Muturi slams Ruto’s Government over abductions and extrajudicial killings: ‘’You will answer for this one day”
With Muturi’s warning echoing through the halls of power, the question remains: Will those responsible for these atrocities ever face justice?

Muturi urged Kenyans to save pictures and videos to cloud that they may be the answer to this intriguing situation in future
Public Service and Human Capital Development Cabinet Secretary Hon.Justin Muturi has issued a scathing rebuke of President William Ruto’s administration over a growing wave of abductions and extrajudicial killings, warning that those responsible will one day be held accountable
Speaking at a press briefing when mourning with families of the deceased at City Mortuary on Friday, Muturi cautioned security agencies against carrying out illegal orders, drawing parallels to the infamous Nuremberg Trials. “Security sector, remember, whatever you are doing, one day you may have to answer for it personally. You hold or you carry personal responsibility,” he said. “You cannot be excused for obeying illegal orders from wherever they may be from.”
The former Attorney General urged Kenyans to document evidence of human rights abuses, hinting that such records could play a crucial role in future justice efforts. “Make sure that those pictures you take, store them safely, even in the cloud. One day, those pictures may be the answer to this intriguing situation we are going through in this country.”
Makueni Senator Hon. Dan Maanzo echoed Muturi’s sentiments. “The police have a lot of information they are not giving us and are not investigating on. Those officers need to be identified, we want the government to tell us where our children are” said Maanzo.
The press briefing was also attended by Hussein Khalid, CEO of Vocal Africa and former Executive Director of HAKI Africa, who provided chilling details of the latest suspected extrajudicial killings involving four men, now referred to as the Mlolongo 4.
Khalid clarified that all four victims were friends, with three of them abducted on January 17. The fourth, identified as Mbisi, was taken the following day. “Two of them, Justas and Martin, had their fingerprints taken, and messages were sent to their rural homes,” Khalid revealed.
He further disclosed that two more bodies matching the descriptions of the missing men were likely at the city morgue, though morgue attendants needed time to confirm due to the high number of unidentified bodies. “The bodies are not in good shape. They appear to have been mutilated,” Khalid said, adding that DNA and fingerprint tests would be necessary for proper identification.
Khalid decried the alarming frequency of enforced disappearances, noting that even as the press briefing was ongoing, another family had reported the disappearance of a man who went missing earlier in the week.
“We have made killings and disappearances too normal in this country. Every other day, there’s a report of a disappearance,” he lamented.
He also accused government security agencies of complicity, challenging their claims of ignorance. “It can’t be normal that armed people, in broad daylight, using fake number plates, are picking our people left, right, and center, and then you tell us you don’t know. That cannot be true
Human rights groups and opposition figures have long accused the government of running covert hit squads, particularly targeting individuals linked to crime or political activism. Khalid reiterated the call for accountability, demanding an immediate end to abductions and extrajudicial executions.
“We are asking Kenyans to speak up, to raise their voices, so that we can end this practice of extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances in our country,” he urged.
As pressure mounts on the government, families of victims continue to demand answers, while rights organizations push for independent investigations into the security sector’s role in these disappearances.