Out of all the political assassinations that have taken place in Kenya, the Dr Robert Ouko murder is unique in many ways.
One of the major differences is the fact that it is the only one where foreign investigators were involved. And there lies the biggest mistake that the Ouko's killers made and it haunts them to this day. It is the reason why they will forever always be looking over their shoulders with lots of anxiety and fear. It is also the reason why the chairman of the Parliamentary select committee set up to investigate the murder, Gor Sunguh, has been telling close friends and associates that he still receives death threats two years after his committee's business was concluded. It matters little that the controversial select committee set up in 2003 got absolutely nowhere.
This is also the reason why those who killed Ouko (who are well known) will not retire from politics quietly but are in fact seeking to influence the outcome of the forthcoming general elections. The whole idea is to ensure that the mystery of the Ouko murder remains just that—a mystery and is never solved. And also so that light will never be shed on the subsequent murders of numerous other Kenyans and a few foreigners in direct connection to that gruesome political assassination.
One of the consequences of bringing in foreign investigators is that there is plenty of forensic evidence locked up somewhere in Britain, so that even where virtually all the possible witnesses are now dead, the forensic evidence mainly supervised by one Doctor Ian West (now deceased) is still available and waiting. Waiting for that day that will inevitably and surely come. That day that the killers dread so much…
It is instructive that those involved in the murder of Tom Mboya (some of whom are still alive today) are not as anxious as the killers of Ouko. Neither are the cold blooded Kenyans who murdered and dismembered the body of JM Kariuki so anxious and paranoid of being brought to book, at least those who are still alive and well in Kenya today. I fact these guys are very comfortable and quietly enjoying themselves far from politics.
Yet in the case of Ouko there would appear to be absolutely no reason at all to fret. After all Kenyans have forgotten about the murder of the best foreign minister the country ever produced. It is no longer in the agenda, so to speak, let alone being a priority. Still, those with the blood of Robert Ouko on their hands continue to have plenty of apprehension. Even with their vast ill-gotten wealth and resources, which ensure that they can easily go to court anywhere in the world to sue anybody who may come up with anything incriminating or pointing a finger in their direction.
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