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Kenya court orders UK soldier’s arrest for Agnes Wanjiru death: All we know 

A Kenyan court this week ordered the arrest and extradition of a British national suspected of murdering a 21-year-old woman in a town close to a United Kingdom army training camp in Kenya in 2012.

The ruling has brought renewed attention to the long-running case of the young woman, Agnes Wanjiru, whose murder in Nanyuki, central Kenya, shook her community and sparked nationwide outrage.

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Nanyuki community members have long accused British soldiers training in a garrison close to the town of gross misconduct; however, no suspects have been tried.

If the extradition goes ahead, it could mark the first time that a current or former British soldier will be extradited to face trial in another country for a civilian’s murder, according to the UK’s Guardian newspaper. In a statement, the UK government acknowledged the ruling and promised to cooperate with Kenyan authorities in the case.

Reacting to the ruling, Wanjiru’s family said on Tuesday they had waited “too long” for justice but hoped that it would now arrive, according to reporting by The Associated Press (AP) news agency.

“While this is progress, it is not justice yet,” family spokesperson Esther Muchiri said.

Agnes Wanjiru tombstone
John Muchiri Kamunge, brother-in-law to Agnes Wanjiru, who was allegedly killed by a British soldier in 2012, visits her grave at a cemetery in Nanyuki, Kenya, Thursday, November 4, 2021 [Brian Inganga/AP Photo]

What happened to Agnes Wanjiru?

Twenty-one-year-old Wanjiru worked as a hairdresser and a sex worker in Nanyuki, her hometown.

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On the night of March 31, Wanjiru disappeared. Witnesses said she was last seen in the company of British soldiers on a night out at the Lion’s Court Lodge. The hotel is popular with British soldiers of the British Army Training Unit Kenya (BATUK), a permanent garrison in Nanyuki.

Two months later, on June 5, Wanjiru’s body was found in a septic tank located close to the hotel.

She had been beaten, stabbed, and was most likely still alive when she was thrown into the septic tank, a Kenyan magistrate said in a 2019 inquest. Wanjiru’s daughter, who was just a few months old, is now 13 and is being raised by her grandmother and an aunt.

The allegations against a British soldier came to light in 2021 when a Sunday Times investigation revealed that “Soldier X”, whom Wanjiru was last seen with, was believed to have stabbed her in the chest and abdomen. The soldier revealed his actions to colleagues and showed them where he dumped her body. At least one of them reported this to senior commanders at BATUK. It’s unclear if any action was taken.

The Sunday Times’ investigation revealed “Soldier X” and several others further poked fun at the murdered woman in Facebook posts.

Attempts by her family to sue BATUK in Kenya were initially met with resistance because the British government, under the former ruling Conservative Party, claimed Kenyan courts did not have jurisdiction over UK troops. Following the Sunday Times exposé, however, the British government’s stance changed.

A UK parliament vote in April 2023 amended security agreements between the two countries to allow for British troops to be tried locally in Kenya. In August 2023, the Kenyan government officially launched an inquiry into Wanjiru’s killing. Kenyan investigators are understood to have travelled several times to the UK since then to speak to witnesses.

What did the court say?

Nairobi High Court Justice Alexander Muteti on Tuesday said there was “probable cause to order the arrest of the accused” and issued a warrant for “one citizen and resident of the United Kingdom”.

The court did not name the suspect, a move that family members of the late woman questioned.

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Kenya’s office for the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) said in a statement on X that “extradition proceedings would now be initiated to ensure the suspect is brought before a Kenyan court”.

“Today, the DPP informed the High Court that evidence gathered links the suspect, a United Kingdom citizen, to the murder,” the statement read, adding that the extradition proceedings will be initiated.

The case will next be heard in court on October 21, 2025, the DPP said.

Lion's Court hotel Kenya
A pedestrian walks past Lion’s Court Lodge, where Agnes Wanjiru was allegedly killed by a British soldier in 2012, in Nanyuki, Kenya, Thursday, November 4, 2021 [Brian Inganga/AP Photo]

What is BATUK?

The British Army Training Unit Kenya (BATUK) is a permanent training support force based on the outskirts of Nanyuki that has been operating since Kenya gained independence in 1963. Thousands of British infantrymen have passed through the BATUK training camp for exercises in harsh terrain.

The unit has some 100 permanent staff and about 280 rotating short-term regiments from the UK. British troops train there as well as Kenyan troops who are part of antiterrorism squads focused on the armed group al-Shabab in neighbouring Somalia.

