The families of activist Bob Njagi and brothers Jamil and Aslay Longton, who disappeared on August 19, are desperately seeking answers from the government about their loved ones' whereabouts. A recent report has emerged, providing new details about the vehicle allegedly involved in the abduction of the brothers, who have now been missing for ten days.

Citizen TV visited the families of the victims, who claim that a car captured on CCTV footage is the same one Jamil and his brother were seen in just minutes before they vanished. Razzak Longton, the brothers' sibling, recounted the incident: "A Subaru lingered around here for a long time. The driver, dressed in black, kept getting in and out. Then he suddenly sped off, braked sharply, grabbed my brothers, and drove away."


At Jamil's home, the atmosphere is filled with an unsettling silence. His wife, Salo Muhamed, is distraught and hasn't slept since her husband's abduction. "I'm still in shock that I haven't seen them to this day. Even if they committed a crime, shouldn't they be taken to court? Their child keeps asking, 'Why is it only my father they keep taking?'" she said.

Razzak further explained, "When my brother asked where they were taking him, the DCI officers said they were ordered to pick him up. When he continued to question them, they slapped him, pushed him into the Subaru, and drove away."

The same story unfolds at Bob Njagi's home, where his parents have been anxiously waiting, holding onto hope that he will return or, at the very least, that he is in police custody. "We want the government to act justly and either release our son or take him to court. I'm appealing to the President to step in for us; we need to know if they are alive and, if so, in what condition," said Frank Njagi, Bob's father.


As the days pass without any updates, the families' plea for justice and answers grows more urgent.