UK defence minister meets family of Kenyan woman who died after night out with British soldiers
The body of 21-year-old Agnes Wanjiru was found in a septic tank at Nanyuki town, north of Mt Kenya, weeks after she was seen leaving a bar with British soldiers.
PTI
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On Monday, UK Defence Secretary John Healey met Wanjiru's relatives and vowed to “help the family secure the justice they deserve”
NAIROBI, 7 APRIL
Criminal investigators in Kenya said on Monday they have concluded a
probe into the death of a young mother in 2012 who was last seen alive in the
company of British soldiers who were in the country for training.
The office of the public prosecutor said it had received the file and
had put together a team of senior prosecutors to review the case.
The body of 21-year-old Agnes Wanjiru was found in a septic tank at
Nanyuki town, north of Mt Kenya, weeks after witnesses said she was seen
leaving a bar with British soldiers.
Wanjiru's family has in the past decried delayed justice because nobody
had been charged in court.
On Monday, UK Defence Secretary John Healey met Wanjiru's relatives and
vowed to “help the family secure the justice they deserve”.
Healey said he would meet Kenya's President William Ruto, adding: “I
will emphasise the need to accelerate progress in this case.”
In a statement shared by the British embassy, the family said it was
grateful to have met Healey after being “offered too many empty promises”.
They added that they were hoping the UK and Kenya would work together to
bring closure to the matter.
Wanjiru's daughter, who was five-months old when her mother disappeared
and is now 13, has remained in the care of her grandmother and aunt.
Britain has roughly 200 military personnel permanently based in Kenya.
Most of them currently are training more than 1,000 Kenyan soldiers a year
before their deployment to neighbouring Somalia to combat al-Qaida's longtime
East Africa affiliate, al-Shabab.
The British government invests more than USD 9.6 million every year into
the partnership. Kenyans have in the past raised concerns about the way British
forces treat local residents and the environment in their training ground.
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