UN Rights Chief Urges Uganda to End Civilian Trials in Military Courts Following Besigye’s Abduction
UN Rights Chief Urges Uganda to End Civilian Trials in Military Courts Following Besigye’s Abduction
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Joseph Mwangi, who was abducted during anti-government protests in Kiambu, has been found safe after nearly a month in police custody without any official record of his arrest.
Mwangi's family, after a frantic search, successfully withdrew a missing person report, though the incident left him traumatized and raised concerns about unreported abductions by rogue police units.
Joseph Mwangi, 28, also known as Mwas, was taken from the Githurai 45 area on June 18, blindfolded, and driven to an unknown location.
Mwangi's ordeal saw him transferred between multiple police stations until he was finally moved to Muthaiga Police Station on Monday night, where he was released last Tuesday. Despite this, a spot check by Citizen TV on the station's occurrence book revealed there was no record of Mwangi's arrest.
Looking weak and frail, Mwangi walked into the Kasarani Police Station accompanied by his mother and lawyers, seeking to withdraw a missing person case reported last month, eight days after he disappeared on June 18. "Tulikuja hapa kureport on June 26th baada ya kumkosa kwa simu kwa siku kadhaa. Sister yake alitupea pressure akisema Mwangi hawezi kunyamaza sana hivyo," said his mother, Tabitha Wanjiru Kairu.
Mwangi went missing in Githurai 45 during the onset of anti-government protests. He was reportedly abducted alongside a group of youths during a crackdown by a rogue police unit.
"Nilishikiwa Githurai 45 nikiwa natoka job saa hizo jioni. Sikuambiwa sababu ya kushikwa na tulishikwa wengi…mimi niliblindfoldiwa na sijui kwenye nilipelekwa," he lamented.
What followed were days of horror and nightmares for Mwangi. He recounted how his abductors blindfolded him whenever he was moved from one police station to another. "Nilijiskia nikiwa nimepelekwa kwa ki-room…sijui kwenye nilikuwa. At one point sijui kwenye tulipelekwa," he added.
His disappearance left his family distraught. As days passed without any sight of him, they feared the worst and began a frantic search in hospitals and morgues.
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"Siwezi taka mzazi mwingine apitie kile nimepitia…tumeenda mortuary, hospitali…the worst experience was to go to the mortuary...hujui kama mtu amekufa, naangalia bodies…one after the other," said Wanjiru.
Lawyers and members of the Law Society of Kenya (LSK) stated that the abduction left Mwangi traumatized. "The circumstances surrounding his arrest are unclear…it has been hell for this boy," said Stephen Mbugua.
Joseph was released on Tuesday this week, almost a month after his abduction. He found himself at the Muthaiga Police Station, though there was no record of his arrest in the station’s occurrence book. "He was not booked anywhere nor was he produced at the court for charges…he was detained incommunicado," Mbugua added.
Lawyers and human rights groups fear there could be more similar unreported cases, with many demonstrators being plucked from the streets or their homes by unidentifiable men believed to be police officers.
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