While the British soldiers’ presence has bolstered the local economy, there have been complaints about their conduct towards local people and the way they treat the local environment. Residents of Nanyuki complain of unexploded bombs that have detonated and maimed community members, and the presence of white phosphorus, a lethal chemical, left behind after training exercises. In one case in 2021, the chemical is believed to have started a large fire that damaged swaths of forest land.

Allegations that the soldiers pay local women for sex are rife. In July 2022, the UK’s Ministry of Defence banned soldiers from using sex workers abroad as part of efforts to curb sexual exploitation and abuse. In an August 2024 report conducted by the British army into activities at BATUK, however, officials found that soldiers there were still using sex workers at a “low or moderate level”.

What has the UK government said?

The British High Commission in Kenya reiterated earlier commitments that it would cooperate with Kenyan authorities on the case, but did not confirm or deny that an extradition request for the suspect had been issued, according to the AP.

According to The Guardian, a spokesperson for the UK government, reacting to the ruling, said: “Our thoughts remain with the family of Agnes Wanjiru and we remain absolutely committed to helping them secure justice.”

The spokesperson added: “We understand that the Kenyan director of public prosecutions has determined that a British national should face trial in relation to the murder of Ms Wanjiru in 2012.

“This is subject to ongoing legal proceedings, and we will not comment further at this stage.”

In April this year, UK Secretary of Defence John Healey met with Wanjiru’s family and promised to help the family get “the justice they deserve”.

 

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Fiber Network Construction at Estate Kings Quarter, St. Thomas 

Liberty VI will begin work on a fiber installation project at Estate Kings Quarter in St. Thomas on Monday, Sept. 22. The project will provide fiber to residents of the Estate Kings Quarter area. The job will be completed by Friday, Sept. 26.

“As we acquire the necessary permits, we are moving forward with our Fiber to the Home construction projects so more locations in the territory can have access to our fiber fast internet,” said Ravindra Maywahlall, general manager of Liberty VI. “We will continue informing VI consumers about the next areas where we will schedule Fiber to the Home construction projects.” 

The work includes the microtrenching of approximately 99 feet from an existing underground vault at the intersection of Williams G. Lewis Lane and Alton Adams Sr. Drive. This willprovide Liberty’s Fiber to the Home broadband service to over 500 customers.

Construction will begin on Monday night between 9 p.m. and 12 a.m. The work will continue Tuesday through Friday from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. Work times may change depending on the work to be performed.

Burying the fiber cables increases the network’s resiliency while protecting it from hazards such as natural disasters. As per the permit, the work also uses a micro-trenching technique, which produces up to a 1 ¾ -inch cut and uses existing ducts where possible, thus diminishing pavement breakage and dust emission significantly. In addition, crews will be using other underground technologies to minimize the impact to the roadways.

The job will be performed with minimal traffic impact. However, residents and drivers within the area should expect delays due to lane and partial road closures and must exercise caution when traveling on the narrow roadways. 

Liberty VI will be providing updates on its website https://www.libertyvi.com/news on when and where the company will be working around the territory so people can plan their daily commutes ahead of time.

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Senate Calendar Sept. 22-Oct. 3

Senate Calendar Sept. 22-Oct. 3

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2025 

Committee on Government Operations, Veterans Affairs and Consumer Protection

9:30 A.M.

Frits E. Lawaetz Legislative Conference Room

The Committee on Government Operations, Veterans Affairs, and Consumer Protection has scheduled a meeting for Monday, September 22, 2025, at 9:30 AM in the Frits E. Lawaetz Legislative Conference Room, St. Croix, Virgin Islands to provide testimony on the following bills: 

BLOCK I 9:30 A.M. – 11:00 A.M.

Bill No. 36-0061 An Act amending title 3 Virgin Islands Code, chapter 27, section 706 and chapter 28A, section 755 allowing retirees who are receiving an annuity from the Government Employees Retirement System who are subsequently employed by the University of the Virgin Islands (“UVI”), to continue to receive their GERS annuity while receiving their salary from the University if the retiree enrolls in a different retirement plan.

Invited Testifiers: 

Mr. Angel E. Dawson, Administrator, Government Employees Retirement System 

Ms. Safiya George, PhD, President, University of the Virgin Islands 

BLOCK II 11:00 P.M. – 12:30 P.M. 

