim singing my rights, my rights.

The person's reaction does matter, the borderline is the point at which such force achieves the desired goal, the goal has to be legally provided for.

The rights you mock are the reason we have the police in the first place, those rights and freedoms apply to them too, do you believe our men and women in uniform find pleasure in executing criminals in cold blood? Or encouraging mob justice and having to collect the mangled or charred human remains? Do you imagine they delight in whipping squealing women and hunting men down to break their bones? Do you truly believe they look forward to soliciting bribes on chilly mornings or in the scorching sun?

Police officers are human too banaa, they too deserve a vocation that does not leave them scarred and ostracised by the very society they gave themselves to serve
 
The rights you mock are the reason we have the police in the first place, those rights and freedoms apply to them too, do you believe our men and women in uniform find pleasure in executing criminals in cold blood?
You misunderstand me and I think it is my responsibility to communicate in such a way as to be understood.
I am not trashing our rights, and our responsibilities, I am saying that there are times to step back rather than escalate a disagreement unnecessarily.
There are also ways of reminding the police of your rights without disrespecting them.
 
Back
Top