Editor's Review

Three suspects were arrested and vandalised equipment worth millions recovered on Thursday, March 10, 2022, as detectives step up the fight against vandalism.


Three suspects were arrested and vandalised equipment worth millions recovered on Thursday, March 10, 2022, as detectives step up the fight against vandalism.

This is after DCI sleuths from Headquarters Operations Branch raided a scrap metal yard in Juja's Matangi area, where Several vandalized transformers, rolls of aluminium conductors and assorted materials belonging to the Kenya Power & Lighting Company (KPLC) were recovered.

A further search in nearby homesteads led to the recovery of more vandalized apparatus, where a container full of steel bracings obtained from critical electricity transmission towers were recovered.

File image of vandalised KPLC property. |Courtesy| DCI Twitter|

Following the raid, Johana Thuku and Stephen Githitu were arrested and arraigned at a Thika court for the offence of vandalism. Additional counts of handling stolen energy equipment were also slapped on the thugs.

A third suspect, Patrick King’ori, was arrested later in the evening as he tried to escape our dragnet. Detectives are burning the midnight candle to net more of their accomplices who are still at large.

The arrest of the three suspects comes barely a month after President Uhuru Kenyatta, announced a moratorium in scrap metal trade due to runaway vandalism, targeting critical national infrastructure.

On January 11, this year, Kenyan homes and businesses were plunged into darkness after a high voltage transmission line connecting the capital collapsed, in what was suspected to be high-level vandalism.

Last November, operations along the busy Mombasa-Nairobi Standard gauge railway (SGR) had to be stopped for two hours after gauge blocks were vandalized from the line.

So far, five suspects have been arrested and presented before court.

File image of vandalised KPLC property. |Courtesy| DCI Twitter|