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A compensation of 10m shillings ($78,000; £61,000) has been awarded to the widow of a prominent Pakistani journalist who was shot dead by police at a roadblock nearly two years ago in by a Kenyan court.

Arshad Sharif was a TV anchor known for his robust criticism of Pakistan's powerful military leaders and corruption in politics. The father-of-five received death threats that he flagged to Pakistan's top judge, before fleeing his home country to seek safety abroad.

Sharif's killing two months later at the hands of police in the Kenyan town of Kajiado caused outrage, and the slow response by officials prompted UN experts to criticise both Kenya and Pakistan.

Kenya's police had argued it was a case of mistaken identity but Sharif's widow, Javeria Siddique, said it was a contract killing carried out on behalf of an unnamed individual in Pakistan.

On Monday, the Kajiado High Court ruled that the Kenyan authorities had acted unlawfully and violated Sharif's right to life. It duly awarded Ms Siddique compensation plus interest until payment in full.

The judge also ruled that Kenya's director of public prosecutions and the independent policing oversight authority had violated Sharif's rights by failing to prosecute the two police officers involved. The court has ordered both bodies to conclude investigations and charge the officers.

Reacting to the ruling, the lawyer representing Sharif's widow, Ochiel Dudley, said "this is a win for the family and a win for Kenyans in their quest for police accountability".

Sharif's widow, Ms Siddique, expressed her gratitude to the Kenyan judiciary but added that her work was far from done.

The police had given conflicting police accounts of Sharif's death.

One account claimed the 49-year-old was travelling in a Toyota Land Cruiser which officers mistook for a similar vehicle that had been reported stolen.

In another version of events, police claimed that one of the car passengers had opened fire and then officers responded by shooting back.

Ms Siddique, a journalist, filed the lawsuit alongside the Kenya Union of Journalists and Kenya Correspondents Association last October.

She and her co-petitioners were seeking transparency, an apology, and accountability from the Kenyan authorities for what they called Sharif's "targeted assassination".

Lewis Musonye

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