Tag: Swarup Mishra

  • THE FIXER IN THE FILE ROOM: How Parliamentary Health Committee Clerk Adan Gindicha Cleared Mediheal Hospital of Organ Harvesting Claims Despite Mounting Evidence

    THE FIXER IN THE FILE ROOM: How Parliamentary Health Committee Clerk Adan Gindicha Cleared Mediheal Hospital of Organ Harvesting Claims Despite Mounting Evidence

    NAIROBI: On April 15, 2026, the National Assembly’s Departmental Committee on Health tabled a report that did something extraordinary.

    It looked at years of documented evidence, at a damning 314-page independent government investigation, at the testimonies of mutilated young men from Oyugis and Eldoret, at the findings of three major German media houses, at the condemnation of Kenya’s own Kenya Renal Association, and it decided that Dr Swarup Ranjan Mishra’s Mediheal Group of Hospitals had done nothing wrong.

    The committee recommended that all sanctions on the hospital be lifted immediately, save for the transplant licence, and that the institution be rehabilitated.

    The man credited as the nerve centre of the secretariat that steered that report from its first public hearing to its final page is Principal Clerk Assistant II Mr Adan Sora Gindicha, the head of the Health Committee’s parliamentary secretariat. His name does not appear on the report’s cover. It never does. But his fingerprints, critics are now arguing, are all over the outcome.

    Parliament works in ways that are deliberately opaque to the public. When a committee begins an inquiry, it is the elected members who take the cameras and the questions.

    But the bureaucratic scaffolding of any committee, how it frames its terms of reference, how it schedules hearings, whose testimony it prioritises, how evidence is categorised and summarised before it reaches members, how the final draft is structured and what language is used to characterise findings, that scaffolding is built and maintained by the secretariat.

    The head of that secretariat is the clerk. In the Mediheal inquiry, that was Mr Gindicha. And the question that medical professionals, civil society actors and senior government sources are now asking, quietly but with growing urgency, is this: did the process that produced this exoneration serve justice, or something else entirely?

    The committee looked at a 314-page criminal indictment and saw nothing. That is not an accident. That is architecture.

    Who Is Adan Sora Gindicha, And Why Does It Matter?

    Mr Adan Sora Gindicha is a career parliamentary civil servant, the kind of institutional figure who accumulates quiet influence over years of being the person who knows where the files are.

    Parliament’s own website confirms his designation as Principal Clerk Assistant II and Head of Secretariat for the Departmental Committee on Health.

    What the website also reveals, and what has attracted pointed commentary in parliamentary circles, is that Mr Gindicha is not a newcomer to high-profile committee work.

    Records show he previously served in the same capacity as head of secretariat for the Sports and Culture Committee, meaning he has navigated the administrative corridors of multiple powerful legislative bodies.

    In theory, a parliamentary clerk is a neutral officer, a facilitator of process rather than a shaper of outcome. The clerk schedules.

    The clerk files.

    The clerk minutes.

    In practice, anyone who has spent time around committee work knows that the distinction between process and outcome in a parliamentary inquiry is frequently fiction.

    The clerk decides, in consultation with the chair, which witnesses appear in what order.

    The clerk shapes how evidence is summarised for committee members who have not read every submission. The clerk is the person MPs lean on when they are uncertain about the weight of a document or the credibility of testimony.

    In a technical inquiry about medical ethics, transplant law and international organ trafficking networks, the gap between what MPs know and what the clerk tells them is wide enough to drive a bus through.

    Mr Gindicha has not responded to questions submitted by Kenya Insights about his role in the inquiry. His superiors at Parliament have similarly declined to comment. What is on the public record is the outcome of the process he administered. That outcome has appalled some of the most credible medical voices in the country.

    What The Evidence Actually Said

    To understand why the parliamentary clearance has caused such an uproar, it is necessary to reconstruct what the full evidentiary record against Mediheal actually looked like before Mr Gindicha’s committee produced its sanitising verdict.

    The problems at Mediheal’s Eldoret Fertility and Transplant Centre were not invented in 2025. As far back as 2019, allegations of irregular organ transplants were circulating.

    Mishra dismissed them at the time as politically motivated, a framing he would return to repeatedly over the following six years.

    The first serious institutional signal came from the Kenya Blood Transfusion and Transplant Service, which in 2023 documented suspicious patterns at Mediheal, including an unusually high volume of transplants, a heavy reliance on unrelated donors and recipients, large cash movements, and a significant foreign patient population.

    That report was filed. It gathered dust.

    The officials who produced it were eventually suspended when the scandal exploded in 2025, ostensibly to protect the integrity of a fresh investigation, but the timing struck observers as at least as convenient for Mishra as for accountability.

    In April 2025, the German investigation changed everything. Deutsche Welle, ZDF and Der Spiegel published the results of a months-long collaborative inquiry that traced an international organ trafficking network from its brokers in Europe and Israel to its operating theatres in Eldoret.

    The reporting documented donors from Kenya, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Pakistan who had been recruited, many of them with little understanding of the medical risks involved, and paid as little as two thousand dollars for kidneys that recipients in Germany and Israel were paying up to two hundred thousand dollars to receive.

    DW journalists spoke to four young men in Oyugis who described being approached by brokers, transported to Mediheal, handed documents in English they could not read, operated on without adequate informed consent, and then sent home with a fraction of the payment they had been promised.

    One man described being asked, after his surgery, to recruit new donors at a commission of four hundred dollars per referral.

    The logic of a structured trafficking network, recruiting from one end, compensating for delivery at the other, was hiding in plain sight.

    Donors from Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Pakistan were flown in. Young Kenyan men were paid $2,000 for kidneys that fetched $200,000 on the other end. One told DW: if I could go back, I would never have done it.

    Health Cabinet Secretary Aden Duale acted within days of the publication, suspending all kidney transplant services at Mediheal facilities on April 17, 2025, and establishing an independent expert committee chaired by Prof Elizabeth Bukusi of the Kenya Medical Research Institute.

    That committee was given ninety days and a mandate to examine everything. It examined everything. The 314-page report it produced in July 2025 was among the most devastating official documents to emerge from any government investigation into a private health institution in Kenya’s post-independence history.

    The Bukusi committee found that between 2018 and March 2025, Mediheal Hospital handled 417 donors and 340 recipients, with Mediheal’s Eldoret branch alone accounting for approximately eighty-one percent of all donors and seventy-six percent of all recipients across the institutions reviewed.

    Male donors made up seventy-seven percent of the total, a stark gender imbalance the committee described as consistent with systematic targeting of vulnerable males.

    More than thirty-eight percent of donors and recipients had unknown or undocumented nationalities, a documentation failure the committee characterised as a serious red flag.

    A single surgeon and a single anaesthesiologist were found to have operated on twenty-four patients within a fourteen-day window, raising questions the report described as deeply troubling regarding patient safety.

    Inconsistencies and suspected irregularities in consent form signatures were documented.

    Patients were categorised in hospital records as mutual friends in ways that appeared designed to avoid legal scrutiny of the donor-recipient relationship.

    Payment patterns were described as consistent with systematic organ commercialisation.

    The committee’s recommendation was unambiguous. Mishra himself, together with chief nephrologist Dr A. Srinivas Murthy, transplant surgeon Dr Sananda Bag, and anaesthesiologist Dr Vijay Kumar, should be investigated immediately for potential criminal involvement in organ trafficking and for possible violations of national transplant laws and ethical standards.

    The Kenya Medical Practitioners and Dentists Council should be investigated for possible regulatory failure and criminal collusion due to repeated inaction in the face of multiple documented complaints.

    The suspension of Mediheal should be maintained until all investigations are concluded.

    CS Duale received the report and pledged publicly that it would not gather dust.

    President Ruto, who had already suspended Mishra from the Kenya BioVax Institute chairmanship in April and then fired him outright in July, appeared to be sending an unambiguous signal.

    Kenya’s police began parallel inquiries. The international scrutiny remained intense. The trajectory of accountability, measured against the weight of the Bukusi report, seemed clear.

    Then came Mr Gindicha’s committee. And the trajectory changed.

    The Man Behind The Money: Swarup Mishra’s Biography of Ambition

    Swarup Mishra.

    It is impossible to assess the significance of the parliamentary clearance without understanding who Swarup Ranjan Mishra is, where he came from, how he built his power, and why a committee of elected Kenyan legislators might find reason to treat his interests with unusual sensitivity.

    Dr Mishra was born in Odisha, India, and arrived in Kenya to work as a lecturer of obstetrics and gynaecology at Moi University in Eldoret. It was a relatively modest beginning in a city that was then still expanding its professional class.

