Gor Sunguh Commission

[1][2] The Committee heard allegations of a dispute going back to the 1988 General Election (PSCI para 249[3]) over opposition to the revival of the Kisumu Molasses Plant in Dr Ouko’s constituency.

(PSCI para 253 (iii))[10] Sunguh’s Committee concluded that Dr Ouko had disappeared from his farm ‘in the early hours of 13 February, [1990], abducted and taken to State House, Nakuru, 'where he was killed allegedly 'in the presence of among others, Hon.

(PSCI para 253 (iv)[11] In all Sunguh’s Committee named recommended that the Kenyan government should investigate the role of over 40 people for their possible involvement in the murder of Dr Robert Ouko.

(Kenya Human Rights Commission Report, 2011, page 35[12]) Six members of the Select Committee, Paul Muite, Mirugi Kariuki, Dr Abdulahi Ali, Njoki Susanna Ndung'u and Otieno Kajwang – resigned during its hearings.

The forensic evidence and analysis submitted by Britain's Scotland Yard as set out in Detective Superintendent John Troon's 'Final Report' stated that Dr Ouko had been shot where his body was found, or a few feet from that spot (TFR para 290[18]).

(Kenya Police Further Investigations, pages 12–13[20] and TFR) This evidence made it impossible for Dr Robert Ouko to have been shot at State House Nakuru and his body taken to where it was subsequently found some time between 12 and 16 February 1990, as Sunguh's Committee had concluded.