
‘We want closure': family searches for answers over Kenyan police officer missing in Haiti
Benedict Kuria and some colleagues were ambushed in March by suspected gang members. Haitian media reported that he had died, but Kenya's police service says a search is continuing.
'We've tried many times to get information from the government, but they've refused,' said Kuria's wife, Miriam Watima. 'We don't know what to do any more.'
Hundreds of Kenyan officers have been posted to Haiti as part of a US and UN-backed mission to help police in the Caribbean country get to grips with rampant gang violence. More than a million people have been forced from their homes in a relentless cycle of indiscriminate killings, kidnappings, gang rapes and arson.
Kuria's case has reignited public concern over Kenya's involvement in the multinational security support mission (MSS), which started last year and was the subject of intense domestic public and legal scrutiny from the outset.
In a search for answers, Kuria's family filed a court petition in June that listed the attorney-general, the inspector general of police and various ministers as respondents. A Nairobi court has scheduled a hearing for September but the family, who want the matter treated with urgency, have called for the session to be brought forward.
'We entrusted our son with the government,' said Kuria's mother, Jacinta Kabiru. 'They should give us the information.'
Kuria, a 33-year-old administration police officer, joined the MSS last July. On 26 March the MSS said he was 'unaccounted for' after an ambush the day before on a team who had gone to assist the recovery of a Haitian police vehicle stuck in a ditch that it suspected had been dug by gangs.
Later on 26 March, Kenyan police said a search and rescue mission was continuing, while local leaders and police chiefs went to Watima's house in the town of Kikuyu, north-west of Nairobi in Kiambu county, to tell her that her husband was missing.
But the following day, Haitian media outlets reported that Kuria had been killed, quoting Haiti's presidential transitional council as saying that he 'fell … while carrying out his mission' and 'gave his life for a better future for our country'.
In the months since, his family's desperate scramble for clarity has included visits to police – who have told them a search and rescue mission is continuing – and politicians' offices. Through their lawyer, Mbuthi Gathenji, they have petitioned parliament and written letters to Kenya's attorney-general and María Isabel Salvador, the special representative of the UN secretary-general in Haiti.
Their court petition accuses government officials of 'refusing and/or neglecting' to provide the family with information on Kuria's whereabouts 'to ease their agony', and asks judges to assist in 'compelling the respondents to disclose information'.
'You can imagine the pain that the parents and relatives are going through,' said Gathenji. 'We are asking the government to come out with finality.'
The Guardian has approached Kenya's interior cabinet secretary as well as the MSS and the Kenyan police for comment.
Kenya's leading role in the mission stemmed from a desire by the US and the UN to restructure international intervention in Haiti with a multinational mission headed by an African country, after a series of floundering UN missions during which UN troops caused a cholera outbreak and peacekeepers were accused of sexual assault.
Kenya, which has participated in many peacekeeping missions internationally, volunteered to lead the Haiti intervention. For its president, William Ruto, the deployment was a chance to position his country as a reliable international partner and burnish the reputation of its police force, which regularly uses violence against civilians.
The arrival of the Kenyan officers in June 2024 brought some hope to Haiti, but the mission, beset by funding, equipment and personnel issues, has failed to repel the criminal advance.
In April, Salvador said Haiti was approaching a 'point of no return'. And on Wednesday, Ghada Waly, the executive director of the UN office on drugs and crime, told the UN security council that gangs now controlled an estimated 90% of the capital, Port-au-Prince.
Kuria's mother had tried to dissuade him from joining the mission after learning about Haiti's violent reputation, but he was determined to go, motivated in part by the extra pay the job came with, which he planned to use to improve his relatives' lives. 'This is an opportunity we have got as a family,' his brother, Philip Kuria, recalled him saying.
Kuria was due to return this year at the end of his one-year contract. 'It's a struggle,' said Philip. 'What we want is closure.'
Kuria's uncle, Daniel Ndung'u, said the family was open to any news. 'My prayer is that he's going to come back to join us,' he said. 'This suspense is actually torturing us.'