    Together with his wife Dr Pallavi Mishra, a gynaecologist, he founded Mediheal Group of Hospitals, with the Eldoret branch opening in December 2004.

    The early years were, by all accounts, a genuine story of entrepreneurial medicine. The facility filled gaps in specialist care that public hospitals in the region could not meet, and it expanded steadily, adding branches in Nairobi and Nakuru, and developing subspecialties including in vitro fertilisation and, critically, kidney transplantation.

    By 2015, Mediheal had performed more than three hundred kidney transplants, an extraordinary number for a private facility in East Africa at the time.

    Mishra’s transition from doctor to politician was enabled by his deep embeddedness in the Rift Valley community.

    He earned the Kalenjin name Kiprop, a mark of genuine cultural acceptance that translated directly into political viability. In 2017, he made history by becoming the first person of Asian origin to win a parliamentary seat in a Kalenjin-dominated constituency, defeating incumbent James Bett on a Jubilee Party ticket to become Kesses MP.

    His tenure in Parliament placed him at the intersection of medical business and legislative power, a position of unique leverage in the regulatory environment that governed his own industry.

    The 2022 elections were catastrophic for Mishra.

    He fell out with then-Deputy President William Ruto, opted to run as an independent, and was swept away by the UDA wave.

    Julius Rutto defeated him with thirty-two thousand votes to Mishra’s twenty-one thousand. The humiliation was public and complete. In 2023, Mishra joined UDA and apologised to the electorate for his political choices. The rehabilitation was gradual but effective.

    By November 2024, President Ruto had rewarded his returned loyalty with the chairmanship of the Kenya BioVax Institute Limited, a state corporation with a mandate that included representing Kenya as a contact person for the World Health Organization and foreign governments. Mishra’s comeback appeared complete.

    What the BioVax appointment also did was place Mishra back at the intersection of political protection and medical enterprise at precisely the moment the organ trafficking allegations were accelerating toward a formal crisis.

    When DW published its findings in April 2025, Mishra was not just a private hospital owner facing scrutiny.

    He was a sitting state official, appointed by the President, chairing a government body with international health diplomacy functions.

    That proximity to power was, sources suggest, not incidental to the outcome of the subsequent parliamentary inquiry.

    A Man Drowning in Debt, With Everything to Play For

    The financial context of Dr Mishra’s situation at the time of the parliamentary inquiry deserves close examination, because a man with nothing left to lose behaves differently from a man with everything still at stake.

    And Swarup Mishra, throughout 2024 and 2025, was a man fighting on multiple fronts to prevent the total collapse of his empire.

    Mediheal’s financial troubles began in late 2022, when the National Health Insurance Fund delisted the hospital from its approved facilities, followed by Minet and other insurance schemes covering government employees.

    The revenue loss was crippling. By mid-2024, auctioneers had descended on the Nakuru branch, seizing nine vehicles and other assets over forty million shillings in unpaid salaries owed to eighteen doctors.

    Courts became a constant battlefield.

    A Sh701 million debt to Bank of India, secured against seventeen parcels of land in Eldoret, Iten and Kisii, threatened to consume the property base of the entire group.

    By November 2025, six of Mishra’s prime Eldoret properties were scheduled for auction on December 10th of that year, including hospital buildings, farmland and residential properties jointly registered with his wife.

    The pattern that emerges from this financial portrait is one of a man for whom the organ trafficking scandal was not simply a reputational inconvenience but potentially the difference between the revival of his medical and business empire and its total liquidation.

    With the transplant programme suspended and criminal prosecution being recommended by the government’s own investigators, the future of Mediheal as a going concern depended heavily on the parliamentary process producing a different conclusion from the Bukusi committee.

    In that context, the question of who shaped the parliamentary process and how they came to do so becomes vastly more significant than it might appear on its surface.

    A man staring at the auction of his hospital, his farms, his home, with a 314-page indictment over his head, needed Parliament to look the other way. The Health Committee obliged.

    Kenya Insights is not in a position to state that Dr Mishra, or anyone acting on his behalf, made any approach to Mr Adan Gindicha or any other officer of the parliamentary secretariat.

    What Kenya Insights can state is that the financial desperation of the man who benefited most from the parliamentary exoneration was acute and well-documented, that the exoneration directly contradicted the findings of a superior investigative body, and that the figure who managed the documentary and procedural architecture of the inquiry has declined to answer any questions about how that architecture was assembled.

    Readers are entitled to draw their own conclusions from that pattern.

    The Bukusi Report Versus The Nyikal Report: A Study in Incompatibility

    The sharpest measure of what the parliamentary inquiry produced is to place its conclusions directly alongside the Bukusi committee’s findings and ask whether the two documents could plausibly be examining the same institution.

    The Bukusi committee: 314 pages. A fifteen-member team of Kenya’s most credible medical, legal and public health specialists. Three months of national hearings spanning Vihiga, Eldoret, Bomet, Meru, Nakuru, Kisumu, Nairobi and Mombasa.

    Findings of systematic documentation failure.

    Evidence of cash payments inconsistent with altruistic donation. Gender imbalances indicating targeted exploitation. Forged or questionable consent signatures. Patients categorised as mutual friends in ways that appear designed to circumvent transplant law.

    Surgeons performing operations at inhuman pace.

    Fourteen named individuals recommended for criminal investigation, including the hospital’s founder, three senior doctors, and regulatory officials. The recommendation: suspend Mediheal, prosecute Mishra and others, investigate the Kenya Medical Practitioners and Dentists Council for criminal collusion.

    The Nyikal committee: cleared Mediheal of malpractice or breaches of the Health Act and Human Tissue Act.

    Recommended the immediate lifting of all sanctions except for the organ transplant licence. Acknowledged regulatory gaps but attributed them to a systemic weakness rather than specific institutional criminality. Urged Parliament to strengthen the legal framework going forward.

    The recommendation: rehabilitate Mediheal, restore operations.

    These are not two bodies that reviewed the same evidence and reached different conclusions through legitimate differences of interpretation.

    These are two bodies that appear to have been looking at fundamentally different questions.

    The government committee asked: was a crime committed? Its answer was yes, and here are the names of those who committed it.

    The parliamentary committee appears to have asked: can we find sufficient procedural violations on the hospital’s own documentation to sustain a finding of malpractice? When the hospital’s lawyers managed the narrative of what documentation was presented, the answer was no. The difference between those two questions is the difference between accountability and whitewash.

    Medical professionals who spoke to Kenya Insights, all of whom declined to be named for professional reasons, described the parliamentary report as inexplicable in the context of what the Bukusi committee established.

    One nephrologist with direct knowledge of transplant practice described the claim that no malpractice occurred as medical fiction.

    A public health lawyer described the committee’s framing as legally incoherent, noting that the standard for a finding of organ trafficking does not require a signed confession. The patterns documented by Bukusi, cash payments, unrelated donors, undocumented nationalities, coercive recruitment chains, would satisfy criminal trafficking definitions in virtually every jurisdiction on earth.

    That Parliament chose to ignore them does not make them disappear.

    Bernard Kitur’s Warning: Someone Tried to Silence This Story

    The Mediheal investigation was never simply a regulatory matter.

    Its political dimensions were signalled early and explicitly. Nandi Hills MP Bernard Kitur, at one point during the parliamentary proceedings, stated publicly that his life was in danger because of his efforts to expose the alleged syndicate at Mediheal.

    That is not a claim that a cautious politician makes lightly. It is a claim that speaks to the character of the interests at stake and the willingness of those interests to extend themselves beyond legitimate lobbying into something considerably darker.

    Mr Kitur’s warning did not trigger a formal protection response from the parliamentary administration. It did not prompt Mr Gindicha’s secretariat to conduct any documented inquiry into the nature or basis of the threat.

    It appears, from everything that followed, to have been noted and filed alongside the rest of the inconvenient evidence.

    It is worth also recalling the context in which Mediheal responded to the German investigation and the government probe.

    The hospital filed a lawsuit against the Ministry of Health, seeking to nullify the Bukusi inquiry on grounds of procedural unfairness.

    Its lawyer, Katwa Kigen, appeared before the Bukusi committee in Eldoret and presented a posture of cooperation while simultaneously pursuing litigation to destroy the investigation in court.

    The hospital’s vice president publicly insisted that all donors arrived voluntarily with their own documentation, a claim directly contradicted by the testimony of multiple donors and by the patterns documented in the Bukusi report.

    Mediheal’s owner described the allegations as recycled misinformation.

