Veteran Journalist
Jennifer Itumbi Wambua, the deputy communications director at the National Land Commission has gone missing.
Ms Itumbi, a former bureau chief with the Kenya News Agency (KNA) in Machakos, was last seen on Friday morning, March 12, when her husband dropped her to work.
The journalist, who currently works as the deputy director for communications at the National Land Commission, did not return home from work on Friday and she had not been traced by Sunday evening.
Her husband, Joseph Komu, said after dropping her to work at the commission’s offices on Friday morning, he was surprised to find her handbag and her mobile phone in the family car hours later, while at a garage.
Mr Komu works with the Ministry of Agriculture at Kilimo House, a walking distance from her work place. The car was parked at a nearby parking yard.
Belongings in Car
He says it appears she came back to the car, dropped her handbag which contained her mobile phone but he cannot tell what happened thereafter.
“I picked the car at around 11am and went to the garage where I discovered my wife’s handbag and her phone. After the car was fixed, I drove to her office to drop the items but was shocked when her colleagues told me she had not been seen that day,” said the distraught husband.
On Saturday morning, after she failed to show up the previous night, Mr Komu says he drove back to NLC offices and proceeded to report the matter at Capitol Hill Police Station.
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Detectives; preliminary investigations
Detectives visited the commission’s offices and retrieved CCTV footage to trace her movements from the time she was dropped by her husband.
Preliminary investigations show that she indeed reported to her fourth floor office at ACK Annex adjacent to Ardhi House, according to CCTV footage, but was seen walking out about an hour later.
In both moments captured by cameras — while alighting from the building’s lift and later as she exited the offices — she is seen carrying her handbag.
“Already, detectives have retrieved CCTV footage at her place of work and preliminary investigations show that she entered her fourth floor office and later left carrying her handbag, an hour later,” said Mr Komu.
However, detectives are puzzled how her mobile phone was hours later found in her husband’s car that was parked near the office.
“It appears she was either kidnapped at the parking lot after she opened the car and put the handbag containing her mobile phone, or she willingly dropped the items in the car and left,” the distraught husband told Nation by telephone.
He said his wife’s failure to show up at home for a third night has heightened anxiety in the family.
Mr Komu was Sunday questioned by detectives at the DCI headquarters and recorded a statement with the team tracing the journalist’s whereabouts. The couple resides in Machakos town.