Bill No. 36-0102 An act amending title 31 Virgin Islands Code, chapter 23 by re-enacting section 236b requiring the use of construction materials manufactured in the Virgin Islands, to the greatest extent practicable, for locally or federally funded contracts with the Government of the Virgin Islands. 

Invited Testifiers: 

Honorable Lisa Alejandro, Commissioner, Department of Property and Procurement 

Honorable Derek A. Gabriel, Commissioner, Department of Public Works

Dr. Haldane Davies, Director, Virgin Islands Bureau of Economic Research (BER)

Mr. Donald Stevens, Partner, Cat5 Builders, LLC

Mr. Eric Castro, Owner, Universal Concrete

Ms. Yvette Williams, Manager of Accounting, Heavy Materials 

Mr. Dion Alibocas, General Manager, Masters Concrete VI

36th Legislature of the Virgin Islands

BLOCK III 12:30 P.M. – 2:00 P.M. 

Bill No. 36-0058 An Act honoring and commending Dennis “Pumpa” Lennox Leroy Liburd, Jr. for 

his many contributions to the Virgin Islands culture and music industry as a Soca 

artist by awarding him the Official key to the Territory and naming the main 

entrance of 6-Y Peters Rest Road, Christiansted, St. Croix in his honor.

Invited Testifiers:

Mr. Bryan “Benny Demus” Boulai, DJ, Music Director, Manager & Producer

Mr. Ian M. Turnbull, Director, Division of Festivals 

Mr. Yohannes Worede, President, USVI Soccer Federation & Peters Rest Apts. Inc. 

Ms. Ushana Khublal, Owner of KUSH ENT

Mr. Kai Hendricks, Director, Converged Networks ONE Communications VI

BLOCK VI 2:00 P.M. – 3:30 P.M. 

Bill No. 36-0107 A resolution honoring and commending Dr. Alfred Lee Anduze for his outstanding 

achievements and significant contributions to the fields of medicine, science, public 

health, and community empowerment.

Invited Testifiers: 

Mr. Terrance E. Highfield, Long time close fiend 

Ms. Jennifer Jackson, Good friend and Former UVI Chancellor

Ms. Rita Dudley Grant, PhD, Cousin

Judge Patricia D. Steele, Cousin 

Judge George W. Cannon, Jr., Good friend

Ms. Angela Torres McGhee, PhD, Cousin

Mr. Richard A. Schrader, Sr., Mentor, Patient & Friend

Mr. Frank Duggan, Long time close friend

BLOCK V 3:30 P.M. – 5:00 P.M. 

Bill No. 36-0121 An act to rename the Peter Carl Limpricht Park the TSK Park in honor of the Ten Sleepless 

Knights quelbe band and making an appropriation to effectuate that change. 

Invited Testifiers: 

Mr. Stanley Jacobs, Treasurer/Founder and Band Leader, Ten Sleepless Knights, Inc.

Dr. Lauren Larsen, President, Ten Sleepless Knights, Inc. 

Ms. Vivian Ebbesen, President, Crucian Cultural Group (CCG)

Mr. Myron Jackson, Former Senator, Legislature of the Virgin Islands

Mr. Vincent Roberts, Commissioner Designee, Department of Sports, Parks and Recreation

Honorable Derek M. Gabriel, Commissioner, Department of Public Works 

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2025 

Committee on Health, Hospitals, and Human Services

9:00 A.M.

Emancipation Garden

Health Fair 

The Office of Senator Ray Fonseca, Chairman of the Committee on Health, Hospitals, and Human Services, is 

honored to announce the forthcoming Annual Community Health Fair. This event is scheduled for September 

23, 2025, and will be held at the Emancipation Garden from 9:00 AM to 3:00 PM. We look forward to your 

participation in this important community initiative.

In collaboration with the Departments of Health and Human Services, the East End Medical Center Corporation, the 

V.I. Dental Center, the American Cancer Society, the Department of Agriculture, the Department of Education, the 

V.I. Diabetes Center of Excellence, We Grow Food Inc., and various other nonprofit organizations, we are organizing 

a community health fair for the residents of the St. Thomas/St. John district. This complimentary event will provide 

health screenings and referrals, aiming to identify early indicators of prevalent health issues while promoting the 

services available to many displaced residents. We anticipate that the insights gathered through direct engagement 

with our citizens will significantly inform our legislative discussions and funding priorities. This initiative seeks to 

address critical public health challenges and improve the living conditions for numerous individuals.

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