11 October 2025
Esther Njoki says her family has been denied justice for 13 years after her aunt Agnes Wanjiru's body was found in a septic tank.
www.bbc.com
''Ms Njoki said her aunt was a "poor Kenyan woman" and "for a long time people didn't care".
However, her family, along with Kenyan rights groups and feminists continued to push for justice and in 2018 an inquest was opened into her death.
In 2019, this concluded that Ms Wanjiru had been unlawfully killed by one or two British soldiers and that she had suffered stab wounds to the chest and abdomen.
Then in 2021, a Sunday Times investigation reported that a British soldier had confessed to colleagues that he killed Ms Wanjiru. The soldier left the army after the incident and reportedly continues to live in the UK.
In 2024, the army announced it was launching an internal review into the conduct of British soldiers in Kenya, including in Nanyuki.
It found 35 suspected cases of soldiers having engaged in sexual exploitation and abuse, including transactional sex, with local women - nine of these being after the army officially banned such conduct in 2022.''
October 21, 2025
The Kenyan government has officially commenced the extradition process for a British soldier accused of murdering Agnes Wanjiru over a decade ago in Nanyuki.
www.radio47.fm
''The Kenyan government has officially commenced the extradition process for a British soldier accused of murdering Agnes Wanjiru over a decade ago in Nanyuki.
The Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions (ODPP) has confirmed that the extradition request has been transmitted to the Office of the Attorney General (AG), the central authority responsible for forwarding it to the United Kingdom.''