Police Recruitment Exercise to Proceed Monday as High Court Lifts Suspension

A police recruitment exercise in Kenya.
A police recruitment exercise in Kenya.
Photo
National Police Service Commission

The long-awaited national police recruitment exercise will go ahead as planned on Monday, November 17, after the High Court lifted its earlier suspension of the process on Friday.

The recruitment will go ahead following a ruling by Justice Bahati Mwamuye, who had previously halted the exercise in response to a petition filed by activist Eliud Matindi.

Justice Mwamuye had issued a conservatory order on Monday, November 10, halting the recruitment pending the determination of Matindi’s petition.

Matindi had challenged the recruitment exercise announced by Inspector General of Police Douglas Kanja on November 4, arguing that the IG lacked constitutional authority to independently conduct the recruitment.

Administration Police Constables during a pass-out parade at Administration Police Training College, Embakasi, Nairobi, January 11, 2024.
Administration Police Constables during a pass-out parade at Administration Police Training College, Embakasi, Nairobi, January 11, 2024.
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Ministry of Interior

Kanja Reacts 

This development paves the way for prospective recruits to participate in the exercise as scheduled, with IG Kanja directing applicants to report to their respective centres as initially planned.

Speaking to the media after the ruling, a visibly pleased IG expressed hope that the exercise would advance the reform agenda within the service.

“The recruitment now goes on. I want to encourage young men and women to troop in their numbers. I also want to assure them that they will get the best from the republic. We are not only giving jobs to them but also building a reformist team,” Kanja said.

Meanwhile, on Thursday, IG Kanja urged the court to intervene urgently, arguing that delaying the exercise posed a serious national security risk and undermined efforts to strengthen staffing ahead of the 2027 elections.

Additionally, Kanja cautioned that any further delay in approving the exercise would leave him without sufficient time to train and deploy the recruits ahead of the elections.

For nearly a month, the recruitment exercise has faced legal setbacks following a series of cases filed in court. In October, the Employment and Labour Relations Court nullified an initial planned police recruitment, ruling that the National Police Service Commission (NPSC) lacked the legal authority to preside over the exercise.

In the ruling delivered on October 30, Justice Hellen Wasilwa held that recruitment, training, and delegation of duties to police officers fall squarely under the mandate of the NPS, a decision that gave Inspector General Douglas Kanja the green light to announce fresh recruitment dates.

Even so, with the recruitment set to proceed as initially scheduled, it is set to give both the country and the Inspector General a significant boost in efforts to beef up police numbers ahead of the 2027 General Election. 

The service has been unable to recruit for several cycles due to budget constraints, leaving staffing levels below the required threshold.

Meanwhile, according to NPS, applicants in the upcoming recruitment will be required to meet several minimum requirements, including being Kenyan citizens aged between 18 and 28 years, holding a valid national ID, and having at least a D+ in KCSE with a minimum D+ in either English or Kiswahili.

Candidates are also required to be physically and medically fit, with a minimum height of 5ft 8in for males and 5ft 3in for females. Female applicants must not be pregnant during recruitment or training.

Murkomen Kanja
Interior Cabinet Secretary Kipchumba Murkomen and Inspector General of Police Douglas Kanja during a Jukwaa la Usalama forum in Nyeri on Thursday, August 21 , 2025.
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Kipchumba Murkomen