    Yet three years before the DW investigation, the Kenya Blood Transfusion and Transplant Service had already documented the red flags internally. The misinformation, wherever it originated, was not with the accusers.

    The Architecture of Exoneration: How Parliamentary Process Can Be Weaponised

    Kenya’s parliamentary committee system is structurally vulnerable to capture when powerful private interests are at stake.

    The committees depend on witnesses presenting themselves voluntarily, on documentation being provided by the parties under scrutiny, and on secretariat staff who are civil servants rather than independent investigators.

    There is no requirement that a parliamentary committee seek out evidence that a subject of inquiry has chosen not to volunteer.

    There is no subpoena power for documentary records held by private parties.

    There is no independent forensic capacity attached to the Health Committee secretariat. What the committee gets, in large measure, is what it is given.

    In the Mediheal inquiry, what the committee was given included voluminous hospital records curated by Mediheal’s own management, testimony from hospital officials led by chief consultant nephrologist Dr A. Srinivas Murthy, and legal representation by one of Kenya’s most capable courtroom advocates.

    What the committee appears to have weighed against that, despite the Bukusi report’s existence, was insufficient to tilt the outcome.

    The question of why that imbalance existed, and who was responsible for allowing it to persist through 80 days of proceedings, leads directly back to Mr Gindicha.

    The role of a committee clerk in managing what members see and when they see it, in determining which expert witnesses are scheduled and how their testimony is contextualised, in shaping the initial drafts from which a final report emerges, is not trivial.

    It is, in high-stakes inquiries of this kind, potentially determinative.

    Parliamentary clerks in Kenya are not immune to the same pressures that have compromised regulatory officials, judicial officers and government investigators across successive administrations.

    The KMPDC officials who ignored multiple documented complaints about Mediheal over years are being recommended for investigation by the Bukusi committee.

    The two KBTTS officials who had supervised previous investigations were suspended during the crisis. The pattern of institutional actors finding reasons not to act against Mediheal is long enough to constitute a structural phenomenon, not a series of isolated oversights.

    Where Mr Gindicha fits in that pattern is a question that only a transparent accounting of his conduct during the inquiry could resolve. That accounting has not been provided. Parliament has not offered one. The parliamentary administration has not volunteered one. And Mr Gindicha himself has remained silent.

    What Amon Kipruto Has to Live With

    While parliamentarians and clerks debate process and procedure in Nairobi, Amon Kipruto Mely, a young Kenyan man from the Rift Valley, is living with one kidney.

    He was, according to DW’s investigation, introduced to a middleman who organised his transport to Mediheal Hospital in Eldoret, where he was received by Indian doctors who handed him documents in English, a language he did not understand.

    He was not informed of the health risks.

    He was operated on. He was compensated at a fraction of what he had been promised. And when he left, the brokers who had recruited him asked him to go back to his community and find more young men willing to do what he had done.

    Amon is not an abstraction.

    He is not a regulatory gap or an ethical framework deficiency. He is a person whose body was treated as a commodity in a hospital whose parliamentary secretariat has now declared blameless.

    If he travelled to Nairobi and knocked on the door of Mr Gindicha’s office to ask why the institution that took his kidney has been cleared, what would the Principal Clerk Assistant II say to him?

    The parliamentary report recommends that the National Treasury prioritise funding for the East Africa Centre of Excellence in Urology and Nephrology at Kenyatta National Hospital.

    It recommends that the Ministry of Health develop a national human resource strategy for transplant specialists.

    It recommends that transplant coverage be reviewed under the Social Health Authority.

    These are fine recommendations.

    They are the kind of recommendations that look good on paper, that give a committee something to show for itself, that allow the institutional actors involved to claim they have contributed something positive.

    What they do not do is hold anyone accountable for what happened to Amon Kipruto. Or to the men from Oyugis. Or to the donors from Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan who were flown into Eldoret to provide kidneys for Israeli patients at a thousand-dollar margin per organ.

    The system that hurt those people has been declared functional. The men who ran it have been told they may return to work, once the paperwork is sorted.

    Amon Kipruto lost a kidney. Parliament produced a report. Swarup Mishra got his clearance. Adan Gindicha’s secretariat filed it. Nobody has been charged with anything.

    The Reckoning That Did Not Come

    It is not lost on observers that the political geography of this exoneration maps cleanly onto lines of power. Swarup Mishra was, as of his firing from BioVax in July 2025, politically wounded but not destroyed.

    He retained his lawyers, his hospital properties in litigation rather than auction, and his documented networks of connection into state institutions.

    The parliamentary committee that cleared him was chaired by Seme MP Dr James Nyikal, a second-term legislator with a medical background who had publicly committed to a rigorous inquiry.

    Whether the rigour that Dr Nyikal intended survived contact with the secretariat process managed by Mr Gindicha is a question that the report’s conclusions make difficult to answer charitably.

    What is unambiguous is the hierarchy of accountability that existed before the parliamentary report arrived.

    A government-appointed expert committee had explicitly named individuals for criminal prosecution.

    Police investigations were running in parallel. The Ministry of Health had pledged implementation. The President himself had fired the hospital’s owner from a state post.

    And then Parliament’s committee produced a report that said, in effect, never mind. The hierarchy of accountability was inverted. The expert committee’s findings were not rebutted or challenged on their substance.

    They were simply set aside, replaced by a parliamentary verdict that served different interests.

    Who benefited? Dr Swarup Ranjan Mishra, an Indian-born physician from Odisha who built a medical empire on Kenyan credit, entered Kenyan politics through Rift Valley goodwill, was fired by the President under the weight of a criminal investigation, and now finds his hospital on a path back to full operation courtesy of the National Assembly’s Health Committee.

    Who administered the process that produced that outcome? Mr Adan Sora Gindicha, Principal Clerk Assistant II, Head of Secretariat, the Departmental Committee on Health. And who is asking either of them the hard questions about how this happened? At present, remarkably few people.

    This publication is asking them now.

    The Questions That Remain Unanswered

    Kenya Insights submitted a detailed list of questions to Mr Gindicha through the parliamentary administration.

    We asked how the committee’s terms of reference were determined and who advised on their scope.

    We asked whether the Bukusi report’s findings were formally placed before committee members as evidentiary material, and if so, how they were characterised in secretariat briefings.

    We asked whether any committee members raised concerns about the divergence between the Bukusi committee’s conclusions and the parliamentary inquiry’s trajectory.

    We asked whether Mr Gindicha has had any professional, social or financial relationship with any representative of Mediheal, its founder, or any associated entity.

    We asked whether he was satisfied that the process he administered produced a just outcome. We received no response.

    We submitted similar questions to Mediheal Group of Hospitals and to Dr Mishra personally. We received no response. We asked the parliamentary administration whether any formal review of the inquiry’s conduct would be undertaken given the divergence from the Bukusi report. We received no response.

    Silence, in the accountability journalism tradition, is itself a form of answer.

    When powerful institutions and the individuals who serve them decline to explain outcomes that benefit private interests at the expense of documented victims, they are not exercising a neutral right.

    They are choosing opacity over transparency at a moment when transparency is precisely what justice requires.

    The organ trafficking scandal that played out at Mediheal’s Eldoret facility produced real victims, documented by international media houses with no commercial interest in the outcome.

    It produced a 314-page government report that named people and recommended their prosecution.

    It produced a presidential firing.

    And it has now produced a parliamentary report, compiled under Mr Gindicha’s administrative hand, that says the institution at the centre of all of this is essentially blameless.

    Somebody should have to explain that.

    Somebody should be made uncomfortable by the distance between what Kenya’s best medical investigators found and what Parliament’s Health Committee chose to report.

    That somebody is, first and most immediately, Adan Sora Gindicha, the clerk who held the pen. And behind him, the question of who, if anyone, guided that pen from outside the file room.

  • Duale Threatens to Deport Mishra, Shut Down Mediheal Over Organ Trafficking

    Duale Threatens to Deport Mishra, Shut Down Mediheal Over Organ Trafficking

    Health Cabinet Secretary Aden Duale has intensified his campaign against suspected organ trafficking at Mediheal Hospital, warning founder Dr. Swarup Mishra faces prosecution, deportation, and citizenship revocation if Parliament adopts damning investigative findings.

    Speaking Friday, Duale condemned what he characterized as systematic exploitation of vulnerable Kenyans by foreign nationals operating medical facilities with impunity.

    The government official’s threats represent the most aggressive stance yet taken by the government against the Indian-born former MP, whose hospital network has become the center of Kenya’s most significant medical scandal in years.

    A government-appointed taskforce has recommended prosecution of Mishra and three other senior doctors over suspected criminal involvement in illegal organ transplants  , following an investigation that examined 476 kidney transplants conducted between 2018 and 2024.

