A police vehicle carrying the remains of Albert Ojwang arrives at Mbagathi Hospital on June 8, 2025.
Minutes later, at 1:37 am, the officers begin making phone calls, still showing no urgency. Time ticks by. Only at 1:46 am, eleven minutes later, do two officers return with a stretcher. They request assistance from a hospital guard to move Ojwang’s body.
“This is 24 minutes since arrival. Not even a hint of urgency,” observed a hospital source.
Police load Albert Ojwang onto a stretcher at 1:59 am.
“He was already gone when they brought him in. The bleeding had stopped. He must have died earlier.”
CCTV Tampering Deepens Mystery
As the nation grapples with these revelations, a new arrest has intensified the outrage. Authorities have apprehended a technician, allegedly responsible for deleting CCTV footage from Nairobi’s Central Police Station—the same place Ojwang was detained before his death.
A collage of screenshots showing what happened to Albert Ojwang upon arrival at Mbagathi Hospital on June 8, 2025.
The suspect, who installed all 25 surveillance cameras and the digital video recorder (DVR) in 2024, was reportedly summoned on June 8 by a senior officer.
“He was taken straight to the DVR room and asked to delete footage from June 6 and 7,” said a source familiar with the operation.
A Nation Demands Justice
As the country mourns Ojwang, Kenyans are demanding answers, accountability, and justice. Social media has erupted with the hashtags #JusticeForOjwang and #StopPoliceCoverUps.
From Cell to Morgue: Ojwang’s Last Hour Caught on Tape
Meanwhile, IPOA investigations continue, and the public is watching closely.
“Every deleted frame is a step away from justice. We must not let this pass,” said a FIDA-Kenya spokesperson.