Boniface Mwangi speaks on alleged torture in Tanzania: 'I have gone through four very dark days'
Activist Boniface Mwangi is wheeled at the Moi International Airport in Mombasa ahead of his trip to Nairobi on May 22, 2025.
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Activist
Boniface Mwangi has spoken publicly for the first time after being arrested, detained and allegedly tortured by Tanzanian
authorities for nearly a week.
Mwangi was on Tuesday arrested at his hotel in Tanzania, where he had
gone to show solidarity with
opposition leader Tundu Lissu during his court appearance on Monday.
He was held incommunicado until Thursday when he was driven to the
Kenya-Tanzania border in Horohoro and reportedly dumped.
Looking frail and
visibly shaken, Mwangi addressed the
press while
inside a vehicle at the Moi International Airport in Mombasa, from where he was scheduled to be
flown to Nairobi for medical attention.
He recounted a harrowing ordeal that he says has left
him unable to walk unaided and deeply worried for Ugandan activist Agather Atuhaire, with whom he was
arrested and detained, and who is
still missing.
“I
have gone through four very dark days, I have been tortured very badly, I can
barely walk,” Mwangi told journalists, his voice subdued but firm.
“But I am very
concerned about Agather because we were tortured together, and they did very
horrible things to us. So, I hope Agather is safe.”
Agather was reportedly separated from Mwangi during
their detention in Tanzania. Her whereabouts remain unknown, fuelling growing
fears for her safety.
“They
were separated, and we don’t know where Agather is, or where she was taken,”
said Njeri Mwangi, Boniface’s wife.
“Bonnie was
dropped at Horohoro borderpost and he found his way upto Lungalunga and got
transport and I called Khelef (Khalifa) and he picked him up.”
Mwangi
and those close to him allege that Tanzanian authorities orchestrated the
ordeal with cruelty and political motive, subjecting him to physical and
psychological abuse while invoking the name of Tanzanian President Samia Suluhu
Hassan.
According
to activist Hussein Khalid, Mwangi’s experience is part of a larger, more
troubling trend in the region.
“It’s
very clear that in East Africa we’re seeing the rise and rise of
authoritarians, and we don’t take this lightly,” Khalid said.
“Boniface Mwangi
was severely tortured, as we speak presently we don’t know where Agather is. We
want to rush Boniface to get medical treatment, his condition is not good at
all, he can barely walk.”
Khalid
laid the blame squarely at the feet of the Tanzanian government, directly
linking the abuse to the country’s highest office.
“This
is courtesy of Mama Samia’s government. He was badly tortured in Tanzania, and
every time they were doing this, they kept making reference to the President…
asking him to say ‘Asante Mama Samia’ as they were torturing him. These people
were brutal, and we will not take this lightly.”
Khalid
further suggested that Kenyan authorities may have played a complicit role in
the abduction and torture of Mwangi, warning that failure to act would trigger
international consequences.
“Rest
assured that we will take action. If the Kenyan government, which we believe
was complicit, does not do anything… if (Foreign Affairs Cabinet Secretary Musalia) Mudavadi does not do anything… then we
will invoke the international community to make sure that action is taken
because he knows those officers and they can be identified,” he said.


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