Three months after the initiation of what was intended to be a comprehensive investigation into allegations of organ trafficking at Mediheal Group of Hospitals, the Health Committee of Kenya’s National Assembly has only managed to interview a single witness, raising significant concerns about possible sabotage and political interference.
This parliamentary inquiry was launched in response to alarming whistleblower accounts and media reports detailing unethical kidney harvesting practices. However, the investigation has been marred by a troubling trend of cancelled meetings, indefinite delays, and a conspicuous lack of communication from lawmakers who had previously vowed to thoroughly investigate the issue.
Since committee chairman James Nyikal commenced the inquiry on April 22, with a 90-day timeline, progress has effectively stalled. The sole witness to provide testimony thus far has been Nandi Hills MP Bernard Kitur, the original petitioner, who appeared on June 5.
Additionally, crucial meetings with representatives from the Kenya Tissue Transplant Authority and the Kenya Renal Association have been inexplicably postponed or cancelled without any given reason. The slow pace of this parliamentary investigation is particularly concerning, especially considering the serious nature of the allegations involved.
An independent government report reveals that Mediheal Hospital in Eldoret handled a staggering 417 kidney donors and 340 recipients between 2018 and March 2025, accounting for 81 percent of all donors and 76 percent of recipients across multiple institutions nationwide.
More alarmingly, nearly 39 percent of recipients have “unknown status,” suggesting serious gaps in documentation and patient identification.
Parliamentary sources, speaking on condition of anonymity, confirm what many suspected: the initial political goodwill for the inquiry has evaporated.
Committee meetings that should have been packed with hospital representatives, medical authorities, and transplant officials have been quietly scrubbed from schedules.
Chairman Nyikal himself has gone silent, refusing to answer calls or respond to messages about the investigation’s status.
The pattern suggests more than mere bureaucratic incompetence.
When Ndhiwa MP Martin Owino, a committee member, claims they are “waiting for the ministry report,” it raises questions about whether lawmakers are deliberately stalling until public attention moves elsewhere.
Health Cabinet Secretary Aden Duale has already released findings recommending investigation of Mediheal founder Dr. Swarup Mishra, yet the parliamentary committee appears paralyzed.
The stakes could not be higher.
Evidence suggests systematic exploitation of Kenya’s most vulnerable citizens, with records indicating Mediheal made at least 372 Kenyans “fugitives in their own country” before harvesting their kidneys.
The majority of donors came from economically disadvantaged regions including Mt. Kenya, Northern Kenya, and the Rift Valley.
While Duale promises his ministry’s report “will not find itself on the shelves,” the parliamentary investigation designed to provide democratic oversight and accountability has effectively collapsed.
The question remains: what forces are powerful enough to silence elected representatives who once vowed transparency in this scandal?
As the 90-day inquiry period expires with virtually no progress, Kenyans are left wondering whether their parliamentary representatives have been compromised, intimidated, or simply lack the political will to confront what may be one of the country’s most serious medical ethics scandals in recent history.