Tag: Nicholas Oyoo

  • Kenyan Activists Bob Njagi, Nicholas Oyoo Detained in Military Prison in Uganda, Lawyers Say

    Kenyan Activists Bob Njagi, Nicholas Oyoo Detained in Military Prison in Uganda, Lawyers Say

    Two Kenyan activists are being held at a military detention facility in Uganda following their arrest at a petrol station in eastern Uganda last week, according to court documents filed by their lawyers in Kampala.

    Bob Njagi and Nicholas Oyoo were arrested and taken away shortly after attending a political rally for presidential candidate Robert Kyagulanyi, widely known as Bobi Wine, who leads Uganda’s largest opposition party, the National Unity Platform.

    Lawyers from Kiiza & Mugisha Co Advocates have petitioned the Civil Division of the High Court in Kampala seeking orders to have the two men freed from detention, listing as respondents Uganda’s Chief of Defence Forces, the Chief of Defense Intelligence and Security, the Inspector General of Police, and the Attorney General.

    In an affidavit supporting the petition, Koffi Atinda, a colleague of Njagi who witnessed the incident, stated that the respondent’s military arrest and detention of the applicants at a detention facility in Mbuya since Wednesday, October 1, 2025, constituted incommunicado detention that was illegal and unlawful. Mbuya houses the Uganda Defence and Veterans Affairs ministry headquarters.

    Atinda stated that the applicants had been in illegal and incommunicado detention for more than 48 hours without trial or any charges being preferred against them.

    The activists, who are members of the African Movement and hold leadership positions in the FreeKenya Movement, had travelled to Uganda to show support for Bobi Wine, whom they also consider a personal friend .

    According to the affidavit, the activists were brutally arrested by men wielding guns and dressed in both military and civilian clothes at Starbex Petrol Station in Kaliro District in eastern Uganda, where they had parked their vehicle.

    They were taken away in a Toyota Hiace van commonly known as Drone at high speed to Mbuya.

    Atinda expressed concern that the detained activists could be subjected to torture and inhumane treatment at the hands of the military, which has been cited for torturing, harassing, and persecuting critics of President Museveni and his inner circle.

    By Monday evening, it remained unclear when the court would convene to hear the application for habeas corpus, although Uganda’s Constitution demands that matters of human rights should be fast-tracked.

    The Kenyan High Commission in Kampala issued a statement to Uganda’s Foreign Affairs ministry last Friday, inquiring about the whereabouts and situation of the activists following petitions from Vocal Africa and the families of the activists to Kenya’s Foreign Affairs ministry.

    It was unclear whether Uganda had responded.

    However, Ugandan police have denied any involvement in the arrests. Kituuma Rusoke, the police spokesperson, told media in Kampala on Monday that police had not registered any reports that two Kenyan activists went missing in Uganda, adding that he was not briefed that they were in police custody.

    Major General Felix Kulayigye, the director of Defence Public Information, said in a phone interview that the accuser, Bobi Wine, had not provided proof of the alleged abduction.

    He said he could not comment on allegations involving non-uniformed individuals without evidence and challenged Bobi Wine to present evidence, including the vehicle number plate.

    But Kyagulanyi insisted the two Kenyans were being targeted by the government for associating with him and expressing solidarity with their cause, demanding their unconditional release.

    There are conflicting accounts about the arrest location, with Bobi Wine posting on his social media platform that the duo was picked up from a petrol station in Kireka in Wakiso District on the outskirts of Kampala and driven off to an unknown destination.

    Videos circulating online show Njagi on stage beside the opposition leader at a campaign rally. The activists reportedly travelled to Uganda on Monday before linking up with Bobi Wine’s campaign.

    Security agents in plain clothes have often been accused of abducting, detaining, and torturing opposition politicians and supporters, with some victims resurfacing in court facing charges including treason.

    On Sunday, former Assistant Bishop of the Anglican Diocese of Kampala, Dr Hannington Mutebi, condemned what he called the rampant abductions of opposition members by security forces.

    While officiating at the confirmation of 47 young faithful at St John’s Church, Makerere, he said the government should champion the rule of law rather than abduct and detain citizens and others with dissenting views in safe houses and prisons.

    Eight presidential candidates nominated last month are traversing the country to canvass votes in the January 2026 General Election, including Bobi Wine and incumbent President Yoweri Museveni.

    The incident has raised fresh concerns about cross-border repression in East Africa.

    In May 2025, Kenyan activist Boniface Mwangi and Ugandan journalist Agather Atuhaire were abducted in Tanzania while observing opposition activities, and in July 2025, Kenyan activist Mwabili Mwagodi was abducted in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, and later dropped off in Kwale, Kenya .

    Earlier this year, Mwangi and Atuhaire were detained in Tanzania and held incommunicado for days before being abandoned at their respective national borders.

    They later recounted being brutally mistreated, including sexual torture at the hands of the Tanzanian authorities.

    Last year, Ugandan opposition figure Colonel (retired) Dr Kizza Besigye mysteriously disappeared in Nairobi only to surface four days later in a military court in Uganda, where he was charged.

    The cases have sparked widespread condemnation and concerns that East African governments could be collaborating to contain dissent.

  • Not Us, Ugandan Police Deny Holding Missing Kenyan Activists

    Not Us, Ugandan Police Deny Holding Missing Kenyan Activists

    The Uganda National Police (UNP) has refuted claims that it is holding Kenyan activists Bob Njagi and Nicholas Oyoo, saying it has no information on their whereabouts.

