15 Officers Charged With Abduction Of Two Indians, Kenyan Taxi Driver

Fifteen police officers accused of being behind the disappearance of two Indians and their Kenyan taxi driver have been charged before a Kahawa Law Court. 

The officers drawn from SSU, DCI, NIS and KWS were arraigned and denied seventeen counts of offences ranging from abduction to commit murder, cooperation in the execution of cruel treatment, conspiracy to commit a felony, forgery among others.

This is after the prosecution closed their miscellaneous application of last year.

 The DPP said investigations proved that all suspects were linked to the disappearance of the three people except one Francis Muendo Ndonye who was released unconditionally. 

The accused persons include: Chief Inspector Peter Muthee, Inspector James Kibosek, Corporals Joseph Kamau, David Chepcheng, Joseph Mwenda, John Mwangi and Hilary Limo, Constables Stephen Luseno, Simon Muhuga, Paul Njogu, Boniface Otieno, Elkana Njeru, Fredrick Thuku, John Wanjiku Macharia and Warden Michael Kiplangat. 

Appearing before senior principal magistrate Boaz Ombewa on Tuesday, officers Muthee, Kibosek, Kamau, Chepcheng, Luseno, Muhuga and  Macharia were charged with the first count of abducting two Indian men namely Mohammed Zaid Sami Kidwai and Zulfiqar Ahmed Khan.

The charge sheet states that on July 22 and 23 in Nairobi, the accused persons while on board motor vehicles KDD 632j, KDG 836X, KDH 262S and GKB 809U and other unknown vehicles, with intent to abduct, trailed and intercepted a motor vehicle with intent to cause Mohammed who is an Indian national, who was an occupant to be secretly and wrongfully abducted or maybe murdered or put in danger of being murdered. 

The seven faced another count of abducting Nicodemus Mwange who was driving the said motor vehicle to be wrongfully abducted or put in danger of being murdered on the same dates and place. 

The 15 faced an offence of jointly conspiring to commit a felony known as abduction with intent to murder Mohammed, Khan and Mwange. 

The court heard that John Macharia while being a member of National Intelligence Service (NIS), subjected Mohammed, Khan and Mwange to inhumane, cruel and degrading treatment.