Two brothers, activist abducted by masked men driving Subarus in Kitengela
Two families in Kitengela are gripped by
anguish after their loved ones were abducted on Monday.
Bob Njagi, leader of the Free Kenya Movement,
was forcibly taken by masked individuals from a matatu he was traveling in.
Njagi was last seen in an interview with
Citizen TV outside Kamukunji Police Station, where businessman Jimmy Wanjigi
was detained on Monday evening.
"The last time we saw him was on Monday
on Citizen TV. Later, we were told he was abducted by unknown people... His
phone has been unreachable since,” Frank Njagi, Bob’s father, said.
Shortly after, the Kitengela-bound matatu he
was in was intercepted by a Subaru, with three masked men forcibly taking him
away and speeding off.
"He was in a Rembo matatu. They took him
by force,” said Frank.
Since then, Bob’s whereabouts are unknown,
his phone remains off, and police deny any involvement.
"Even if they arrested him, why not take
him to court?" Isabela Njagi, Bob’s mother, posed.
Meanwhile, two brothers were abducted by men
in a Subaru outside their home in Kitengela, and their whereabouts remain
unknown, with police remaining mum on their disappearance.
Aslam Longton and his elder brother Jamil
were abducted outside their Kitengela home the same Monday. Their family has
not slept in peace since.
"I was called by neighbors who told me
that my husband was taken outside,” said Salwa Mohamed, Jamil’s wife.
Witnesses report that a Subaru blocked their
car, then forcibly took the brothers. Aslam had been organizing protests
against the government in Kitengela.
"They had a Subaru... And they had been
parked here for a while, watching,” said a boda boda rider who requested his
name be withheld.
Their other brother Abdirazak Longton said: "Walikuwa
wanaandikia mabarua wanapelekea OCS, wanamwambia tarehe fulani na fulani kutakuwa
na maandamano.”
Despite reporting these abductions, both
families have received no updates, and their phones remain off. The family of
the two brothers has expressed growing fears for their safety and concern about
their whereabouts.
In Kibra, Boniface Ambasou and Moses Mwawura
Njau vanished from the streets of Kibra's Laini Saba area on August 2, shortly
after the nationwide anti-government protests. Twenty-one days later, their
families are still searching for answers.
Amid government assurances that forced
disappearances and abductions would cease, reports of such incidents persist.
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