    The investigation’s findings paint a troubling picture of medical tourism gone wrong.

    Mediheal Eldoret was linked to 417 donor files representing 81 percent of all donors reviewed with investigators flagging 60 cases where donor nationalities were missing and citing concerns over fraudulent signatures and inadequate documentation.

    “Our children, because of their social status, they were abused. They were given little money. Foreigners used NHIF,” Duale declared, referencing allegations that international patients paid millions for transplants while desperate Kenyans served as donors for approximately Sh400,000.

    The Health Secretary’s deportation threat specifically targets Mishra’s naturalized citizenship status.

    “If it means us revoking that citizenship because your citizenship is not by birth, we will revoke the citizenship. We will cross your hospitals and we will deport you,” he stated directly.

    Mishra has vigorously defended his hospital’s practices, stating that of 476 kidney transplants performed, only 20 were rejected significantly below the global average rejection rate of 20 percent.

    “In the name of God, I swear I am not guilty. Mediheal has never been involved in any form of organ trafficking. This is a conspiracy to finish me,”  he declared in recent statements.

    Swarup Mishra.
    Swarup Mishra.

    The controversy has exposed systemic weaknesses in Kenya’s transplant oversight mechanisms. The investigation revealed that some patients were described merely as “mutual friends” and critical paperwork bore signatures from an individual identified only as “IY,” believed to be an online freelancer.

    Patient numbers at Mediheal grew rapidly from 82 between 2018 and February 2020 to 324 from 2021 to March 2025, with ages ranging from eight to 80 years old.

    Investigators questioned the medical ethics of performing transplants on 150 to 170 patients aged 65 and above.

    Duale emphasized that the scandal involves both medical malpractice and misuse of public resources, noting allegations that Kenya’s National Hospital Insurance Fund (NHIF) was used to treat foreign patients seeking organ transplants.

    The 314-page investigative report recommends establishing a National Organ Transplant Authority and Transplant Coordination Centre, alongside stricter regulations to prevent future abuse. The committee also called for regulatory review of the Kenya Medical Practitioners and Dentists Council.

    “I want to assure you this report will not gather dust on shelves. It will be implemented. I will take it to Parliament and Cabinet,” Duale pledged, signaling the government’s determination to pursue criminal charges regardless of political connections.

    The case has sparked broader questions about medical tourism regulation in Kenya and the vulnerability of economically disadvantaged citizens to exploitation by well-resourced foreign operators in the healthcare sector.

    As Parliament prepares to review the taskforce findings, the medical establishment watches closely to see whether Kenya’s government will follow through on unprecedented threats against a naturalized citizen who once held elected office.

  • Mishra Invokes God’s Name Claiming Innocence Despite Overwhelming Evidence Linking Him to Organ Trafficking

    Mishra Invokes God’s Name Claiming Innocence Despite Overwhelming Evidence Linking Him to Organ Trafficking

    Mediheal Hospital chairman’s emotional denial comes as government investigators detail systematic exploitation of vulnerable donors

    Dr. Swarup Mishra, the embattled chairman of Mediheal Group of Hospitals, made a desperate appeal to divine authority yesterday as mounting evidence of systematic organ trafficking at his facility threatens to unravel what investigators describe as a sophisticated international operation targeting Kenya’s most vulnerable populations.

    “In the name of God, I am innocent,” declared a tearful Mishra during a press conference in Nairobi, his voice breaking as he faced recommendations from an 18-member government task force that he be criminally investigated for organ trafficking violations. “If anyone has evidence of organ trafficking at Mediheal, let them come forward.”

    But the evidence appears overwhelming. A damning government investigation has exposed what prosecutors are calling a carefully orchestrated system that exploited poor Kenyans and Central Asian nationals to supply kidneys for wealthy foreign recipients, particularly from Israel, while generating millions of shillings in profits.

    The numbers don’t lie

    The scale of operations at Mediheal dwarfs all other transplant facilities in Kenya.

    Between 2018 and March 2025, the Eldoret-based hospital performed 476 kidney transplants accounting for approximately 81 percent of all donors and 76 percent of recipients across the 33 hospitals investigated nationwide.

    More disturbing are the payment patterns uncovered by investigators.

    While other hospitals charged an average of Sh990,743 per procedure, Mediheal’s mean bill was Sh2,313,324—a staggering 133 percent premium that investigators say “suggests potential billing irregularities.”

    The hospital operated a three-tier pricing structure that investigators found deeply troubling: Kenyans paid Sh2 million, African patients $25,000, and international patients from outside Africa $34,000. Most concerning, 347 patients paid cash out-of-pocket, with investigators finding that 25.1 percent of Mediheal donors were “highly likely” to have received cash payments—nearly seven times the rate at other facilities.

    The Azerbaijan-Israel pipeline

    Perhaps the most damning finding involves what investigators describe as a “systematic pipeline” of organs from Azerbaijan to Israel.

    The task force expressed “grave concern” that 25 donors specifically for Israeli recipients came from Azerbaijan—a pattern so unusual it raised immediate suspicions of patient misidentification, forged documents, or “targeted recruitment.”

    The gender imbalances paint an even darker picture. Among Azerbaijani participants, investigators found 43 male donors versus only seven females, while Israeli recipients showed 50 males compared to just eight females.

    Combined with the virtual absence of Israeli donors, this suggests a system where Israeli men systematically benefit from organs harvested from vulnerable Azerbaijani males.

    “This pattern indicates that Azeri men are being systematically recruited as organ donors for transplantation elsewhere,” the investigation concluded, recommending immediate involvement of security agencies.

    Regulatory failures and systemic weaknesses

    The investigation revealed shocking regulatory failures that enabled the alleged trafficking to flourish.

    Staff licenses had expired, key personnel were missing, and the facility lacked essential safeguards including multidisciplinary committee meetings and patient advocates.

    Most concerning, consent forms for donors and recipients were not translated into languages they could understand, laboratory samples were sent to unregistered facilities in India, and there was no long-term follow-up care for patients.

    Dr. A.S. Murthy, the nephrologist responsible for patient care, described his operation as a “one-man show” conducting counselling for both donors and recipients himself, creating obvious conflicts of interest. The same doctor had never joined the Kenya Renal Association despite eight years of practice in the country.

    Marketing the human body

    Mediheal Group of Hospitals in Eldoret City, Uasin Gishu County.
    Mediheal Group of Hospitals in Eldoret City, Uasin Gishu County.

    The investigation uncovered a sophisticated marketing operation that used social media to recruit donors and arrange accommodation through commercial platforms.

    A former employee revealed she worked as a marketing coordinator from 2018 to 2023, specifically targeting nephrologists and renal nurses for patient referrals while coordinating the arrival of foreign patients, especially from Israel.

    Videos supposedly showing donor consent appeared similar to marketing materials promoting services to international kidney recipients, raising questions about whether genuine informed consent was ever obtained.

    A pattern of denial

    Despite the overwhelming evidence, Mishra and his legal team have launched a counteroffensive, claiming they are victims of a “fault-finding, not fact-finding” mission.

    His lawyers argue that the hospital fully cooperated by providing 60,000 pages of documents and maintaining that investigators found “no single incident of organ trafficking.”

    But this defense rings hollow against the backdrop of systematic irregularities documented by investigators.

    The hospital’s own data shows 15 patients died during procedures, with complications including renal artery thrombosis and pulmonary embolism.

    Yet Mediheal conducted no post-transplant audits for morbidity and mortality.

    Beyond one hospital

    The Mediheal case represents more than isolated criminal activity—it exposes fundamental weaknesses in Kenya’s healthcare regulatory system that allowed systematic exploitation to flourish for years.

    The investigation recommends criminal probes not only of Mediheal staff but also of officials at the Kenya Medical Practitioners and Dentists Council for “regulatory failure and possible collusion.”

    As Mishra invokes divine protection while 2,300 employees lose their jobs due to the scandal, the victims of this alleged trafficking network—poor Kenyans and vulnerable Central Asians who may have sold their organs for survival—remain largely invisible in the public discourse.

    The task force has given investigators until July 22 to submit final findings.

    But for families who may have lost loved ones to organ harvesting, and donors who may have been exploited in their desperation, divine justice may prove more elusive than Mishra hopes.

  • Mediheal: Inside the Criminal Organ Trafficking Ring That Made Mishra Millions

    Mediheal: Inside the Criminal Organ Trafficking Ring That Made Mishra Millions

    A far-reaching investigation by the Ministry of Health has exposed an international organ trafficking syndicate operating from one of Kenya’s most prominent private hospitals, Mediheal, allegedly orchestrated by its founder, former Kesses MP Dr Swarup Mishra.

