Kenyan activists Bob Njagi, Nicholas Oyoo abducted in Uganda

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Two Kenyan activists, Bob Njagi and Nicholas Oyoo, were on
Wednesday afternoon allegedly abducted by four armed
men believed to be security officials.
The two, who had joined National Unity Platform Presidential
candidate Bobi Wine’s campaign trail on Tuesday, were reportedly forced into a vehicle
and their phones switched off.
A friend who escaped the ordeal claims the
incident is linked to their support for Bobi Wine.
Videos recorded during Bobi Wine’s campaign in Kamuli District,
Eastern Uganda on Tuesday clearly capture Free Kenya Movement Chairman Bob
Njagi on stage alongside Uganda’s opposition leader Bobi Wine who is
seeking to unseat President Yoweri Museveni.
In other clips, Njagi is seen listening
keenly to Bobi Wine, and at times joining his entourage as they traversed rural
areas.
According to a friend who spoke to us on
condition of anonymity, the activists left Kenya on Monday and drove to Uganda
in the company of two Ugandans. Once in Kampala, the Ugandan companions went
home, leaving the three Kenyans to link up with Bobi Wine’s campaign.
On Tuesday, they moved across Buyende and
Kamuli with NUP leaders as they campaigned ahead of the 2026 presidential
elections.
But by Wednesday afternoon, the mission
took a darker turn. The group had stopped at a petrol station to repair their car when
everything went south.
"At around 3pm there are some guys who came with a van looked to be greyish
in colour, people came out with guns. They were four of them there was also a lady who
was seated in front they took Bob and Oyoo Ochieng who
is the secretary general of the Free Kenya Movement,” a witness recounted.
The witness, who was in their company, says
he too was picked up but later released.
"I told them that my car is not
locked, I cannot go to where I don't know, and then they asked me to just get
out and then go and lock my car,” the witness added.
The gunmen sped off, and within moments,
Njagi and Oyoo’s phones were switched off. Alone, in the dark, and in a foreign
country, their colleague has not reported the matter to the authorities, fearing
for his safety.
"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 alleged abduction comes just four
months after Kenyan activist Boniface Mwangi and Ugandan activist Agather
Atuhaire were arrested in Tanzania and later dumped near their countries’
borders. Both would later claim they were sexually assaulted by Tanzanian authorities.
For Njagi, this is not the first time. Last year, he was abducted
alongside the Longton brothers over alleged links to anti-government protests
and disappeared for more than a month.
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