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Family of boda rider shot dead in Thika cries for justice

Ojuma’s mother, Nanjala, devastated by son's killing, says he was the family’s main provider

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by KNA

News09 September 2025 - 15:20
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In Summary


  • The family has appealed to well-wishers to support them financially for the postmortem, transport of the body to Busia, and a decent burial.
  • “We are pleading with well-wishers to help out. Hopeless as we are, we are financially crippled,” Bosibori added.
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Ojuma’s mother (right) and wife to the slain boda boda riders, Kennedy Ojuma, 38, who was shot dead on Sunday, speak to journalists at the Thika DCI offices./KNA



The family of a boda boda rider allegedly shot dead by a senior police officer in Makongeni, Thika, is crying for justice, fearing the suspect may interfere with the case.

Kennedy Ojuma's family, to whom one of the riders killed on Sunday morning belonged, after a confrontation with an officer attached to the Directorate of Criminal Investigations (DCI) headquarters, said the officer could use his rank to derail the case.

Ojuma, 38, from Busia County, was allegedly shot by the police officer on Sunday morning in the Makongeni area in Thika. 

Witnesses claim the suspect, believed to have been intoxicated, rammed into a motorcycle carrying a passenger. When riders and locals confronted him, he allegedly pulled out his firearm and opened fire on the crowd. Ojuma was shot in the chest and abdomen, while another rider, Stephen Mwendwa Maweu, 39, was also shot and died on the spot.

Ojuma’s widow, Nancy Bosibori, said family members were blocked from accompanying the body to the General Kago Hospital mortuary.

“Even when his body was being taken to the mortuary, we were not allowed to accompany him. We fear some things are not being done right," Bosibori said.

Bosibori, who is pregnant and raising an eight-year-old child, described her husband as the family’s breadwinner.

“Ken was not a criminal. His only mistake was questioning why the officer had knocked his colleague’s motorcycle. Now I don’t know how I will raise our children alone,” she said tearfully.

Ojuma’s mother speaks to journalists at the Thika DCI offices./KNA

The family has appealed to well-wishers to support them financially for the postmortem, transport of the body to Busia, and a decent burial.

“We are pleading with well-wishers to help out. Hopeless as we are, we are financially crippled,” Bosibori added.

Ojuma’s mother, Margaret Nanjala, devastated by his killing said her son was the family’s main provider.

“He was the second-born in a family of six and our only support. His death has shattered our lives. We don’t even know how to take his body home,” she said.

The family called on the Independent Policing Oversight Authority (IPOA), the Human Rights Commission as well as the Law Society of Kenya to help ensure justice is served. 

Meanwhile, bodaboda riders in Thika have condemned the shooting, terming it an extreme act of impunity.

For now, Ojuma’s family remains trapped in grief and poverty, clinging to hope that justice will prevail and that support will come to give their kin a dignified sendoff.