People who went missing without a trace

Here are some of the other abductions of individuals who have left families with more questions than answers as the police remain clueless about what happened to their loved ones.

Dr Solomon Joloimat Lenengwesi

He went missing on July 8 and his case was taken up by Ipoa on August 22.

The businessman had just attended a meeting with a friend at a city hotel and was heading to Kileleshwa when he was stopped by a vehicle that blocked his way.

Four armed men jumped out of the car that had barred his way, introducing themselves as police officers before they left with him.

Mr Lenegwesi was with his friend in his vehicle. The friend had to drive the vehicle to Mr Lenengwesi’s home. He informed the family about what had transpired.

The family called Mr Lenengwesi’s phone number several times but it was not answered, said his sister Salome Lerosion.

But when his elder brother sent him a text message asking him whether he was okay, the businessman responded by saying “niko poa”.

“The [way] the message was drafted was a clear indication that it was not my brother who was responding,” Ms Lerosion said.

The family reported the abduction at the Lang’ata Police Station but were referred to the Kileleshwa Police Station because the incident happened there.

“We are asking the detectives following up on the matter to speed up the investigations so that we can get our brother back,” she said.

Mr Lenengwesi says in his LinkedIn profile that he was the chief executive at Global Investments Group.

He was also the Bingwa Lottery executive chairman when the company partnered with Halifax Limited in a move that allowed Kenyan mobile phone users to buy lottery tickets via short message services, the first end-to-end SMS-based lottery in the country.

He did not have any ongoing cases in court.

Mr Mwenda Mbijiwe

Mr Mwenda Mbijiwe went missing on Saturday, June 12, 2021.

Interestingly, despite the attention the matter was given by former Directorate of Criminal Investigations (DCI) boss George Kinoti, his disappearance was not included on a recent list issued by Ipoa.

Mr Mbijiwe was a known security expert and a former Kenya Air Force officer, serving for several years before he left to start his own company.

His disappearance also caught the attention of Rigathi Gachagua, who said that once the Kenya Kwanza coalition won the elections, they would get to the bottom of the matter. But this is yet to happen.

For four months, his phone number remained active on WhatsApp groups until Friday, October 14, 2021, when he left several groups, raising the question suggesting that someone else was using his mobile phone.

His family says he disappeared en route from Nairobi to Meru County. He was going to see his mother.

He went silent at 8 pm and his phone signal was traced to Thika, Kiambu County, detectives said.

The car he was last spotted in was traced to Kamiti Corner on Sunday, October 20, 2021, with the doors vandalised, keys missing and the radiator unplugged.

Mr Mbijiwe went missing alongside Mathew Muhatia Namasaka, his longtime driver.

Mr Mbijiwe had an ongoing case in court. In June 2019, he was charged with fraudulently acquiring money.

He was accused of conning Mr Fadhili Abdi Mohamed of Sh150,000 by pretending that he could get his sister Shamso Abdirahman a job at the United Nations.

Court documents in our possession claim Mr Mbijiwe committed the act on March 28, 2019, in Nairobi.

He appeared before Magistrate Martha Mutuku and pleaded not guilty. He was released on Sh50,000 cash bail.

Mr Dafton Mwitiki

He went missing on March 11, 2020, and close family members said he was in a hurry and was heading to seal a deal.

His brother Victor said Mr Mwitiki was a shrewd businessman who co-owned a restaurant in Nairobi alongside a Chinese national.

But police claimed he had engaged in a series of kidnappings in the city where families had to part with millions of shillings to secure the freedom of their loved ones.

In two kidnapping cases that were investigated to the end, the phone numbers were registered to his name, putting him at the centre of the crimes.

In the first case, a Chinese national was kidnapped on February 27, 2020, with the criminals demanding Sh100 million.

The plan was foiled by detectives from the National Intelligence Service (NIS) who tracked down the suspects and killed four of them, including an administration police officer.

A source privy to the investigations said the communications equipment used in demanding the ransom was a sophisticated one but the line was registered to Mr Mwitiki.

In the second case, a university student went missing in January 2020 and his kidnappers demanded a ransom of Sh100 million.

The case was reported on January 13, 2020, at the Kilimani Police Station, but investigations were dropped days later after the family withdrew the case and paid the kidnappers Sh4 million after negotiations.

The student’s phone was switched off in Roysambu on Thika Road at 11.50 pm on the same day he went missing.

Mr Mwitiki’s vehicle was found in a thicket near Juja Oakland Estate after an unidentified person was found driving it.

No one has been arrested in relation to the matter.

 

 

Michael Njau,  Adan Saibu Njau and Samuel Mungai

It has been more than three months since three friends – Michael Njau, a human rights activist, his cousin Adan Saibu Njau and their friend Samuel Mungai – vanished. Michael and Saibu had left Nairobi for Thika to meet Samuel, a taxi operator. On arrival, the trio is believed to have spent time together before Samuel offered to drop them back in Nairobi.

Along the way, investigators say, two other people boarded the vehicle and they all proceeded towards Nairobi. That was on April 24. It is not clear at what point the three disappeared, but police reports indicate that their phones were switched off between Githurai and Kasarani.

The three are part of the more than 2,350 people who have been reported missing since December last year, with some having gone missing years ago, leaving their families in agony as police approach the investigations with lethargy.

 

FRANCIS MUTUKU, 26

The Kenyatta University Student was supposed to graduate on December 20, 2019 with a Bachelors of Education degree. On the eve of his graduation, his sister, Agnes Mutuku, says Francis called her and they spoke briefly.

Later on at 5pm he texted his mother: “Hello mum….been struggling in the hands of strangers since morning, pray for me in my last moments as they send me to dance with the angels.”

The phone was then switched off and seven months later, he is still missing.

 

JANE WARUGURU IHURE NGUNJIRI, 51

Jane left her home in Amboseli Estate in South C in Nairobi heading for the CBD to meet a colleague who had accepted to be her guarantor for a loan.

Her husband, Mr Samuel Ndegwa, says CCTV cameras in the estate showed his wife left at 6.30am on the day she went missing.

The DCI, he said, took over the case from Langata Police Station where the incident was reported under OB number 74/15/6/2020. “It has been two weeks of agony,” he said.

JOHN NDUNGÚ KIMANI

The businessman was last seen on Wednesday, March 18, 2020 when he left home to go to work. To date, he has never been found.

His cousin, Moses Kiarie, says John’s phone was switched off on the same day he went missing.

“We have searched everywhere for him but we are yet to find him,” he says.


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