    Speaking during a press briefing on Monday, UNP Spokesperson ACP Rusoke Kituuma said the police have not received any formal report regarding the activists’ status.

    “Regarding the Kenyan activists who allegedly came to Uganda and are reported to have disappeared. I am not briefed by the police that they are in our custody. At the moment, I have no information indicating that they are held by the police, nor do I have any information that they are facing any accusations. If I had such information, I would share it here without reservation,” Kituuma said.

    He added that the UNP also has no information on whether Njagi and Oyoo have been reported as missing persons.

    “I also do not know whether it has been formally reported that they are lost persons or missing persons; I do not have that information,” he said.

    The two activists have not been heard from since Wednesday, October 1, when they were reportedly forced into a van at gunpoint while at a petrol station in Kireka township, just outside Kampala.

    Njagi and Oyoo had travelled to Uganda to join National Unity Platform (NUP) presidential candidate Bobi Wine’s campaign trail ahead of the 2026 elections.

    A witness who was with them at the time of the alleged abduction said four armed men, including a woman in the front seat of a grey van, took Njagi and Oyoo.

    The witness, who was also briefly detained but later released, described how the gunmen sped off, and the activists’ phones were switched off immediately.

    “I don’t know where Bob is. I don’t know which police station he has been taken to. I honestly don’t know where he is. I’m just stranded here,” the witness said.

    The abduction has drawn condemnation from human rights groups and political activists. Kongamano La Mapinduzi (KLM) called for the immediate release of the activists, describing the incident as “a blatant act of repression” and an attack on democracy and political freedom.

    “Stop abducting Kenyans! Stop persecuting Africans who stand with progressive struggles like that of Bobi Wine and the people of Uganda,” KLM said in a statement on Monday.

    It called for an intervention from the Kenyan government, the East African Community, the African Union and international human rights bodies.

    In a communique dated October 3, 2025, the Kenyan High Commission in Kampala confirmed receiving information on the alleged abduction and said it had requested Uganda’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs to liaise with local authorities to establish the activists’ status.

    “Two Kenyan nationals, Mr Bob Njagi and Mr Nicholas Oyoo, were allegedly abducted by armed men around the Kireka area, Kampala, on Wednesday, October 1, 2025, and their whereabouts remain unknown. The Mission requests the Ministry’s assistance in liaising with the relevant authorities to secure their release and safe return to Kenya,” read the communique.

    Interior Cabinet Secretary Kipchumba Murkomen also noted that the matter is being handled diplomatically.

    “It is the duty of the Government of Kenya to protect its citizens in any part of the world,” he said.

  • Kenyan Activist Bob Njagi Abducted in Uganda While Campaigning for Bobi Wine

    Kenyan Activist Bob Njagi Abducted in Uganda While Campaigning for Bobi Wine

    Kenyan activist Bob Njagi, the National Chairman of the Free Kenya Movement, has allegedly been abducted in Kampala, Uganda, alongside the movement’s Secretary General Nicholas Oyoo, while campaigning in support of opposition leader Robert Kyagulanyi, alias Bobi Wine.

    In a statement released on Wednesday, the movement’s National Coordinator Felix Wambua said the two were seized at Stabex Petrol Station in Kireka around 3:00 pm by unidentified men and taken to an undisclosed location.

    “I hereby wish to confirm that our Chairman, Bob Njagi, and our Secretary General, Nicholas Oyoo, were today arrested by unknown persons at Stabex Petrol Station, Kireka, Kampala, and taken to an undisclosed location,” Wambua said. He urged supporters to remain calm as the movement engaged with Bobi Wine’s National Unity Platform (NUP) and Ugandan authorities to establish the whereabouts of the missing leaders.

    Eyewitnesses reported that a clay-coloured van pulled up at the station before four armed men and a woman forced the two activists inside. Their fate and current location remain unknown.

    This marks the second abduction for Njagi, who last year revealed he had been held for 32 days in a dark cell after being seized in Mlolongo, Machakos County, during Kenya’s anti-government protests.

    The incident comes just days after Bobi Wine was officially cleared by Uganda’s Electoral Commission to contest in the January 2026 presidential election against long-time ruler President Yoweri Museveni, who is seeking a record seventh term in office.

    Wine condemned the abduction, accusing the Ugandan state of targeting his supporters and foreign allies.

    “We are deeply disturbed by the disappearance of our Kenyan brothers. Their only crime was to stand in solidarity with us as we demand freedom in our own country,” Wine said in a statement. “We demand their immediate release and remind the regime that Uganda does not belong to one man.”

    The NUP Kenya Chapter has also joined in search efforts and called on Nairobi to intervene. “This is not just a Ugandan matter; it is an East African issue. If Kenyan citizens are unsafe in Kampala, then all regional integration is meaningless,” the chapter said.

    Ugandan authorities, however, dismissed allegations of abduction. Police spokesperson Fred Enanga told local media they had no record of Njagi or Oyoo in custody.

    “We are not aware of any arrest of the said individuals. If there are concerns, the Kenyan High Commission should liaise directly with our security agencies. We caution against spreading alarmist reports that may incite unnecessary panic,” Enanga said.

    But human rights organisations were quick to draw parallels with Uganda’s history of enforced disappearances of opposition activists, especially during election seasons.

    The Free Kenya Movement has given authorities 24 hours to disclose the activists’ whereabouts or release them unconditionally.

    For Njagi, who has already survived one abduction in Kenya, the latest disappearance underscores the dangers faced by regional activists challenging entrenched political systems.