The Borneo Post

Desperate and despairing, parents tap sleuth to find Kenya’s lost children

- Rael Ombuor

NAIROBI: When Leroy Blessing went missing, his family panicked. The autistic 9-year-old could not talk to strangers easily, and police in his native Kenya scoffed when his desperate parents sought help, saying he was old enough to look a er himself.

“They said ‘he’s a big boy, he will come back home,’” Ke y Omondi, Leroy’s mother, recounted. “They never received me with kindness or pity.”

Then Maryana Munyendo stepped in. She heads Missing Child Kenya Foundation, an alliance of voluntary sleuths tracking down missing children. She plastered up posters and blasted social media. A stranger called two days later with the boy’s whereabout­s.

Since se ing up the group in 2016, Munyendo said she and her two-person team have reunited 1,055 children with their families out of the 1,551 missing children that parents have reported to her. Another 153 were sent to government homes and 28 were declared deceased, leaving 315 active files.

Munyendo, 41, set up the group a er a 10-year-old girl went missing in the neighbourh­ood near her office. Locals spo ed the lost child a er Munyendo put up posters, and the girl was reunited with her family a er two days. More families reached out. Buoyed by early successes, Munyendo and her friend Jennifer Kaberi set up the foundation, running it on a shoestring out of Kaberi’s living room. Many of the children were runaways or the victims of parental abductions or trafficker­s. Some were simply lost and unable to tell strangers where they lived.

They started with posters, social media and the introducti­on of online hashtags and the keywords “MissingChi­ldKE” to bring up names and posters. Then the group expanded, se ing up Kenya’s first toll-free number for tracing missing children and badgering local news organizati­ons to air features on the missing.

Just before the start of Kenya’s soccer championsh­ip match in 2019, her team arranged for players to hold up placards with pictures and names of missing children. The moment was broadcast on television and led to four reunions.

Their methods work. Blessing, now 15, disappeare­d twice more, and each time, strangers contacted Munyendo saying they had seen him. During his last disappeara­nce, a comment by a stranger on the Missing Child Foundation Facebook post helped trace him to a hospital.

Another parent, George Ouma, 51, said Munyendo also helped recover his 17-year-old autistic son. He was missing for 10 days before a conductor noticed him at a bus terminal staring at a poster of his own face.

Few alternativ­es

Kenya has an epidemic of missing children. Police did not respond to inquiries on statistics, and there’s no national database on missing children. But in May the cabinet secretary for labour and social protection, Florence Bore, said in a speech that 6,841 children were reported missing from July 2022 to May 2023. Only 1,296 have been reunited with their families, she said.

Most of the government’s budget for vulnerable children goes to the state-run Children’s Welfare Society, but while it runs homes, it does not conduct investigat­ions. The society relies on the police. But multiple families, like the parents of 3year-old Monica Makhungu, said in interviews that police had done li le and asked for money. Police did not respond to requests for comment.

The girl disappeare­d in 2016 while playing in her Nairobi neighbourh­ood. Playmates said they saw a man give her a bo le of water and carry her away. Her father, Enock Mudavadi, went to police, but he says they repeatedly asked him for money. Friends searched the area and found one of Monica’s pink shoes a few kilometres from her house. Weeks later, police said they had no resources to continue searching and asked for money to fuel the police car. Desperate, Mudavadi said he sold everything he had. He spent so much time searching he lost his job.

Finally he turned to Munyendo, and she issued posters using forensic age progressio­n technology, which produces updated identikits of the disappeare­d, provided by the Italian Missing Children Institute. But Monica was never found.

Even a er 1,500 more cases, Munyendo said quietly, “I still cannot forget about Monica.” Despite se ing up the toll-free number, she will never change her personal phone number, she said, in case one of the old leaflets is found and someone calls with informatio­n about the girl.

Munyendo works closely with Kenya’s Directorat­e of Criminal Investigat­ions, which launched an Anti-Human Traffickin­g and Child Protection Unit in 2016. Many of their cases involved parental abductions and child traffickin­g. The unit’s chief, Mueni Mutisya, said, “People like Maryana fill in the gaps. Sometimes we also ask Maryana to post for us the pictures of the missing. They publish the informatio­n, and people o en contact her.”

Internatio­nal impact

Munyendo is tackling a major global problem. The Internatio­nal Centre for Missing and Exploited Children says only 45 countries have specific legislatio­n or policies concerning missing children, although other laws can apply. Athena Morgan, the centre’s Africa head, said most African nations do not keep records and the problem is rarely a government priority.

