A disturbing wave of enforced disappearances has gripped East Africa between August and October 2025, raising alarm among human rights defenders, families of the missing, and regional observers. The victims—journalists, activists, and outspoken citizens from Uganda, Kenya, and Tanzania—have vanished under suspicious circumstances often linked to state security operations.
According to the Agora Human Rights Observatory, at least seven confirmed disappearances have been documented so far: Ugandans Sam Nsubuga and Sam Mugumya; Kenyans Bob Njagi and Nicholas Oyoo; and Tanzanians Humphrey Polepole, Rogers Yohana, and Ramso. One additional case remains unidentified, reflecting the growing uncertainty surrounding the true extent of the abductions.
Human rights advocates allege that the pattern reflects a coordinated regional abduction network, involving cooperation among security agencies in Uganda, Kenya, and Tanzania—reportedly operating with the knowledge or tolerance of Presidents Yoweri Museveni, William Ruto, and Samia Suluhu.
“The East Africa abductions syndicate of William Ruto, Samia Suluhu, and Yoweri Museveni must be stopped,” reads a joint statement from regional activists. “Abductions are violations of human rights, and we demand the unconditional release of abducted Kenyans, Ugandans, and Tanzanians.”
Civil society organizations have warned that this culture of impunity surrounding political abductions threatens to normalize repression and silence dissent across the region. Many victims are believed to have been detained incommunicado, tortured, or forcibly disappeared, leaving their families in deep anguish and without justice.
Groups such as Agora, along with international partners, have called upon the African Union (AU), the United Nations (UN), and the International Criminal Court (ICC) to launch independent investigations and hold perpetrators accountable. They emphasize that enforced disappearance is a crime under international law, and that no government can justify such actions under the guise of security.
As the movement #ENDAbductionsEA gains momentum across East Africa, citizens continue to demand transparency, accountability, and the safe return of all missing persons. The region’s leaders are now facing increasing pressure to end this cycle of fear and repression and reaffirm their commitment to human rights and the rule of law.