Dienstag, 7. Januar 2025
Will there be an investigation in Kenya?
On Monday, four Kenyans who were allegedly kidnapped and held in unknown locations for half a month were released. The four are cartoonist Gideon Kibet alias Kibet Bull, his brother Ronny Kiplangat, college student Billy Mwangi, content creator Bernard Kavuli and Peter Muteti.
Kibet, who was abducted from downtown Nairobi, was found in Luanda, 383 kilometers away. Mwangi, who was abducted in the town of Embu, walked home while Kiplangat, who was captured in Kikuyu, was released in Machakos.
Kavuli, who was abused and driven away in Ngong, was found in Kitale while Muteti, who disappeared in Uthiru, was abandoned by his abductors in downtown Nairobi.
“You cannot be released by kidnappers and still go to any disco in Luanda. That is impossible." And you have been gone for 15 days and you still look clean and relaxed dancing matanga in a disco," he questioned in reference to Kibet's alleged abduction.
Chairman of the National Assembly's Committee on Defence, Intelligence and Foreign Relations Nelson Koech has questioned the recent wave of abductions after four alleged abductees were released.
Koech, an ally of President William Ruto, however, called for a public inquiry into the abduction cases. "I would like to call on the Director of Criminal Investigation to go further and invite and interrogate these young men who were released yesterday to find out what happened," he stated.
The newspaper Kenyans writes that and it is nice to question it. what does the "alleged" kidnappings mean? even if a member of the government said, and seriously, that these young people had "kidnapped" themselves, which more likely indicates government involvement, is a diversionary tactic. the police are having a hard time, documents have leaked out that prove that the police's statements do not correspond to the facts.
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