Watima recalled her last call with Kuria as they discussed academic plans for their 17-year-old daughter. She tops up credit for her husband's phone so it doesn't get deactivated, hoping that one day he'll call again. In the meantime, she waits for the government. 'They should tell us whether he's alive or not,' she said. 'That's all we want to know.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
a few seconds ago
- Daily Mail
Labour's class war is about to get worse. This mean and petty act takes your money from your children. Could Rachel Reeves be so stupid? Yes she could: STEPHEN GLOVER
What is it about this Government? Just when one thinks it can sink no lower, it plumbs new depths of idiocy. Rachel Reeves is reportedly considering raising more money from inheritance tax in her autumn Budget. This would be a stupid and utterly futile thing for the Chancellor to do. It would also be massively unpopular for a party that is already beating historical records for political unpopularity.


Reuters
30 minutes ago
- Reuters
Bessent vows to finish divestitures that ethics office says are late
WASHINGTON, Aug 12 (Reuters) - U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Wednesday he was working to divest illiquid personal assets including farmland by year-end after the Office of Government Ethics said he had not met deadlines in the ethics agreement he signed in January. In a letter sent on Monday to Senate Finance Committee Chair Mike Crapo, OGE Deputy Compliance Director Dale Christopher wrote that Bessent "has failed to timely comply with certain terms of the ethics agreement he signed" before taking office in late January. The ethics office said it told Treasury ethics officials to remind Bessent "that it is his personal responsibility to avoid taking any action that could create a real or apparent conflict of interest with regard to his holdings," the letter said. Bessent, a key figure driving President Donald Trump's economic agenda including tariffs, tax cuts and deregulation, signed an ethics agreement in January that pledged he would divest his Key Square Group hedge fund and other assets to avoid conflicts of interest. Many of the divestitures were to be completed by April 28. In a statement issued by the Treasury Department, Bessent said he had completed all but 4% of the asset divestitures required by his ethics agreement. "Much of (that) is farmland, an inherently highly illiquid asset," Bessent said. "As agreed upon with OGE, I am working towards selling the rest of my required divestitures before the end of this year." A U.S. Treasury spokesperson said most of the required divestitures, valued at about $1 billion, were completed before Trump's second-term inauguration on January 20. Bessent took office about a week later. OGE's Christopher on Wednesday said in a subsequent letter to Crapo that Treasury ethics officials told OGE that Bessent was committed to completing the remaining asset divestitures by December 15, including farmland in North Dakota. Christopher said the Treasury officials had explained that the illiquid assets were not readily marketable. Some assets also have restrictions on who can acquire them. Bessent will continue to recuse himself from certain matters affecting the remaining assets, and Treasury's ethics office has set up screening procedures to identify "potentially conflicting matters that would be seen by the Secretary," the letter said.


The Herald Scotland
an hour ago
- The Herald Scotland
Reeves pledges to tackle productivity challenge at autumn budget
'If renewal is our mission and productivity is our challenge, then investment and reform are our tools,' she wrote in an editorial for The Guardian newspaper. The Government's plans to cut red tape and shift responsibility away from councillors and towards expert officers are set out in its Planning and Infrastructure Bill, which is currently making its way through the House of Lords. Writing in the newspaper, Ms Reeves added that Labour's second year in power will be focused on 'building a stronger economy for a renewed Britain'. She wrote: 'Working people across Britain are striving and grafting, but they haven't had the tools they need for the job. They have not seen their incomes rise as a reward for their hard work. 'There is that sinking feeling that families and businesses across the country feel at the end of every month that they are working hard, but getting nowhere. 'There is nothing progressive – nothing Labour – about an economy that is not productive and does not reward those who contribute. 'Since I became shadow chancellor and then Chancellor, I have known that breaking this cycle will require our sustained effort across many fronts.' Ms Reeves also said her decision on tax rises would be set out in a 'responsible manner' at the budget, despite some already 'claiming to know' her plans. Her comments come as the latest gross domestic product (GDP) figures are set to be released on Thursday. In April this year, the economy saw the biggest monthly contraction since October 2023. Manufacturing activity had pulled back sharply amid a record drop in exports to the US following President Donald Trump's tariff hikes. Official figures showed gross domestic product (GDP) fell by 0.3% in April, compared with growth of 0.2% the previous month. Productivity was 0.2% lower in the first quarter of 2025, in comparison to the first three months of 2024, according to the Office for National Statistics. In July, Cabinet ministers were told to prioritise 'productivity-enhancing opportunities' when it comes to decisions on Government contracts. Ms Reeves and Cabinet Office chief Pat McFadden said in a letter that public procurement expenditure should boost 'British industry, jobs, skills, productivity'.