Nairobi – The Tuesday evening murder of prominent city lawyer and author, Mathew Kyalo Mbobu, has sent shockwaves through Kenya’s legal fraternity, with investigators, colleagues, and political watchers probing whether his death was the work of a professional hitman—and more importantly, who might have wanted him silenced.
Mbobu, a former Chairperson of the Political Parties Dispute Tribunal and respected governance expert, was driving home along Lang’ata Road between Catholic University and Brookhouse School at 7:30 pm when a gunman on a motorcycle pulled alongside his vehicle, opened fire, and sped off into the night.
A chilling video of the aftermath circulated online, showing stunned motorists scrambling for safety as traffic came to a standstill. Many Kenyans concluded the hit bore the hallmarks of careful planning. “This was no random crime of opportunity,” one senior investigator confided. “It was a message.”
The Lawyer, the Election, and a 3:00 AM Visit
For the public, Mbobu was known as a distinguished lawyer, prolific author, lecturer at the University of Nairobi and the Kenya School of Law, and board member of the Institute of Directors. But within political and legal circles, his reputation carried an additional layer—his proximity to some of the country’s most sensitive disputes.
Sources have told SIAYA TODAY that Mbobu was in the company of former Attorney General Amos Wako and former Cabinet Secretary Raphael Tuju during the infamous early-morning visit to then-IEBC Chairman Wafula Chebukati at Bomas of Kenya around 3:00 AM, when the tallying of the 2022 presidential election was hanging in the balance.
That encounter, which Chebukati later described as an attempt to pressure him into altering results, remains one of the murkiest chapters of Kenya’s electoral history. Until his death, Mbobu rarely spoke about it publicly—but those close to him say the subject was not entirely off-limits in private conversations.
“Kyalo had hinted that one day, when the timing was right, he would tell the full story,” a friend in the legal fraternity revealed. “He knew things that many people at the top levels of politics would rather remain buried.”
Who Would Want Him Dead?
The central question now is: Who stood to gain from Mbobu’s silence, and why now?
Kenya is seventeen months away from another presidential election. The country is already on edge, with questions about the 2022 polls still unresolved in the court of public opinion. Mbobu’s assassination may therefore not only be about his professional disputes, but about controlling narratives before 2027.
1. Political Motives
Mbobu’s involvement in high-stakes election disputes and his presence at Bomas in 2022 put him at the intersection of Kenya’s fiercest political rivalries. If he held information implicating powerful figures, eliminating him would serve as a pre-emptive strike to prevent leaks or testimony in future legal or political showdowns.
2. Legal and Business Conflicts
As a Senior Partner at Kyalo & Associates Advocates, Mbobu handled high-value cases in commercial litigation and arbitration. Police are probing whether his death could be linked to corporate disputes, business rivalries, or clients with powerful enemies.
3. Professional Hit or Criminal Opportunism?
Eyewitnesses’ accounts and the assassin’s clean escape suggest a calculated professional hit, not a botched robbery. The use of a motorbike—a common tool for Nairobi contract killings—aligns with a growing trend of targeted assassinations in the city.
A Pattern of Silence
Mbobu’s murder echoes a grim history: lawyers, activists, and whistleblowers connected to Kenya’s electoral disputes often face intimidation, exile, or worse. Critics argue that the state’s inability—or unwillingness—to solve such high-profile killings fuels a climate of impunity.
“We can’t solve one murder to the end,” consumer rights activist Stephen Mutoro lamented on X (formerly Twitter). “Because we barely scratch the surface, the cycle of violence keeps repeating.”
Rising Insecurity, Rising Questions
The killing has also reignited fears over Nairobi’s deteriorating security. Recent weeks have seen a surge in motorbike-related violent crimes—but Mbobu’s case is different. It is not just a law-and-order issue, but a political time bomb.
Was Mbobu silenced because of what he knew about the 2022 election? Was his death meant to send a warning ahead of 2027? Or was it tied to a completely different set of enemies within Kenya’s business and legal circles?
Until investigators provide answers, speculation will only deepen. But one thing is clear: the killing of Mathew Kyalo Mbobu is not just the loss of a brilliant legal mind—it is a chilling reminder that in Kenya, truth can be fatal.








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