A major shake-up at the top of Kenya’s security apparatus is imminent, with Inspector General of Police Douglas Kanja and Director of Criminal Investigations (DCI) Mohammed Amin both set to exit office, according to highly placed sources cited by NTV.
The revelations point to a quiet but consequential transition underway within the National Police Service (NPS), driven by contract expiries, age limits, and shifting political winds at the apex of power.
Contract Clock Ticking for Top Cops
Sources indicate that both Kanja and Amin are currently serving on contract after attaining the mandatory retirement age of 60, a legal threshold that has increasingly shaped senior appointments in the security sector.
While Mohammed Amin was granted a four-year contract extension in 2024, due to run until August 2028, insiders now say he is unlikely to serve the full term. The reasons remain closely guarded, but multiple signals suggest that a mid-term exit is being prepared behind the scenes.
Kanja’s Exit: A Familiar Script
The case of Douglas Kanja appears more straightforward—and more immediate. His contract is set to expire in March this year, and sources say the government will not renew it.
In what has become an almost predictable pattern for Kenya’s police chiefs, Kanja is said to have fallen out of favour with the powers-that-be, sealing his fate just months before the end of his term. Historically, few Inspectors General have left office without friction with the political establishment, and Kanja’s tenure appears to be following that well-worn path.
Succession Race Gains Momentum
Even before an official announcement, the succession battle is already in full swing. Senior insiders point to Deputy Inspector General Gilbert Masengeli and Deputy IG Eliud Lagat as the leading contenders to replace Kanja.
Both officers bring deep institutional experience and enjoy visibility within the security and political establishment—factors that often prove decisive in such high-stakes appointments.

The potential exit of both the IG and DCI boss within the same period would mark one of the most significant leadership transitions in Kenya’s security sector in recent years. It comes at a time when the government is under intense pressure to demonstrate firmness on crime, corruption, terrorism, and public order management.
As speculation intensifies, attention now turns to State House and the National Police Service Commission, whose next moves will shape not just leadership at Vigilance House, but the broader direction of policing and investigations in Kenya.
For now, officials remain tight-lipped—but if the sources are anything to go by, the countdown to a security reset has already begun.







