- Constable Mukhwana faces murder charge
- Late Teacher arrested for criticising Police officer online
In a case that has caused public outrage and brought renewed scrutiny on the Kenyan security forces, a Police officer, Constable James Mukhwana is currently facing trial in court accused of complicity in the death of a School teacher.
Constable Mukhwana is the first police officer to be arrested over the death of Albert Ojwang, a secondary school teacher who died in police custody recently.
Teacher Ojwang was arrested on 6 June 2025 in Homa Bay county, western Kenya, after criticising a Senior Police official on social media. After his arrest, Ojwang was driven about 200 miles (350km) to Nairobi, where he died two days later.
Mukhwana was the Cell sentry officer on duty the night Ojwang, 31, was brought to the Central Police Station in Nairobi, the Independent Policing Oversight Authority (IPOA) told a court in the capital.
Presenting Mukhwana in court, the IPOA sought permission to detain him for 21 days in order to carry out investigations. The court will deliver its ruling on 20 June.
Mukhwana’s court appearance is the latest development in what has become a fast-moving case.
Police originally said Ojwang had died “after hitting his head against a cell wall”, but an autopsy showed that his wounds, including a head injury, neck compression and several soft tissue injuries, were likely to have been the result of assault.
“These were injuries that were externally inflicted,” said Dr Bernard Midia, who led a team of pathologists for the postmortem examination.
On Wednesday, June 11, 2025, Douglas Kanja, the Inspector General of Police, apologised on behalf of the Police for suggesting Ojwang had died after hitting his head against a wall, saying that had been “misinformation”.
The IPOA launched an investigation that encompasses the actions of the officers who arrested Ojwang in Homa Bay county and took him to Nairobi.
On Tuesday, the Police spokesperson Michael Muchiri said five officers had been removed from active duty to “allow for transparent investigations”.
Ojwang’s death caused outrage online and protests in Nairobi as people demanded accountability and called for the resignation of the Deputy Inspector General (DIG), Eliud Kipkoech Lagat, who was the subject of Ojwang’s comments.
Police fired teargas on Monday to disperse protesters as they marched to the Central Police station, then again on Thursday as protesters set vehicles ablaze.
Ojwang’s death rekindled persistent public anger about Police brutality and other high-handedness in Kenya, where officers are rarely convicted. It came nearly a year after unprecedented protests that led to the killings of dozens of protesters and the disappearances and abductions of many more.
This is as Kenya’s President, William Ruto, said this week that Ojwang had died “at the hands of the Police” and ordered the National Police Service to cooperate with the IPOA investigation.
He said Ojwang’s death was “heartbreaking and unacceptable”, adding: “I strongly condemn the actions and omissions, including any negligence or outright criminality, that may have contributed to his untimely death.”
President Ruto had promised to stop extrajudicial killings by members of the law enforcement, but activists and rights groups have criticised his administration for failing in that regard and even accused it of concealing the crimes. – With The Guardian report