    The 18-member probe team, appointed by Health Cabinet Secretary Aden Duale, uncovered a deeply disturbing network of exploitation, forged documentation, unethical medical practices, and cash-for-organs deals that have turned vulnerable Kenyans and foreign nationals into a supply chain for the world’s desperate and wealthy.

    At the center of the scandal is Mediheal Group of Hospitals, whose transplant wing has dominated the kidney transplant market in Kenya, performing 476 procedures between 2018 and March 2025, dwarfing all other hospitals combined.

    The evidence points to a clear pattern: exploitation of poor, desperate individuals particularly men in exchange for cash, with organs channeled to affluent foreign patients, especially from Israel.

    A medical mirage of greed

    The investigation paints a damning portrait of Mediheal’s operations. The hospital charged Kenyans Sh2 million, other Africans Sh3.2 million, and non-Africans Sh4.4 million for kidney transplants, a three-tier pricing model that officials say signals “transplant tourism.”

    More than 347 patients paid out-of-pocket in cash. Only 77 procedures were covered by insurance. The data reveals 25.1% of Mediheal’s donors were “highly likely” to have been paid illegally, a sharp contrast to the 3.6% average at other hospitals.

    Many of these donors, investigators say, were not even from Kenya. A striking number were young Azeri men, systematically recruited to supply kidneys to Israeli recipients, none of whom donated organs themselves. The report raises red flags of “forged identification documents, misrepresented relationships,” and a pipeline from Azerbaijan to Israel.

    “Kidney harvesting capital” of East Africa?

    According to the report, Kenya and specifically Mediheal has effectively become a regional hub for organ harvesting.

    Of all kidney donors nationwide during the review period, 81% came from Mediheal. An overwhelming 77.2% of these were men, further underscoring the gender imbalance and socio-economic vulnerability of those targeted.

    Some patients were as young as eight, while others were as old as 80 including 170 aged over 65 raising serious ethical questions about the medical justification and safety of these transplants.

    The Mishra machine

    Mediheal Hospital

    The report directly implicates Dr Swarup Mishra, as well as his top transplant staff: nephrologist Dr A.S. Murthy, urologist Dr Sananda Bag, and anaesthesiologist Dr Vijay Kumar, all of whom are recommended for criminal investigation.

    Dr Murthy is described as running a dangerous “one-man show” without oversight, ethics committees, or licensed transplant teams. Despite working in Kenya for eight years, he is not a member of the Kenya Renal Association. Investigators found expired staff licenses, ghost roles, and nurses posing as theatre technicians. In one case, a nurse aide was performing technical roles in operating rooms.

    Mediheal lacked essential transplant personnel, including pathologists, psychologists, and nutritionists. There were no formal audit meetings, ethics reviews, or multidisciplinary oversight.

    Meanwhile, donor consent videos submitted to the committee were identical to promotional material posted online — suggesting donors were used as props to market transplant services.

    Kenya’s regulatory collapse

    The findings implicate not just the hospital but also state agencies that failed to act. The Kenya Medical Practitioners and Dentists Council (KMPDC) faces accusations of regulatory negligence and possible collusion for ignoring prior complaints against Mediheal.

    Samples from Kenyan patients were flown to unregistered labs in India without authorization from the Kenya Medical Laboratory Technicians and Technologists Board. The labs were not accredited, and their use violates Kenyan law.

    An MoU between Mediheal and Indian-based SRL Limited was signed without expiry, a loophole investigators fear may have facilitated unchecked medical testing and possible data misuse.

    Targeting the poor, serving the rich

    The report reveals that most donors were sourced from Mountain, Rift Valley, and Northern Kenya, where poverty and desperation run high. A former Mediheal marketing coordinator told the committee she worked from 2018 to 2023 recruiting donors in western Kenya and coordinating foreign patients, mainly from Israel.

    The deaths of at least 10 transplant patients were reported, with complications including renal artery thrombosis and pulmonary embolism. Yet Mediheal conducted no post-transplant audits — a gross violation of medical protocol.

    The committee’s recommendations are sweeping: immediate criminal investigations, regulatory reviews, and a complete overhaul of Kenya’s organ transplant system.

    A cover-up in the making?

    Despite the depth of the findings, insiders now say efforts to suppress or doctor the report have already begun. Health CS Duale disowned the report, citing internal dissent. Meanwhile, Parliament’s health committee probing the scandal reportedly interviewed only one witness before its term expired.

    Kenya may be facing the largest medical crime in its history one that not only commodified human organs but turned the country’s medical reputation into a global black market.

  • Have MPs Been Compromised in Mediheal Organ Trafficking Probe?

    Have MPs Been Compromised in Mediheal Organ Trafficking Probe?

    Three months after launching what was supposed to be a thorough investigation into alleged organ trafficking at Mediheal Group of Hospitals, Kenya’s National Assembly Health Committee has managed to interview just one witness, raising serious questions about potential sabotage and political interference.

    The parliamentary probe, initiated following damning whistleblower reports and media exposés about unethical kidney harvesting, has been plagued by a suspicious pattern of cancelled meetings, indefinite postponements, and deafening silence from lawmakers who once promised to “get to the bottom of the matter.”

    Since committee chairman James Nyikal opened the inquiry on April 22 with a 90-day deadline, the investigation has ground to a virtual halt.

    The only witness to testify was Nandi Hills MP Bernard Kitur, the original petitioner, who appeared on June 5.

    Key meetings with officials from the Kenya Tissue Transplant Authority and Kenya Renal Association have been mysteriously postponed or cancelled without explanation.

    The timing of this parliamentary lethargy is particularly troubling given the scope of the alleged scandal.

    An independent government report reveals that Mediheal Hospital in Eldoret handled a staggering 417 kidney donors and 340 recipients between 2018 and March 2025, accounting for 81 percent of all donors and 76 percent of recipients across multiple institutions nationwide.

    More alarmingly, nearly 39 percent of recipients have “unknown status,” suggesting serious gaps in documentation and patient identification.

    Parliamentary sources, speaking on condition of anonymity, confirm what many suspected: the initial political goodwill for the inquiry has evaporated.

    Committee meetings that should have been packed with hospital representatives, medical authorities, and transplant officials have been quietly scrubbed from schedules.

    Chairman Nyikal himself has gone silent, refusing to answer calls or respond to messages about the investigation’s status.

    The pattern suggests more than mere bureaucratic incompetence.

    When Ndhiwa MP Martin Owino, a committee member, claims they are “waiting for the ministry report,” it raises questions about whether lawmakers are deliberately stalling until public attention moves elsewhere.

    Health Cabinet Secretary Aden Duale has already released findings recommending investigation of Mediheal founder Dr. Swarup Mishra, yet the parliamentary committee appears paralyzed.

    The stakes could not be higher.

    Evidence suggests systematic exploitation of Kenya’s most vulnerable citizens, with records indicating Mediheal made at least 372 Kenyans “fugitives in their own country” before harvesting their kidneys.

    The majority of donors came from economically disadvantaged regions including Mt. Kenya, Northern Kenya, and the Rift Valley.

    While Duale promises his ministry’s report “will not find itself on the shelves,” the parliamentary investigation designed to provide democratic oversight and accountability has effectively collapsed.

    The question remains: what forces are powerful enough to silence elected representatives who once vowed transparency in this scandal?

    As the 90-day inquiry period expires with virtually no progress, Kenyans are left wondering whether their parliamentary representatives have been compromised, intimidated, or simply lack the political will to confront what may be one of the country’s most serious medical ethics scandals in recent history.

  • Mediheal: Damning Report Tightly Links Mishra to Organ Trafficking, Recommends Criminal Charges

    Mediheal: Damning Report Tightly Links Mishra to Organ Trafficking, Recommends Criminal Charges

    Government Taskforce Exposes International Kidney Harvesting Syndicate Operating from Eldoret Hospital

    A bombshell government investigation has recommended immediate criminal charges against Dr. Swarup Mishra, founder of Mediheal Group of Hospitals, following evidence of his alleged central role in an international organ trafficking syndicate that exploited hundreds of impoverished Kenyans.

    The Independent Investigative Committee on Tissue and Organ Transplant Services delivered its damning 314-page report to Health Cabinet Secretary Aden Duale on Tuesday, exposing what investigators describe as a sophisticated criminal enterprise that harvested kidneys from vulnerable donors for wealthy international recipients.

