Miguna Miguna has once again come out with damning allegations, this time pointing fingers at Noordin Haji and his operatives for the abduction, torture, and murder of British IT forensic specialist Campbell Scott.
According to Miguna, the orders for this heinous act came directly from President William Ruto himself. Campbell Scott was allegedly working on analyzing critical IEBC data before he was silenced in the same brutal manner as Chris Msando in 2017.
The parallels are clear anyone uncovering sensitive electoral information that threatens the regime’s legitimacy faces elimination. Miguna insists that Scott’s murder was not random but a carefully planned operation to suppress evidence of IEBC system manipulation.

He claims that Ruto had the most to gain from ensuring that the data Scott was working on never saw the light of day. If Scott had uncovered proof of system cloning, penetration, and remote control, it would have raised serious questions about Ruto’s legitimacy.
This is why Miguna believes the British IT expert had to be eliminated, and the manner in which it was done sends a chilling message to anyone else thinking of exposing the truth.
Haji, now in charge of national intelligence, has long been accused of running state-sanctioned operations that target individuals seen as threats to the regime. Miguna has repeatedly exposed Haji’s involvement in extrajudicial activities, and this case appears to fit the pattern.
The abduction, torture, and dumping of Scott’s body in a remote forest in Makueni align with past tactics used to eliminate those holding sensitive information. It also raises concerns about how many other similar cases go unreported.

The silence of the British government and embassy is another issue Miguna has highlighted. Given that a British citizen was brutally murdered in Kenya under suspicious circumstances, why has there been no outrage or demand for accountability? This silence suggests either complicity or pressure from the Kenyan government to keep the matter buried.
The question remains, what did Scott know, and why was his life taken in such a gruesome manner?
Miguna has called for an international investigation into Scott’s murder, warning that this is not just a Kenyan issue but one that exposes the dangerous lengths the current regime will go to in order to maintain power.
He has urged Kenyans to question the official narratives and demand justice. If a foreign expert could be killed so easily for handling sensitive electoral data, what does that say about the safety of local whistleblowers?