A Mombasa Court has closed the inquest into the mysterious death of British national Harry Roy Veevers, ending an 11-year legal process.
Senior Resident Magistrate David Odhiambo, while delivering the ruling, said the court could not establish how Veevers died due to conflicting forensic reports and the advanced decomposition of the body.
"Due to the level of decomposition and the conflicting reports by pathologists, the government chemist, and other experts, the cause of death remains unknown, and as such, nobody can be called to answer to any charge,” he ruled.
The British national died in February 2013 and was buried within days in a Muslim cemetery in Mombasa without a post-mortem examination or police involvement.
His sons accused his long-time partner, Azra Parvin Din, and her daughters of rushing the burial process to conceal the cause of death.
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They alleged that their father may have been poisoned for financial gain and successfully petitioned for his exhumation later in 2013.
According to the Office of the Director of Public Prosecution(ODDP), the inquest was first ordered and passed through the hands of several magistrates over more than a decade.
The inquest saw sixteen witnesses, including family members, investigators, and forensic experts from both Kenya and the United Kingdom, testify.
Some forensic tests detected traces of cyhalothrin, a pesticide, while others found none.
Experts warned that decomposition and possible contamination undermined the reliability of the findings.
The court also cited procedural lapses, such as poor chain-of-custody documentation for evidence.
Odhiambo ordered that Veevers’ remains, which have been stored at the Coast General Teaching and Referral Hospital mortuary for 11 years, be released to the family for reburial at a site of their choice, subject to payment of mortuary fees.
The magistrate, however, said the inquest will only be reopened if new evidence emerges.