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The body organ thieves: Frightening new dimension in wave of kidnappings
Ms Jane Aloo Akech, 70, holds a photograph of her son James Ochieng’ Akech, 50, who has been missing for the last three months. Mr Akech was the Nakuru District accountant. Photo/JOSEPH KIHERI
In Summary
- Nine suspects shot dead as police say they are stepping up fight on abductors
Police have stepped up the war on kidnappers and recently killed eight suspects.
The killings, by Flying Squad and Special Crime Prevention Unit detectives, come amid reports of kidnappers who may be seizing people to harvest body organs.
According to a victim who reported his ordeal at Kasarani Police Station on September 24, he was held for four days before being released by his abductors after his organs were found to be “useless”.
The case is recorded at the police station as OB 10/24/9/2009 and is being investigated by the Criminal Investigation Department. Confessions by victims indicate that three gangsters, one of them a woman, have been prowling the city, abducting people who are then drugged before being driven to undisclosed locations, where they are subjected to medical examination with the aim of removing body organs.
Three people have so far confessed that they were kidnapped by the gang on Moi and Kenyatta avenues.
After some tests, the victims are either held further or bundled into a vehicle and driven to isolated locations, where they are dumped. The victims say nothing is taken from them.
However, police spokesman Eric Kiraithe has said no cases of kidnapping for harvesting of organs had been established.
“We have had cases of bizarre murders or people being shot by criminals who attempt to kidnap them but we have not been able to investigate cases of harvesting of organs,” Mr Kiraithe said.
Some diplomatic missions and multinational corporations have issued alerts to their nationals and staff to be cautious of kidnappers.
Detectives investigating the kidnappings have established that most victims are being held in dens on Thika Road or Dandora.
Security consultants working for the foreign missions and multinationals have issued a list of precautions to foreigners which include not driving alone at night and avoiding deserted areas.
Detectives who have begun hunting a gang behind the abductions for ransom on Monday night shot dead three suspects and recovered an AK-47 rifle loaded with five bullets in Dandora Estate.
Two weeks ago, police in Lang’ata shot dead four people suspected to be kidnappers in Otiende Estate and recovered an AK-47 rifle, two pistols and a piece of cloth doused in a sleep inducing chemical as they lay in wait for a victim. Another suspect escaped in a get-away car.
All the suspects, including an ex-convict recently released from prison, were from Ngecha in Kiambu. They are believed to have been involved in the latest kidnapping of a city-based part-time university lecturer identified as Paul Kariuki, two foreigners and a Sudan-based United Nations agency employee.
Mr Kariuki was reportedly held at an unknown location by gangsters who kidnapped him as he drove to his Ngong home on Saturday evening in the company of a friend.
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Allowing Somalis and Nigerians to enter the country easily has brought these type crimes.These saught of sadistic greed is not authentically Kenyan in nature.
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It is sad that some people see everything - even a serious social problem- through tribal lenses. My dear Kenyans, if Kenya sinks, Central Province very likely will not be the only new watering hole! Instead of blaming one tribe, or seeing one group as the epicenter of our woes, why not collectively think solutions.
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I have never been proud of my country,and iwill never be proud of it.its sad to be born a kenyan.




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