KMPDU blames police for Albert Ojwang's death, demands DIG arrest
National
By
David Njaaga
| Jun 10, 2025
Kenya Medical Practitioners and Dentists Union (KMPDU) has linked police brutality to the death of Albert Ojwang in custody and called for the arrest of Deputy Inspector General of Police Eliud Kipkoech Lagat.
Ojwang, who had travelled to Migori County to visit family, was arrested by officers reportedly linked to the Directorate of Criminal Investigations over a social media post described by authorities as “derogatory.”
He was taken to Nairobi and held at the Nairobi Central Police Station.
Nairobi Central Police boss Stephen Okal claimed Ojwang died by suicide after injuring himself while alone in a cell.
“He was rushed to the hospital after what we think was an attempted suicide. He had injured himself in the head and was rushed to the hospital, where he died. He did not die here in custody,” said Okal.
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However, a postmortem conducted on Tuesday at City Mortuary by five pathologists ruled out suicide and confirmed the injuries were not self-inflicted.
“There were serious injuries to the head. There were also features of neck compression and multiple soft tissue injuries that were spread all over the body,” said Dr Benard Midiai, the lead pathologist.
“These are injuries that are externally inflicted and are keeping with assault,” he added.
Pathologists said Ojwang died from head trauma, neck compression and widespread soft tissue injuries. Samples were collected for further forensic testing.
KMPDU Secretary General Davji Atellah, who claimed he was also assaulted by police during recent healthcare protests, blamed the system for fostering impunity.
“As long as the rogue Deputy Inspector General of Police Eliud Lagat remains in office, no Kenyan is safe,” said Atellah.
“I speak not just as the Secretary General of KMPDU, but as a victim of the very brutality we now seek to end.”
Atellah claimed he was tear-gassed and attacked while leading peaceful protests for better working conditions for doctors.
“This is what happens when lawlessness is condoned. When life is reduced to a statistic. When the police, sworn to protect,t become perpetrators of impunity,” said Atellah.
“We cannot build a stable economy or a functioning nation on the blood of citizens. Silence is not peace, it is surrender. Kenyans deserve justice,” he added.