Flora Terah: The Politics of Personal Violence

Flora Terah with Michaele Jean. Image credit: www.peacockpoverty.org

In an event that is co-sponsored by The Harriet Tubman Institute and the Institute for Feminist Legal Studies at Osgoode Hall Law School, Kenyan political candidate Flora Terah spoke at Osgoode on Thursday, March 3, 2011, beginning at 12:30.

On September 7th, 2007, Kenyan parliamentary candidate Flora Igoki Terah was abducted and tortured by a group of men. The attack took place with the intention of silencing her election bid against a minister in President Mwai Kibaki’s government, and was carried out with impunity. Terah’s physical recovery took weeks and resulted in the loss of her place in the December election, but the hardest blow came the following year when her 19-year-old only son was murdered, his death brushed aside by the authorities. Flora Terah’s case is not an isolated incident – 153 cases of electoral violence against women candidates were reported to Nairobi’s Education Centre for Women in Democracy leading up to the 2007 elections. For Terah, this injustice has given her all the more reason to hold onto her political aspirations. She has since founded Terah Against Terror – an organization for victims of electoral violence, and works with the Centre for Multiparty Democracy to strengthen the democratic process in Kenya. Her book, "They Never Killed My Spirit" – an account of her experiences – was published last year. Flora Terah plans to run for parliament again in the 2012 Kenyan elections.

To read an interview with Flora Terah, click here.

Place: 
Osgoode 107, York University
Date: 
Thu, 03/03/2011