    Evidence

    The investigation, spanning three months and analyzing data from 452 donors and 447 recipients across multiple institutions, revealed that Mediheal Hospital in Eldoret accounted for approximately 81% of all donors and 76% of all recipients in Kenya’s organ transplant sector between 2018 and March 2025.

    This staggering concentration of transplant activity at a single private facility immediately raised questions about the hospital’s operations and regulatory oversight.

    The data paints a disturbing picture of systematic exploitation that operated on an industrial scale. Mediheal Hospital handled 417 donors and 340 recipients, with male patients making up three out of every four cases.

    Most concerning to investigators was that nearly 40% of recipients had “unknown status,” indicating possible deliberate gaps in documentation to obscure their identities and origins.

    The investigation uncovered evidence of what appears to be a transnational organ trafficking network with tentacles reaching across continents.

    While Kenyan recipients made up half of the donors, those with undocumented nationalities, along with individuals from Israel and Uganda, comprised the lion’s share of the remaining cases.

    Perhaps most tellingly, investigators found that 60 people failed to reveal their country of origin, a pattern they believe was designed to cover tracks and obscure the international nature of the operation.

    Previous reporting by international media organizations, including Deutsche Welle, had already exposed how impoverished Kenyans were paid KSh294,000 for their organs, which were then sold to recipients in Germany for Sh3.2 million each.

    Foreign recipients were reportedly paying up to $200,000 for transplants at the private Kenyan hospital, creating a profit margin that investigators say demonstrates the predatory nature of the alleged scheme.

    The taskforce identified numerous red flags that had gone unaddressed by regulatory authorities for years.

    A single surgeon and a single anesthesiologist operated on 24 patients within a 14-day period, raising serious concerns about patient safety and the quality of care.

    Documentation irregularities plagued the operation, with concerns about the authenticity of signatures and some patients mysteriously categorized as “mutual friends.”

    The laboratory used to test Kenyan samples in India was not even registered by the Kenya Medical Laboratory Technicians and Technologists Board, yet continued to process critical medical tests.

    The pattern of operations suggested that Mediheal was functioning as a transplant tourism destination, commanding the premium pricing structures typically associated with such medical tourism operations.

    This positioning allowed the hospital to attract wealthy international clients while exploiting the desperation of local donors who had few alternatives for economic survival.

    The committee has now recommended criminal investigations for four key figures at the center of the alleged scheme.

    Dr. Swarup Mishra faces charges as the hospital’s founder and owner, while Dr. A.S. Murthy, the nephrologist, is accused of running a “one-man show” in what investigators emphasize should be a “team sport” requiring multiple specialists and oversight.

    Dr. Sananda Bag, the urologist and transplant surgeon, and Dr. Vijay Kumar, the anesthesiologist, are also recommended for criminal investigation for their potential involvement in the trafficking operation.

    Mishra cornered 

    Despite mounting evidence, Mishra has maintained his innocence with religious fervor.

    “In the name of God, I swear I am not guilty. Mediheal has never been involved in any form of organ trafficking. This is a conspiracy to finish me,” he declared in April when the allegations first surfaced publicly.

    However, his protestations have been undermined by the systematic evidence compiled by the government taskforce.

    The allegations have already had significant consequences for Mishra’s career and standing. President William Ruto suspended Mishra as the chairperson of the Kenya BioVax Institute in April, with the suspension taking effect immediately to allow investigations into the organ trafficking allegations.

    This presidential action signaled the seriousness with which the government views the charges.

    The fall from grace is particularly stark for a man who first set foot on Kenyan soil in 1997 as an ambitious gynaecologist with nothing but a suitcase and a dream.

    Over two decades, Mishra built a medical empire that positioned him as a respected healthcare provider and even earned him government appointments.

    His transformation from immigrant doctor to alleged organ trafficking kingpin represents one of the most dramatic reversals of fortune in Kenya’s recent medical history.

    Systemic failures 

    The report also exposes broader regulatory failures that allowed the alleged scheme to operate with impunity for years.

    The committee recommends that the Kenya Medical Practitioners and Dentists Council be investigated for potential regulatory failure and possible criminal collusion due to their repeated inaction on reports of wrongdoing at Mediheal Hospital.

    Dr Cheptinga claimed that interference with the final report occurred at the highest levels, suggesting that the scandal may extend beyond Mediheal itself into government regulatory bodies.

    Cabinet Secretary Duale has promised decisive action that goes beyond the usual government rhetoric.

    “I want to assure you that report will not find itself on the shelves. It will be implemented. I will take it to Parliament and Cabinet,” he declared upon receiving the report. His commitment suggests that the government recognizes the international embarrassment and domestic outrage that the scandal has generated.

    The committee has made sweeping recommendations for reform that would fundamentally restructure Kenya’s organ transplant system.

    These include establishing a National Organ Transplant Authority, creating a National Transplant Coordination Centre, and implementing robust oversight mechanisms for all health facilities offering diagnostic, dialysis, and transplant services.

    The committee also recommends that Mediheal Hospital remain suspended until all investigations are concluded.

    Behind the statistics and regulatory failures lies a deeply human story of exploitation that has touched hundreds of families across Kenya.

    Rip-off 

    The investigation revealed how young, impoverished people were systematically taken advantage of to donate their kidneys at a cost of about Ksh.400,000, while Mediheal Hospital allegedly sold those same organs for almost Ksh.30 million to patients locally and overseas.

    This vast markup, from approximately $3,000 paid to donors to nearly $200,000 charged to recipients, illustrates both the predatory nature of the alleged scheme and the vulnerability of those it exploited.

    The Mediheal scandal has triggered multiple parallel investigations that promise to keep the story in the headlines for months to come.

    Parliament’s Health Committee has opened an 80-day inquiry into the alleged organ harvesting, while the government has suspended all organ transplant services at the Mediheal Group of Hospitals with immediate effect.

    These overlapping investigations suggest that the full scope of the alleged criminal enterprise may be even larger than currently understood.

    As Kenya grapples with this unprecedented healthcare scandal, the case has exposed critical weaknesses in the country’s medical regulatory framework and raised serious questions about how such an extensive alleged criminal operation could operate for years without detection.

    The scandal has damaged Kenya’s reputation as a medical tourism destination and raised questions about the oversight of private healthcare facilities throughout the country.

    The next phase will determine whether justice will be served for the vulnerable individuals who may have been exploited, and whether Kenya can rebuild trust in its organ transplant system through meaningful reform and accountability.

    For now, the weight of evidence compiled by the government taskforce has placed Swarup Mishra at the center of what may be one of the most significant medical scandals in Kenya’s history.

  • “In The Name of God, I Swear I Am Not Guilty”: Mishra Breaks Silence on Organ Trafficking Accusations

    “In The Name of God, I Swear I Am Not Guilty”: Mishra Breaks Silence on Organ Trafficking Accusations

    Former Kesses MP Dr. Swarup Mishra has vehemently denied allegations of organ trafficking at Mediheal Hospital in Eldoret, calling the accusations “a plot by both political and non-political enemies” designed to destroy his reputation.

    “In the name of God, I swear I am not guilty. Mediheal has never been involved in any form of organ trafficking. This is a conspiracy to finish me,” Mishra told a loval newspaper.

    The hospital founder’s impassioned denial comes as the National Assembly Health Committee, chaired by Seme MP Dr. James Nyikal, launched an 80-day inquiry into the allegations following public uproar.

    The report detailed claims that senior Health Ministry officials allegedly doctored an initial investigation into the scandal.

    “Nothing to Hide”

    Swarup Mishra.
    Swarup Mishra.

    Mishra has extended an open invitation to journalists and accusers to visit Mediheal facilities, including the Eldoret branch currently under investigation.

    “Visit Mediheal and talk to patients who have benefitted from our services. We are an open book and ready to provide any information because our goal is to protect, preserve, and save life – not destroy it,” he said.

    Conrad Maloba of Conrad Law Advocates LLP, representing Mediheal Group of Hospitals, reaffirmed the hospital’s cooperation with authorities.

    “We acknowledge the Health Ministry has noted the allegations. On government instructions, we have suspended all transplant services and are fully cooperating with the audit, which is set to begin shortly,” Maloba stated in a media briefing.

    Parliamentary Investigation

    Dr. Nyikal described the allegations as serious, emphasizing the need for a comprehensive investigation to protect lives and restore dignity to the medical profession.

    “We will get to the bottom of it,” he promised during a press conference at Parliament Buildings.