But Munyendo’s success has inspired others. She set up a webinar for Africans working on missing children and met Ghanaian journalist Regina Asamoah, who set up Missing Children Ghana in 2020. The next year Asamoah released a documentar­y featuring more than 30 missing children, some of whom had been living in orphanages for a decade. It became a series. Families told the stories of their lost children, and those who had been reunited shared their stories. One boy was reunited with his family a er 14 years. He’d gone missing at age 3.

So far, the Ghana group has reunited 203 children with their families in two years and is searching for 660 others. Asamoah also met the police chief. Ghana set up its first missing people unit last year.

The work is never easy. This past summer, Munyendo’s toll-free number was cut off because they could not pay the bill, and it was out of service until an anonymous well-wisher paid the outstandin­g bill this month. Last year she could not give her volunteers bus fare or lunch money, so now they work from home to save costs. In November, their office roof collapsed. Yet she carries on. This autumn, in a shared Nairobi workspace, she stared at a photo of 3-year-old Daniel Yasin Meke on the flickering screen of an old computer. He was last seen a year ago near his Nairobi home. There had been no leads. She reposted his photograph anyway.

“We never give up,” she said.

 ?? — Malin Fezehai for The Washington Post ?? Enock Mudavadi, 32, and Elizabeth Auwa, 30, with their 3-year-old son Gael, in their village in Vihiga County. When the couple’s daughter, Monica Makhungu, then 3, vanished in 2016 while playing in their Nairobi neighborho­od, her father Enock Mudavadi approached the police for help but faced demands for money instead of assistance. Police later declared a lack of resources to continue the search, requesting funds even for fueling their vehicles. Mudavadi faced financial ruin and job loss in his relentless quest to find Monica, selling all his possession­s to fund the search.
— Malin Fezehai for The Washington Post Enock Mudavadi, 32, and Elizabeth Auwa, 30, with their 3-year-old son Gael, in their village in Vihiga County. When the couple’s daughter, Monica Makhungu, then 3, vanished in 2016 while playing in their Nairobi neighborho­od, her father Enock Mudavadi approached the police for help but faced demands for money instead of assistance. Police later declared a lack of resources to continue the search, requesting funds even for fueling their vehicles. Mudavadi faced financial ruin and job loss in his relentless quest to find Monica, selling all his possession­s to fund the search.
 ?? Fezehai for The Washington Post — Malin ?? Leroy Blessing, 15, holds hands with his mother Ke y Omondi, 42 at their home in Nairobi. At age 9, he disappeare­d, receiving no assistance from the police. Maryana Munyendo, head of the Missing Child Kenya Foundation, intervened, and two days later a tipster provided informatio­n on Leroy’s location.
Fezehai for The Washington Post — Malin Leroy Blessing, 15, holds hands with his mother Ke y Omondi, 42 at their home in Nairobi. At age 9, he disappeare­d, receiving no assistance from the police. Maryana Munyendo, head of the Missing Child Kenya Foundation, intervened, and two days later a tipster provided informatio­n on Leroy’s location.
 ?? — Malin Fezehai for The Washington Post ?? Monica Makhungu was 3 years old when she vanished in 2016 while playing in her Nairobi neighborho­od. At le , Monica and her mother Elizabeth; at right, Monica and a schoolteac­her. Witnesses, including Monica’s playmates, reported seeing a man giving her a bo le of water before taking her away.
— Malin Fezehai for The Washington Post Monica Makhungu was 3 years old when she vanished in 2016 while playing in her Nairobi neighborho­od. At le , Monica and her mother Elizabeth; at right, Monica and a schoolteac­her. Witnesses, including Monica’s playmates, reported seeing a man giving her a bo le of water before taking her away.
 ?? — Malin Fezehai for The Washington Post ?? Elizabeth Auwa, 30, with her son Gael, 3, holds a picture of her daughter Monica Makhungu. Monica was 3 years old when she vanished in 2016 while playing in their Nairobi neighborho­od. Witnesses, including Monica’s playmates, reported seeing a man giving her a bo le of water before taking her away.
— Malin Fezehai for The Washington Post Elizabeth Auwa, 30, with her son Gael, 3, holds a picture of her daughter Monica Makhungu. Monica was 3 years old when she vanished in 2016 while playing in their Nairobi neighborho­od. Witnesses, including Monica’s playmates, reported seeing a man giving her a bo le of water before taking her away.
 ?? Fezehai for The Washington Post — Malin ?? Elizabeth Auwa, 30, holds her daughter Monica’s school uniform.
Fezehai for The Washington Post — Malin Elizabeth Auwa, 30, holds her daughter Monica’s school uniform.

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