Categories: News

Kenya Halts US-Backed Ebola Facility After Health Minister Is Found in Contempt of Court

Kenyan Health Minister Aden Duale ordered an immediate halt to the construction of a controversial United States-backed Ebola quarantine facility at the Laikipia Air Base on Tuesday afternoon after a presiding judge found him in contempt of court. High Court Judge Patricia Nyaundi Mande ruled that the health ministry unlawfully permitted construction to proceed despite a prior judicial freeze issued in May over community safety concerns.

The decision marks a significant escalation in a tense legal battle spearheaded by the Katiba Institute and the Law Society of Kenya. These prominent legal organizations challenged the construction of the isolation ward, arguing that the national government completely failed to conduct adequate public participation or address severe biosecurity fears before breaking ground.

The proposed fifty-bed tented isolation and treatment field hospital was explicitly designed to quarantine and treat American military personnel or citizens exposed to the lethal Bundibugyo ebolavirus strain during regional operations in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda. The United States government originally backed the strategic military initiative with a substantial thirteen point five million dollar funding package intended for regional healthcare preparedness.

Local residents and medical professionals strongly opposed importing an active viral risk into a nation that has historically recorded zero cases of Ebola. Mass demonstrations against the high-security facility recently escalated into violent clashes with security forces, resulting in three civilian fatalities near the town of Nanyuki.

Independent investigations utilizing satellite imagery and flight tracking data later confirmed that workers continued setting up tents and offloading cargo at the airbase despite the clear judicial blocks. This defiant construction activity prompted the High Court to issue the severe contempt ruling against Duale, who subsequently issued an official apology to avoid potential imprisonment.

“The ministry respects the rule of law and will completely suspend all activities at the site until the court delivers its final determination,” Duale stated during his legal address on Tuesday. This dramatic executive reversal leaves the immediate and long-term future of the international health initiative highly uncertain.

The temporary injunction blocking all physical site development will remain legally active until a substantive hearing takes place on July 23, 2026. Legal experts suggest the final judicial outcome will set a vital national precedent regarding executive accountability, public health policy, and community rights across Kenya.

Anyangu Yasin

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