    The parliamentary inquiry will run parallel with an executive-led audit and will examine:
    – The effectiveness of existing legal frameworks governing organ transplantation
    – The performance of regulatory bodies including the Ministry of Health, KMPDC, and the Kenya Tissue and Transplant Authority
    – Whether unethical practices or oversight failures were allowed to persist at Mediheal Hospital
    – Any earlier complaints or warning signs that might have been ignored

    Health Cabinet Secretary Aden Duale has put the Kenya Medical Practitioners and Dentists Council (KMPDC) on notice over licensing of foreign doctors, some of whom have reportedly been banned in countries such as India.

    “We must dismantle cartels and clean up the health sector. Where was the leadership when someone was trafficking organs in Eldoret? KMPDC was there,” Duale said during a tour of the regulatory body.

    “These are very poor Kenyans. Someone offers them Sh500,000 and takes their kidney – that is deeply immoral,” he added.

    Medical Services Principal Secretary Dr. Ouma Oluga echoed the CS’s remarks, underlining the importance of regulation in the health sector.

    According to reports referenced in the article, records show Mediheal had allegedly made at least 372 Kenyans “fugitives in their own country” before taking their kidneys.

    The investigation has also revealed that most kidney donors came from Mountain, Northern and Rift regions, with people having names with Mt. Kenya backgrounds being the most frequent donors.

    President Ruto has reportedly suspended Mishra as BioVax chair to pave the way for the Mediheal organs trade probe.

    As the investigation unfolds, Dr. Nyikal emphasized that the goal is not merely to punish wrongdoing but to strengthen Kenya’s health systems.

    “We want to ensure Kenya’s health sector is safe, ethical, and internationally respected,” he said.

    The committee will recommend reforms to transplant regulations and propose disciplinary actions against any individuals or institutions found culpable – a move aimed at restoring public trust in Kenya’s organ donation system.

  • Ruto Axes BioVax Chair Mishra Over Mediheal Kidney Transplant Scandal

    Ruto Axes BioVax Chair Mishra Over Mediheal Kidney Transplant Scandal

    President William Ruto has suspended Dr. Swarup Mishra as the chairperson of the Kenya BioVax Institute, effective immediately.

    In a statement released on Friday, Ruto clarified that the suspension will remain in place until the completion of an investigation into allegations of unlawful kidney transplant procedures conducted at a hospital he founded.o said the suspension will remain in effect until a probe into allegations of illegal kidney transplant procedures in a hospital he founded is complete.

    “The suspension shall remain in force pending the outcome of investigations into serious allegations of unethical and illegal activities involving kidney transplant procedures at Mediheal Hospital and Fertility Centre in Eldoret,” Ruto said.

    In the statement, the President reaffirmed his administration’s commitment to fighting corruption, including upholding integrity in healthcare, public safety, and justice for victims.

    The suspension comes barely six months after Ruto appointed Mishra to serve as chairman of the board of directors of the Biovax Institute for three years with effect from November 22, 2024.

    Mishra is the proprietor of Mediheal Group of Hospitals and had served for one term as MP for Kesses but lost to newcomer Julius Rutto in the last General Election.

    The hospital has three branches in Eldoret, two in Nairobi and one in Nakuru.

    He ran against the grain after he vied as an Independent and was considered a sympathiser of the Azimio side in a region that is President Ruto’s stronghold.

    Mishra, who was known as a big spender on community projects and generous to a fault, had become a household name, especially in the Rift Valley region, where he was nicknamed “Kiprop” by the Kalenjin community.

    On Wednesday, the government suspended all transplant services at the Mediheal Group of Hospitals. 

    The Ministry of Health said it specifically halted kidney transplant procedures at the facility following “credible concerns” from both the government and the public.

    “Effective immediately, all transplant services — and in particular kidney transplant services — at Mediheal Group of Hospitals are hereby suspended until further notice,” the statement read.

    Officials cited ethical issues as the reason for the shutdown.

    “This decision follows credible concerns from government and citizens regarding the facility’s adherence to required ethical standards in the conduct of transplant procedures,” the Ministry said.

  • ‪Mediheal Hospital Involved In Organ Trafficking, Evidence Shows

    ‪Mediheal Hospital Involved In Organ Trafficking, Evidence Shows

    Mediheal Hospital in Eldoret has been involved in alleged organ smuggling over unspecified period of time, a report has revealed.

    The report commissioned by International Society of Nephrology and done under the Kenya Renal Association (KRA) exposes an alleged complex syndicate in which the hospital is being accused of engagement in unethical transplant activities, involving the sale of kidneys and transplant tourism that have violated international and local laws.

    The report reveals how buyers from overseas were purchasing kidneys as low as Sh700,000.

    The investigating committee say the probe was launched over complaints that raised serious ethical concerns.

    Investigations reveal exploitation of vulnerable donors, endangering their health and damaging Kenya’s medical reputation. Such practices undermine trust in voluntary organ donation, fostering a dangerous black market.

    “This is the association said is in direct violation of the World Health Organization resolutions, the Declaration of Istanbul, and Kenya’s Health Act of 2017, which prohibits organ trade.” the report reads.

    Evidence

    The committee has accused the hospital of damaging the county’s reputation by involvement in the unethical practices and taking advantage of the poor members of the public.

    “Evidence gathered over the past two years from donor testimonies and recipient accounts suggests significant ethical breaches, including exploitation of vulnerable donors from local communities. This has not only endangered the health of both donors and recipients but has also damaged the reputation of Kenya’s medical community internationally.” reads the report seen by Kenya Insights.

    The association emphasizes on both physical and psychological well-being of the donors.

    “Kidney donors play an essential role in transplantation, receiving no physical benefits and relying solely on the psychological and spiritual satisfaction of aiding another. Ethical handling and extensive pre-and post-operative care are crucial fo ensuring their health and well-being.”

    In condemning Mediheal, the association has raised alarm over diminishing trust between donors and practitioners that could arise from unethical practices like that of Mediheal.

    “Unethical practices undermine the trust in voluntary donation, leading to a decrease in willing donors and increasing the costs associated with organ transplants. This fosters a harmful black market for organs, with potential risks including human trafficking and violence.”

    Report further claims that the transplants are being done at the hospital ‘under the watch of relevant ministry officials’ and has called on the Government to intervene. “The issue of illegal kidney transplants has been a significant and troubling problem, stemming from a complex interplay of poverty, lack of regulation and exploitation. Vulnerable populations, particularly those from impoverished backgrounds, are often targeted by organ trafficking networks,” notes the report.

    Report further states that these networks deceive or coerce individuals into selling their kidneys, often for a fraction of the potential market value.  Operations frequently occur under unsafe conditions, posing severe health risks to the donors, it notes.

    Report indicates that the trade is fueled by the high demand for kidney transplants and the shortage of legally available organs.

    “Inadequate legal frameworks and corruption within certain segments of the medical community allow this illicit activity to persist,” it says.

    The report claims the kidneys are shipped overseas where they are sold for as much as Sh4 million.

    Suspend Mediheal

    Committee has made five recommendations to the CEOs of the Kenya Blood and Transplant Authority and Kenya Medical Practitioners and Dentist Council including;

    1. Suspend Mediheal Hospital’s license pending a full investigation.
    2. Suspend the licenses of all medical personnel involved and initiate disciplinary actions.
    3. Review and potentially revise the regulatory role of the Kenya Medical Practitioners and Dentists Council concerning Mediheal Hospital.
    4. Direct the Directorate of Criminal Investigations and the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions to expedite legal actions against individuals involved in illegal transplant activities.
    5. Publicize the findings and recommendations of the Kenya Blood Transfusion and Transplant Services report.

    Commitment

    The Kenya Renal Association, along with other medical bodies has reiterated commitment to uphold ethical transplant practices and offers continued support fo victims of these unethical practices, ensuring their health and privacy.

    The committee has called for immediate and decisive actions to eliminate these unethical practices as evidenced by Mediheal to protect the integrity of kidney transplantation in Kenya and ensure the safety and well-being of all patients and donors involved.

    The report seen by Kenya Insights has been signed by Kenya Renal Association (KRA) Dr. Jonathan Wala, Kenya Association of urological Surgeons/KAUS/Dr. Patick Mburugua, Kenya Association of Physicians (KAP) Dr. Erick Njenga and Renal/ Partients Society of Kenya (RPSK) Mr. John Gikonyo.

    Mishra’s woes

    The hospital which is associated with the immediate former Kesses Member of Parliament Dr. Swarup Mishra has been clouded with endless woes that has seen it shutdown many of its branches across the country including the Eldoret branch that served as its main branch amid financial crisis.

