The Federation of Women Lawyers in Kenya (FIDA-Kenya) have decried the mishandling of the investigations into the death of Toto Touch CEO, Susan Kamengere Njoki, who was reportedly forcefully injected with an unknown substance and committed to a hospital without consent.

In a statement released on Wednesday, July 23, the federation demanded that several state organisations thoroughly investigate the matter after pathologists revealed that Njoki had died due to manual strangulation.

Njoki, who admitted to having been previously admitted for depression, had raised the alarm before she died, documenting that two men and two women had stormed her Kileleshwa residence on July 14, restrained her, injected her with foreign medication and taken her to a private hospital in Lavington. "The Federation of Women Lawyers in Kenya (FIDA-Kenya) mourns and strongly condemns the circumstances surrounding the death of Susan Njoki Kamengere, the CEO and founder of Toto Touch," part of the statement read.

An Undated Image of FIDA Chairperson Nancy Ikinu and fellow members at a press briefing FIDA Among the institutions they cited were the Directorate of Criminal Investigation, the Director of Public Prosecutions and the Kenya Medical Practitioners and Dentists Council (KMPDC). "FIDA-Kenya calls on the Directorate of Criminal Investigations (DCI) to conduct a thorough, transparent, expeditious, and independent investigation into the circumstances leading to Ms.