logo
ADVERTISEMENT

Family of JKUAT student killed, dumped in quarry speak

There's speculation the student could have been killed elsewhere and his body dumped at the site.

image
by GORDON OSEN

News10 July 2024 - 04:42
ADVERTISEMENT

In Summary


  • The family of Denzel Onyango, 23, says he was a quiet yet ambitious young man who would not engage in arguments.
  • They last saw him in a self-recorded video during the storming of Parliament on June 25.

A family is in mourning yet again over the death of their loved one following the deadly protests of June 25 against the now withdrawn Finance Bill, 2024. 

The family of Denzel Onyango, 23, says he was a quiet yet ambitious young man who would not engage in arguments. They last saw him in a self-recorded video during the storming of Parliament on June 25.

His brother, Joshua Juma, said he spoke with his brother a day before the protests.

Juma said Onyango, who was a quantity survey student at Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology, did not give any indication that he would be part of the 'Occupy Parliament' demonstrations. 

“It was just a call like any other, between an older and a younger brother,” he said, adding that his phone later went off during the day of the protests. 

Some family members in Nairobi swung into action and started searching for him.

They moved from one police station to another, hospitals and morgues with no success.

“My uncle went to Juja police station and reported him missing. Like it happened to everyone during these protests, the search was in morgues and hospitals and no police station gave indication that he had been arrested,” Juma said. 

Over the weekend, his family saw a picture circulating on social media  showing his body alongside his identity documents at a quarry in Juja.

“We were shocked because I had shared the poster looking for his whereabouts. We were not prepared to get the feedback from social media that he had died. The family is still deeply traumatised,” the brother said.

The family is still struggling to come to terms with the news and are preparing for the postmortem on the body before burial preparations.

“As you can expect, a body recovered from water is swollen and you cannot tell if there are any signs of torture or strangulation,” he said when asked on possible marks on the body that could give indication on how the young man met his death.

Speculation is rife the student could have been killed elsewhere and his body dumped at the quarry.

ADVERTISEMENT

logo© The Star 2024. All rights reserved