The Directorate of Criminal Investigations has partnered with the United States embassy in Nairobi, Immigration Services and ODPP among other government agencies, in the fight against illegal rehabilitation centres in the country.
This is after some of the rehabilitation centres mainly targeting young Somali’s living in the United States and Europe were discovered to be holding captive youthful members of the Somali community brought in for rehabilitation by their kin after becoming drug addicts, alcoholic and generally disobedient abroad.
The rehabs mainly situated in the city’s Eastleigh and Ongata Rongai suburbs that style themselves as treatment centres, have turned out to be a nightmare for the youths who are shipped into the country by their parents to ostensibly learn the culture and traditions of their African people.
In one such instance, detectives in April this year raided Irshad rehabilitation centre along second avenue in Eastleigh where ten foreigners were rescued including seven Somali-American citizens, one Dutch, one Canadian and one British national.
Following the raid, the 10 who had been physically abused and were living in inhumane conditions were rescued and reunited with their families.
Further investigations revealed that their kin had tricked them that they were going on safari in Africa, only for them to jet into the country and get whisked from the airport to the centre surrounded by a perimeter wall, an electric fence and a mean looking disciplinarian.
Detectives have been to three such centres in the past rescuing victims held incommunicado, and in order to find a lasting solution, a multisectoral approach has been sought.
In the forum coordinated by the U.S embassy in Nairobi, that also brought the National Authority for the Campaign against Alcohol and Drugs Abuse (NACADA) on board, the stakeholders committed to ensuring that all legal measures are adhered to in dealing with the vice that is gaining prominence among the Somali community living abroad.
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