DCI dismisses claims of Meth lab in Namanga, says Mexican and Nigerian cartel suspects arrested

The lab, located in Namanga near the Kenya-Tanzania border, was dismantled in September 2024 following a coordinated multi-agency raid.
The Directorate of Criminal Investigations (DCI) has dismissed reports of a Mexican large-scale methamphetamine production lab located in Namanga near the Kenya-Tanzania border.
The DCI on Wednesday clarified that the said lab had not been in operation, and was only in its primary stages of being set up when the Mexican, Nigerian and other cartels linked to the syndicate were arrested in September and October last year.
While partly confirming the presence of the
lab, DCI revealed that the said clandestine lab was in the process of being set
up with samples and structures already in place but the plan never actually
materialised since the sleuths managed to nab six suspects, including a Mexican
and a Nigerian linked to the same.
Those arrested include Alvarado Israel
Vera (Mexican), two Nigerian nationals Agwu Ojukwu and MBA, Agwu Ogba who are brothers, and three Kenyans namely; Betty
Muchemi, Caroline Wambui Muchira and Francis Maina Gachau.
“The circumstances surrounding the discovery of the lab and the suspects implicated contain misrepresentations and lack sufficient details about the case,” the DCI said in response to a Daily Nation report on the lab.
“Based on the facts (and others which are
sub judice), we clarify that the drug cartel did not succeed in
operationalizing their illegal activities in the country and that no member or
members of the criminal ring have been deported from the country for trial
elsewhere.”
According to the DCI, Anti-Narcotics Unit
officers launched an operation on September 12, 2024, following a tip-off from
the public regarding the setting up of the lab on a 10-acre parcel of land, located
8km from the Nairobi-Namanga highway.
“Upon visiting the site, two iron sheet
structures were discovered, with one housing laboratory apparatus, including
chemicals, and the other hosting a chemical store, kitchen, and sleeping area.
Based on the team's observations, a drug lab was being set up,” DCI noted.
“Indeed, two exercise books bearing lab
drawings and chemical formulas were recovered at the scene, alongside a mobile
phone belonging to a Mexican suspect.”
A probe led to the arrest of the first suspect
Betty on September 14 at her house in Ruiru, after she was linked with the purchase
of the land in collaboration with the two Nigerians.
“She is believed to have championed the
setting up of the lab at the site, jointly with a second suspect, Agwu Ojukwu,
a Nigerian national. From her house, several documents linking her to the
purchase, importation and distribution of the land, chemicals and equipment
found at the scene were seized,” the DCI stated.
One of the Nigerians MBA, Ogwu Ogba was appreahed
on October 1, in Lavington while his brother Ojukwu, the mastermind in the
syndicate was pounced on at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport two days
later October 3 while trying to flee the country.
“Investigations revealed that Ojukwu was
the mastermind and architect of the clandestine lab. He is believed to have
visited Kenya for the first time in 2007 allegedly for business, and owns
multiple businesses in Nigeria, Gabon, South Africa and China. He is also
linked to a drug cartel in South America,” explained the DCI.
The Mexican suspect Alvarado, already identified
to be a former member of the investigative unit in the Mexican police and who was
sought for his expertise in cooking meth was also arrested at JKIA while
attempting to escape back to his country.
Detectives are still pursuing his fellow
Mexicans believed to have gone into hiding after their orientation.
The other suspects Caroline and Francis were
apprehended for their roles in the purchase and distribution of the chemicals,
together with two Kenyan companies, ENORMED PHARMA LTD and BLTLINK SUPPLIES
LTD, which were used in the purchase, importation, and supply of the chemicals
for laboratory use.
The authorities say an expansive investigation has since revealed a powerful international nexus traversing the borders of Nigeria, India, Mexico, South Africa and Gabon.
A March 2025 report by the United States Department of State Bureau for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement
Affairs highlighted the shocking revelation confirming that Jalisco New
Generation Cartel (CJNG), one of Mexico’s most dangerous criminal
organizations, was operating a large-scale drugs lab in the country.
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