- Albert Ojwang’s father, Meshack Opiyo, said he traveled to Nairobi with a copyright, hoping
- Opiyo reported that no arrest warrant was shown when DCI officials bound his only son’s hand at home, shortly after returning from collecting seedlings and eating lunch
- A sad father questioned about police incidents, saying his son was treated as a criminal and isolated, despite not having a history of violence or conflict
When Meshack Opiyo uploaded his bag to Nairobi, he was not only carrying hope, but the copyright of his land.
Source: Twitter
Albert Ojwang’s father, a digital activist who died in a chaotic environment under police protection, hoped that even if things got worse, he could give up his only child.
It did not come to his mind that instead he would return to Homa Bay to arrange his funeral.
Addressing the media, Opiyo revealed that the plan was to sponsor his son by using the document, adding that he had notified his lawyer.
“I also had an attorney whom I informed earlier yesterday that we would come to resolve this issue, even though the ownership certificate I had on my bag, if a bond or a trustee was needed, we would talk to an attorney,” The frustrated father revealed.
Ojwang, a graduate of the Coastal University and a recently married father, was arrested on Saturday, June 7, in Homa Bay.
Investigating officers from the Criminal Investigation Department (DCI) arrived at his family’s house, and took him shortly after returning from collecting seedlings and eating the food his mother had given him.
There was no arrest document shown, according to his father, with the family looking at how he had been arrested and chased at the Mazwago police station.
Why was Albert Ojwang put in different cells and other suspects in the center?
From the Mawego police station, the boy was transported to Nairobi, where he was detained at the police station.
Ojwang was allegedly placed alone and, according to police, seriously injured himself by knocking his head on his cell wall.

Source: UGC
He kept the most important documents of his father, entrusted to the items that Opiyo had collected for many years of hard work in the Mombasa mine.
Opiyo explained that it was painful that despite being a straightforward boy, his son was considered to be a death offender, bound from Homa Bay to Nairobi.
“I had informed my son about this yesterday as well.
It hurts me so much that he has now been considered a criminal, wrapped in a hand at home, wrapped in both hands. Then he was taken to the toilet and closed alone, as if it were a killer, as if he had committed a serious crime or stole the bank. I leave everything to God, ” He said as he fought in tears.
Why did Johansen Oduor say he can’t about the corpse surgery?
As previously reported, government chief philanthropist Johansen Oduor reportedly resigned to investigate the body of the young blogger after recognizing him as a relative.
He is said to have stated that although he did not do the procedure, he would remain part of the broader team of doctors tasked with the examination of the corpse.
Oduor’s withdrawal postponed a dead body scheduled for Nairobi Funeral Home, leaving other professionals to continue.
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