
A wave of abductions and heavy-handed arrests has surged across Kenya, triggering alarm among rights groups, legal scholars, and families of the missing, and prompting urgent action from the judiciary.
In a dramatic twist, the High Court has summoned the Director of Criminal Investigations (DCI), George Kinoti Amin, demanding answers over alleged enforced disappearances and defiance of court orders linked to ‘Gen Z’ protest Crackdowns.
Lawyers, families and NGOs accuse the DCI of turning Kenya into an “abductors’ playground.” Testimonies flood in of suspects detained without arrest warrants, whisked away in unmarked vehicles, and held without charges. Critics say Nameless policemen and intelligence operatives are collaborating in orchestrated knock-and-grabs—bypassing due process and judicial oversight .
A surge in violent arrests has further ignited public outrage. Videos show officers using excessive force during protests, dragging and gassing civilians in a manner critics call “state-sanctioned intimidation.” Reports claim that in some cases, detainees were beaten to extract confessions or to squash emerging dissent.
Families of those abducted are braving widespread fear to seek justice. One mother recounted, “He vanished without a trace—one day he was home, the next they told us he had escaped.” Lawyers argue that such incidents directly violate courts’ habeas corpus orders and jeopardize Kenya’s constitutional safeguards .
The judiciary steps in. In an unprecedented move, the High Court issued summons to Amin, calling on him to explain the DCI’s modus operandi and clarify whether officers are operating above the law. Judges have warned that non-compliance could lead to contempt charges and systemic checks on the DCI’s mandate.

Civil society sound the alarm. The International Commission of Jurists (Kenya) and local watchdogs have vowed to move swiftly to court if abuses persist. They warn that unchecked abductions threaten Kenya’s reputation and erode its standing in global human rights forums .
What unfolds next?
- Amin’s court appearance is expected within days. His testimony will be pivotal in determining the extent of police autonomy.
- Judicial oversight intensifies, potentially leading to landmark rulings defining the boundaries of lawful arrest and detention.
- Parliamentary scrutiny may follow, with MPs under pressure to legislate safeguards against state overreach.
Why this matters: Kenya now faces a constitutional thrust—a reckoning between preserving state authority and upholding democratic rights. With trust in law enforcement at a low, events of the past week risk unraveling public confidence at a time when transparent policing is critical.
Stay engaged. As the court summons fly and families fight for their loved ones, uncovering who wields unchecked power—and whether they can be held to account—has become Kenya’s most urgent news story.