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South Sudanese Whistleblower Reported Abducted In Kenya

NAIROBI, June 11 (Reuters) – A South Sudanese whistleblower who made allegations of corruption in his home country was abducted in Kenya and taken to South Sudan’s capital Juba, according to his wife.

Athorbey Al-Gaddhaffy-Dit, who also has Kenyan ​citizenship, was taken by armed, masked individuals on Tuesday at around 3 a.m. and bundled ‌into a white vehicle after leaving a casino on the outskirts of Nairobi, according to a police report filed by his wife that cited witness accounts.

“I have no idea where he is currently being held in Juba and I am very worried ​about his health and the conditions that he is being kept in,” his wife, who asked ​that her name not be used, said in a statement to Reuters on Thursday.

“I ⁠pray that whoever is holding him treats him well and looks after him. Gaddhaffy is a loving father ​and husband and we are very worried about him.”

SERIES OF INCIDENTS

South Sudan’s government spokesperson Ateny Wek Ateny, and ​Korir Sing’Oei, a top official at Kenya’s foreign affairs ministry, both said they were not aware of the incident. A Kenyan police spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment.

Gaddhaffy-Dit’s disappearance is the latest in a series of recent incidents in ​Kenya where foreign nationals have been reported abducted or deported to countries where they say they face political ​persecution.

“Nairobi used to be safe for those seeking refuge from authoritarian regimes – (this) seems that’s over. Too bad!” Tibor Nagy, who served ‌as ⁠U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Africa during Donald Trump’s first term as president, wrote on X in response to reports of Gaddhaffy-Dit’s abduction.

Sing’Oei, the Kenyan foreign ministry official, did not respond to a request for comment about Nagy’s criticism. In previous cases, Kenyan authorities have either denied knowledge of reported abductions or said they ​were cooperating with legitimate requests ​from foreign governments.

FEAR OF REPERCUSSIONS

Amnesty International said in a statement on Wednesday that deporting Gaddhaffy-Dit to South Sudan would pose “a serious and urgent threat to his life, safety and fundamental rights.”

Boniface Mwangi, ​a prominent Kenyan human rights activist, said he met in April with Gaddhaffy-Dit, ​who said he ⁠had shared information about alleged high-level corruption in South Sudan with journalists and diplomats and believed he was being targeted by the country’s government as a result, Mwangi told Reuters.

The U.N. Commission on Human Rights in South Sudan ⁠documented in ​a 2023 report what it called “the ongoing pervasiveness of extra-territorial ​operations” by South Sudanese security forces, especially in Kenya and Uganda.

This included illegal renditions to South Sudan, death threats and surveillance of South ​Sudanese dissidents, the report said.

South Sudan’s government has repeatedly dismissed accusations of systematic human rights violations.

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