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Public on High Alert After Kenyan Serial Killer Escapes

Collins Jumaisi Khalusha (33) looks on at the Makadara Law Courts in Nairobi on August 16, 2024. - The Kenyan man who police said confessed to murdering and dismembering 42 women appeared in court, following the discovery of nine mutilated women's bodies in a Nairobi abandoned quarry in the Mukuru slum, a gruesome discovery that has horrified the nation. (Photo by SIMON MAINA / AFP)

A Kenyan man who police claim has confessed to murdering and dismembering 42 women has escaped from a Nairobi police cell, along with a dozen other detainees, police said on Tuesday.

Collins Jumaisi, 33, described by police as a “vampire and a psychopath”, was arrested last month after the horrific discovery of mutilated bodies in a garbage dump in a slum in the Kenyan capital.

“They escaped last night, 13 in total, including the key suspect in the dump murder case,” Kenya police spokeswoman Resila Onyango told AFP. She added that the other 12 detainees who had also escaped from the police station were all Eritreans.

Jumaisi appeared in a court in Nairobi on Friday, where the magistrate ordered him held for another 30 days to enable police to complete their investigations.

Ten butchered female bodies trussed up in plastic bags were found in the dumpsite in an abandoned quarry in the Nairobi slum of Mukuru, the Kenya National Commission on Human Rights said last month.

Jumaisi was detained in the early hours of July 15 near a bar where he had been watching the Euro 2024 football final.

The head of the Directorate of Criminal Investigations, Mohamed Amin, said after his arrest that Jumaisi had confessed to murdering 42 women over two years from 2022 and that his wife had been his first victim.

“We are dealing with a vampire, a psychopath,” Amin said at the time.

The dumped bodies threw a fresh spotlight on Kenya’s police force as they were found just 100 metres from a police station.

The state-funded Kenya National Commission on Human Rights (KNCHR) said in July it was carrying out its investigations into the Mukuru case because “there is a need to rule out any possibility of extrajudicial killings”.

Kenya’s police watchdog, the Independent Police Oversight Authority, had also said it was looking into whether there was any police involvement or a “failure to act to prevent” the killings.

Rights groups often accuse Kenyan police of carrying out unlawful killings or running hit squads, but few have faced justice.

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