17-year-old boy allegedly beaten to death by bouncers at VVIP Rooftop Club
A family in Kangemi is mourning the tragic death of their
17-year-old son, a dancer and online influencer, who was allegedly beaten to
death by security guards at the VVIP Rooftop Club.
Wilberforce Kisia’s body was hidden for hours, and a
post-mortem confirmed he died from prolonged assault. Now, his family is
demanding justice.
Kisia is said to have left home in Kangemi on Sunday, full of
hope, as he was chasing his dream as a dancer and performer who was admired
online and on stage, unaware that the night would be his last.
“The last time I saw him was Sunday. He said, ‘I’ll be back
Monday morning.’ But by Tuesday, there was no word… nothing. They hadn’t posted
him on their club social... That’s when I knew something was wrong,” said his
brother, Kennedy Ambani.
For four agonising days, the family searched, calling friends
and checking social media, but Kisia had vanished.
A chilling sign started when his videos began disappearing
from the club’s social pages.
“I called the club cameraman. He just told me, ‘If it’s about
Kisia, go ask the management,” Ambani added.
Witnesses later revealed a devastating truth: Kisia had
allegedly been attacked by two security guards after a misunderstanding. He was
strangled, dragged into a room, and left to die alone.
“He was dancing on the stairs when one bouncer grabbed him and
handed him to another. That one held him by the neck. That’s the last they saw
him,” another brother, Vincent Mudoga, explained.
His body was not reported until the next evening, nearly a
full day later.
A post-mortem on Tuesday confirmed the family’s worst fears
that their son died from a sustained beating, including being struck with a
blunt object.
Two security guards have since been arrested and are being
held as suspects in his murder. They are expected in court on May 21, 2025.
“They killed my child… my baby. I keep asking why. Why did
they kill him? But no one tells me anything,” the deceased’s mother, Joyce
Kavai, stated.
But for Kisia’s grieving family, justice is still out of
reach. They’re not only mourning a son, but also asking how a minor was allowed
to work in such a place.
“I haven’t received justice. And I want it. I won’t accept
that my son died like an animal. I can’t even look at his pictures — they hurt
too much,” Kavai lamented.
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