Tag: KENYAN MIGRANT WORKERS

  • Stephen Munyakho Breaks Silence on Fight Over Salary That Landed Him on Death Row

    Stephen Munyakho Breaks Silence on Fight Over Salary That Landed Him on Death Row

    Stephen Munyakho, the Kenyan man who spent more than a decade on death row in Saudi Arabia, has finally shared the real story behind his shocking imprisonment.

    While appearing on JKL Live on Citizen TV, Munyakho revealed that a salary dispute with a colleague is what spiraled into a deadly altercation that changed his life forever.

    The long silence surrounding the incident that began in 2011 has now been shattered. Munyakho’s account sheds light on the hidden struggles many Kenyan migrant workers face in Gulf countries—unpaid dues, mistreatment, and fights that escalate beyond control.

    Stephen Munyakho Explains What Led to Deadly Fight in Saudi Arabia

    Stephen Munyakho, now known by his Muslim name Abdul Kareem, described in vivid detail how a salary-related disagreement with a colleague named Abdul Halim turned violent. Both men were working in the accounts department of a restaurant in Saudi Arabia when the clash happened on the night of April 9, 2011.

    Munyakho stated that he was trying to leave work to collect his salary, but his Yemeni colleague refused to let him go. Halim reportedly hurled insults that Munyakho did not fully understand, provoking his anger. However, the disagreement didn’t stop at words.

    “He is the one who started the fight,” Munyakho emphasized. “The knife was his. He tried to stab me first. After he used it on me, I used it on him.”

    The confrontation quickly turned physical. In the chaos, Halim suffered a single stab wound to the chest, while Munyakho sustained injuries to his hand and thigh.

    Despite being seriously hurt himself, Halim delayed going to the hospital—a mistake that proved fatal. According to Munyakho, the death was not directly from the stabbing but due to blood loss from delayed medical attention.

    “It was not intentional. It was just a mistake,” Munyakho said. “We had a misunderstanding which ended in a fight, and then it escalated to stabbings.”

    A Decade Behind Bars and a Death Sentence

    After the incident, Saudi authorities arrested and charged Munyakho. He was convicted of manslaughter, but the charge was later upgraded to murder. This led to a death sentence, putting his life in limbo for years.

    While in prison, Munyakho converted to Islam and became known as Abdul Kareem. He held onto hope that he would one day return home.

    The turning point came when the victim’s family agreed to accept diyya—an Islamic form of blood money that allows forgiveness in exchange for financial compensation. With support from the Kenyan government and the Muslim World League, over Ksh129 million was raised to secure Munyakho’s freedom.

    The final step before his release was performing Umrah, a pilgrimage to Mecca. On July 22, 2025, Munyakho was officially freed. He landed in Kenya early Tuesday morning, bringing a close to a 14-year nightmare.

    Government Support and a Cautionary Tale

    Prime Cabinet Secretary and Foreign Affairs Minister Musalia Mudavadi was present at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport to receive Munyakho. His case had drawn attention from human rights activists, religious leaders, and Kenyan diaspora networks who rallied to secure his release.

    Munyakho’s experience is a stark reminder of the dangers faced by many Kenyans working in the Gulf. Cases of unpaid wages, abuse, and even death are not uncommon. His account calls for stronger protections for migrant workers, including better dispute resolution and embassy support.

    What began as a fight over salary turned into a decade-long fight for justice. Munyakho’s story is not just about survival—it’s about the urgent need for better treatment of Kenyan workers abroad.

  • Ombudsman writes to state on mistreatment of Kenyans in Saudi Arabia

    Ombudsman writes to state on mistreatment of Kenyans in Saudi Arabia

    Uproar continues to greet recent revelations of mistreatment of Kenyan migrant workers in Saudi Arabia amid demands for answers from state agencies concerned.

    The Commission on Administrative Justice (CAJ) has weighed into the matter, expressing concern over the plight of Kenyans facing exploitation in the oil-rich Gulf states.

    CAJ chairperson Florence Kajuju wrote to the Cabinet Secretary in the Ministry of Labour and Social Protection Simon Chelugui asking him to clearly indicate his position on the matter and the ‘steps taken if any, or intended actions and time-frames,’

    “Regrettably….distress calls of Kenyan workers in Saudi Arabia have been ignored with fatal consequences,” Kajuju lamented.

    In the letter to the CS Thursday, the Ombudsman further indicated that it is in receipt of complaints to the effect that attempts by victims and their families to pursue justice have been frustrated.

    “We look forward to hearing from you with a view to remedy lapses in the administration of migratory labour,” Kajuju told Chelugui.

    And she did not stop there. She further took issue with the National Employment Authority over the presence of rogue recruitment agencies who abandon workers as soon as they arrive in the Middle East.

    In her letter to NEA Director-General, Kajuju wants to know the status of regulation of private employment agencies sending Kenyan workers to Saudi Arabia.

    “Section 8 of the Commission on Administrative Justice Act, 2011 mandates the Commission to look into complaints on maladministration including delay, ineptitude among others,” Kajuju noted in her demand letter.