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Kenya minister found in contempt of court over US-backed Ebola centre

BBC News June 22, 2026 1 views
Kenya minister found in contempt of court over US-backed Ebola centre

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Kenya minister found in contempt of court over US-backed Ebola centre

Getty Images A head-and-shoulders image of Aden Duale. A white collar and dark suit can just be seen at the bottom of the picture.
Kenya's Health Minister Aden Duale has been found guilty of contempt of court over his handling of the construction of a controversial US-funded Ebola quarantine facility.
But on Monday, a judge ruled that Duale had ignored the order and allowed the project to continue. He is to be sentenced on Tuesday.
The quarantine facility is intended for US citizens who are suspected to have contracted Ebola in the current outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
The plan has sparked a series of angry protests in Nanyuki, which is about 140km (87 miles) north of the capital, Nairobi, during which three people have died as police attempted to disperse the demonstrators.
Among those killed was 17-year-old schoolboy Sylvester Muigai Ndung'u who nurtured ambitions of becoming a priest - witnesses say he was shot in the head, but police told the BBC they were awaiting post-mortem results to determine the cause of the boy's death.
In its court petition in May to stop the construction, rights group the Katiba Institute warned that the arrangement posed "grave and imminent risks" to public health.
The health ministry later insisted it had not flouted last month's court order to stop the joint US-Kenyan building works, because any ongoing construction was being done solely by the Kenyan government in the national interest to protect Kenyans against Ebola.
But on Monday the judge said the government could not "avoid compliance by recasting or re-characterising the ongoing construction", adding that a court order "is not an invitation to ingenuity - it is a command to be obeyed".
Lady Justice Patricia Nyaundi added that Duale knew and understood that all construction at the Nanyuki site had to stop - yet he allowed it to continue.
In recent weeks Kenya's President William Ruto has defended the plan for the US-funded Ebola quarantine site, saying he had received a request from the US to establish the centre and a refusal would be "inhuman".
He also called on Kenyans not to politicise a matter "so serious" as Ebola, asking politicians to avoid "reckless" talk about it.

Family photograph A photograph of Sylvester Muigai Ndung'u in a school uniform. He is in a grey jacket, white shirt and red tie.
police have not answered claims they used excessive force on civilians
Kenya, East Africa's largest economy, had not recorded any Ebola cases as of Monday.
The US plan has led to vocal opposition from one of the biggest medical unions in Kenya - the KMPDU - which questioned why the country was chosen to host a quarantine facility for exposed American citizens.
The Congolese city of Bunia, the epicentre of the outbreak, is 780km (485 miles) from Nanyuki, with Uganda separating DR Congo and Kenya.
Davji Bhimji Atellah, KMPDU's secretary general, said the union "will not sit back and watch Kenya be treated as a containment colony for a lethal pathogen that we did not generate".
Washington intends to provide $13.5m (£10.7m) in aid to fund Kenya's Ebola preparedness efforts, according to a spokesperson for US Secretary of State Marco Rubio
That amount is part of a larger $112m US commitment for the regional response to the outbreak.

Getty Images/BBC A woman looking at her mobile phone and the graphic BBC News Africa

<small>Source: BBC News</small>

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