    An auction slated for July 2, 2024 by Eldoret-based Jomuki Auctioneers lists four prime properties owned by Dr Mishra and his wife under Mediheal Group Limited, including 50 acres of land in Ngeria, Uasin Gishu county, and two acres in Elgon View Estate, as well as the land that housed his former Constituency Development Fund (CDF) offices while he served as Kesses MP.

    The properties have been put up for sale due to multi-million loan arrears owed to banks by the businessman-turned-politician who runs the once vibrant Mediheal Group of hospitals with branches in parts of the country, including the Mediheal Eldoret Fertility Centre.

    Last year, the High Court issued an injunction restraining the sale of the politician’s prime properties in Eldoret town over a Sh61 million loan arrears. This came after the former MP, his wife Pallavi Rajthan and their hospital, Mediheal Diagnostics and Fertility Centre, sued Legacy Auctioneer Services and Commercial International Bank (CIB) Kenya Limited.

    Fall of Mediheal

    During the visit by the Parliamentary Committee on Health to the Mediheal facility, the management attributed the facility’s failure to the government’s withdrawal of medical coverage and the State’s non-payment of NHIF funds to the hospital for no apparent reason.

    It emerged that since 2021, the facility had received about Sh1.7 billion from NHIF in the form of claims.

    “We have checked the hospital’s records and we have not found any discrepancies. We feel sorry for this hospital and we will write our report and table it in Parliament,” said the chairperson of the parliamentary committee, Dr Robert Pukose, during the visit.

    The team was touring selected health facilities to assess whether some were being paid fraudulently by NHIF, following reports that showed some were colluding with the health insurer to make fraudulent claims.

    The Mediheal Group of Hospitals has five state-of-the-art facilities in Eldoret, Nakuru and Nairobi, and outreach centres in Kisumu and Kakamega. There were plans to open more facilities in other towns such as Naivasha as part of an expansion strategy.

    Mishras’ Eldoret facility was the first to open under the Mediheal group of hospitals, becoming operational in December 2004, and had been expanding slowly until the recent financial difficulties.

    By 2015, the owners had established more than three facilities offering general medicine and other specialities, including IVF and kidney transplants. By then, the facility had performed more than 300 kidney transplants.

    Mediheal’s financial problems began two years ago when some insurance companies stopped covering teachers, police officers and other civil servants who sought medical treatment at its facilities, without informing them of the reasons.

  • Mishra Owned Mediheal Hospital Ropped In A Series Of Scandals With Patients

    Mishra Owned Mediheal Hospital Ropped In A Series Of Scandals With Patients

    Mediheal Hospital doesn’t seem to catch a breath anymore from complaints and accusations from patients. A doctor at the Mediheal Diagnostic and Fertility Centre Limited, a subsidiary of Mediheal Group of Hospitals owned by Indian born self-declared obstetric gynaecologist from Odisha, India, cum politician Dr. Swarup Ranjan Mishra, former Kesses Member of Parliament (MP) have been ordered to pay over Sh1.1 million to a woman they agreed to collect an egg from last year to give to an unknown recipient.

    Swarup Mishra.

    The Nairobi-based hospital and a doctor at the facility Dr Shaunak Khandwala were ordered by Milimani Magistrate Lucy Njora to pay the plaintiff, Anatasha Chepngeno (code-named AC), Sh1,139,665.06 for breach of contract.

    Mediheal and Khandawala have been given 10 days to pay the ordered amount to lawyer Geoffrey Langat of Fatah Advocates.

    Through a ruling delivered on August 9, 2023, in default of appearance after Mediheal and Khandawala failed to file a defence in the case filed by Langat in 2022, the magistrate ordered the facility and the doctor to settle the payment.

    “Take notice that an interlocutory judgement was entered against you (Mediheal and Dr Khandwala) in default of appearance. A decree and certificate of costs were drawn and decretal sum now payable to plaintiff (woman identified AC) is Sh1,139,665.” Langat states in the demand for pay to the hospital dated August 10, 2023.

    According to the ruling, the hospital and the doctor have been ordered to pay within 10 days, failing which auctioneers will descend on their property to recover the said amount.

    On January 30, 2023, the magistrate   entered a judgment against the medic and the health facility when they failed to respond to the case filed last year for breach of contract.

    “Judgement is hereby entered for the plaintiff as against the defendants (Mediheal and Dr Khandwala) in the sum of Sh950,000 plus costs and interest.” Milimani Magistrate Njora ruled.

    The interests was set at Sh132,115.06 while the legal and other costs were set at Sh57,550.

    In the undefended suit, Anatasha Chepngeno told the court that on November 6, 2021, she entered into a written contract with the defendants to be an egg donor.

    The defendants thereafter “put the plaintiff (ac) through a follicle retrieval (IVP) procedure which could lead to the extraction of the follicle.”

    The court heard that the procedure, which could take 45 days, involved laboratory tests, a strict diet and 12 injections that could disrupt her normal menstrual cycle and disrupt the natural hormonal process.

    “The process was to finally lead to induced extraction/harvest of the ovum by Khandwala to be sold to recipients not known to AC.” Langat stated in the evidence to the court.

    According to the agreement, Anatasha was to be paid Sh950,000.

    However, Langat told the court that a copy of the agreement was not issued to his client Anatasha when both parties executed it.

    On December 15, 2022, when the plaintiff was due to harvest the follicles, the defendants terminated the said agreement and chased Anatasha away “without proper communication or counselling”.

    The court heard that as a result, the process was unilaterally stopped by the defendants and she was later given medication which led to “painful follicles, causing her to go through a long period of pain and suffering”.

    Langat told the court that failing to complete the agreed-upon process resulted in psychological torture for the complainant.

    The judge heard that the woman could be suffering from the effects of hormonal imbalance, leading to unusually moody moments that have affected her normal daily activities.

    Langat told the court the woman had suffered loss and damage.

    In her ruling, the judge said the plaintiff had proved her case against the defendants and granted judgment in her favour.

    Organ Trafficking

    Despite being Buoyed as a thriving medical transformation center after undertaking over 200 kidney transplants since the inauguration of the hospital’s Kidney transplant Unit in 2019, the much hyped  Mediheal Group of Hospitals continue to be dogged by endless disputes.

    Mediheal has numerously been in the public limelight over accusations of organ transplant and trafficking allegations, claims that the hospital and the alleged patient identified as John Kogo from Eldoret vehemently disowned.

    While seeking gag orders from the matter being publicised, in an affidavit, Mishra said that the organ transplant trafficking allegations were severely denting the image of the hospital locally and internationally.

    The allegations led to panic among current and potential patients, investors, partners, financiers and donors resulting in loss of business and opportunities which is hurting the hospital irreparably.

    Separately, in July 2021, the facility was ordered to pay a former employee Sh2million as damages for testing her HIV status without her consent and disclosing the results to third parties in July last year.

    Justice Hellen Ong’udi directed Mediheal Group of Hospitals and Mediheal Hospital Eastleigh to pay the woman, code-named Rao, money for emotional and psychological distress as a result of the stigma she suffered as a result.

    The judge increased the Sh900, 000 award given to the woman by the HIV and Aids Tribunal in November 2020.

    Justice Ong’undi said the tribunal’s amount was too low and it had failed to consider that Ms Rao also lost her job.

    The court dismissed a counterclaim by the hospital seeking damages from Ms Rao for bad publicity it claimed it suffered and an outstanding hospital bill of Sh33, 067.

    In yet another labour dispute matter, the hospital was on the spot for unfairly terminating eight nurses over the disappearance of two patients who had pending bills.

    The eight employees including five nurses and three nursing aids accused Mediheal Hospital management of unfair termination saying it was not their duty to guard discharged patients.

    The labour officer Joel Omweno directed the hospital’s management to settle the matter within a week, failing to which legal action was to be taken.

    “The eight employees reported the unfair termination and lack of the management’s willingness to pay their terminal dues.” Omweno said.

    Omweno called upon the hospital management to settle the one-month pay in lieu of notice, any pending leave, unpaid days worked, any overtime worked and rest days.

    Peril Cheruto, a nurse who was among the victims, said the patients who had been discharged disappeared at the facility on March 5 and 10 respectively.

    “Nurses do not have an obligation to handle patients who have been discharged. The two disappeared during the day and having been mobile patients, they were not under our watch,” Cheruto said.

    One patient, who had been involved in an accident and was treated at the facility, escaped without paying Sh85, 000. The other patient was in the private suite and was to pay Sh400, 000.

    Despite Mediheal being a private hospital, it’s still under the control of the Ministry of Health guidelines in one way or the other and needs certification from MoH to operate or to confirm such claims like Mediheal just did.

    The MediHeal Hospital has branches in Nairobi, Nakuru, Uganda and Rwanda.