Parliament is now seeking to unearth the extent of child trafficking
in public health facilities run by the
national and county governments and
clinics across the country.
The move comes after a court
convicted a former social worker at Mama
Lucy Kibaki Hospital in Nairobi of
facilitating the sale of several children.
In the probe being undertaken by
the Senate Health Committee, the senators are seeking to establish reasons
behind the vice.
“The committee should provide a
detailed report on investigations into
allegations of child trafficking facilitated by staff in government health
facilities,” Nominated Senator Esther
Okenyuri said.
In her request to the House, she
wants the panel to particularly address allegations that a social worker
— MLKH — facilitated the sale of
multiple children.
Senate Speaker Amoson Kingi
cleared the request and ordered the
Health Committee chaired by Uasin
Gishu Senator Jackson Mandago to
immediately swing into action.
The panel will also establish the
disciplinary and legal actions taken
against government employees found
complicit in child trafficking cases.
“The committee should state the
collaborative measures in place between law enforcement agencies,
health authorities and child protection services to dismantle these illegal
operations,” she said.
In October 2023, the court sentenced Fred Leparan, a former social worker at Mama Lucy Kibaki
Hospital, to 35 years in jail after he
was found guilty of child trafficking.
He was arrested in 2020 and found
guilty of child trafficking, child neglect and conspiracy to commit crime.
His co-accused Selina Adundo
was sentenced to six years in jail or
Sh300,000 fine.
The pair was convicted of child
trafficking and negligence after they
were exposed in a BBC report in 2020.
In the probe, the senators are also
investigating informal health clinics
believed to be abetting the vice.
“The committee should provide
a status report on the licensing
and regulatory oversight of private
health facilities, explaining why unlicensed clinics continue to operate
unchecked,” she said.
Okenyuri also wants the committee to provide a list of licensed and
unlicensed clinics in Nairobi’s Kayole
area and other identified hotspots in
informal the settlements.
She wants the government to shut
down all the illegal clinics allegedly
involved in child trafficking.
“Indicate the measures being implemented to ensure compliance with
health regulations as well as the closure of facilities involved in illegal
activities,” the senator said.
There are a few reliable statistics
on the extent of child trafficking in
Kenya.
In 2023, former Labour and Social Protection CS Florence Bore
said more than 6,000 children were
reported missing between July 2022
and May 2023.
Bore had indicated the government
would abolish all privately owned orphanages and children’s homes within
the next eight years – a move aimed
at ending child trafficking.
“The reason why we are closing
them up is because we have been given directions under the Children’s Act
that private homes should be closed.”
“They have also been routes for
child trafficking, so the government
wants us to retain the institutions that
we have under the Child Welfare Society of Kenya.”