News
Kenyan Driver Hospitalized After Dubai Assault for Rejecting Gay Advances, Passport Seized as Authorities Remain Silent
While the attack has been reported to Dubai police and the case is allegedly under investigation, Kiplimo’s family says they have received no meaningful updates about progress or charges.
The troubling case of a Kenyan taxi driver brutally attacked in Dubai has reignited urgent concerns about the safety and protection of Kenyan workers in the Middle East, as authorities in both countries remain conspicuously silent while the victim lies hospitalized and unable to leave the United Arab Emirates.
Brian Kiplimo arrived in Dubai just two months ago with hopes of building a better future.
Instead, the young cab driver now finds himself trapped in a nightmare, recovering from injuries sustained during a violent assault that was captured on his vehicle’s CCTV cameras, while his employer holds his passport and pressures him to return to work.
The incident unfolded in the early morning hours of November 8, around 5:58 am Middle Eastern time. Security footage shows what began as a routine fare quickly descending into terror.
After agreeing on the destination, the passenger entered Kiplimo’s cab and initially sat normally.
But within moments, the client moved to the back seat and without warning locked Kiplimo in a chokehold from behind.
According to early reports and accounts from Kiplimo’s family, the assault was triggered after he refused unwanted sexual advances from the passenger, who had attempted to touch him inappropriately.
The driver fought desperately for his life as the attack continued inside the vehicle, with the entire violent episode recorded by the cab’s surveillance system.
Kiplimo sustained injuries serious enough to require hospitalization, but in a cruel twist, his employer’s cab company did not arrange or pay for his medical treatment.
The driver was forced to cover his own hospital expenses while recovering from the traumatic attack.
Now, barely able to work, he faces a new threat from the very company that should be protecting him.
His family in Kenya reports that the cab company is threatening Kiplimo with financial penalties for what they’re calling “absconding from duty,” despite his documented injuries and ongoing recovery.
Even more distressing, the company has confiscated his passport, effectively imprisoning him in Dubai at the most vulnerable moment of his life.
Without his travel documents, Kiplimo cannot leave the UAE, even if he wanted to escape his deteriorating situation.
While the attack has been reported to Dubai police and the case is allegedly under investigation, Kiplimo’s family says they have received no meaningful updates about progress or charges.
No court dates have been set, and the silence from UAE authorities has left the family desperate and confused about how to navigate a foreign legal system that seems indifferent to their loved one’s suffering.
The situation has become even more complicated by the cab company’s initial restrictions on sharing the CCTV footage of the attack.
Though Kiplimo eventually managed to access and share the video, his family fears retaliation and worries about his safety while he remains under the control of an employer that appears more concerned with profits than worker welfare.
Back in Kenya, Kiplimo’s relatives are pleading for help from anyone who will listen.
They feel abandoned by the systems that should protect Kenyan citizens abroad.
Their frustration has grown as days turn into weeks with no assistance from government officials.
As of the time of publication, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has not issued any statement on Kiplimo’s case, despite mounting pressure from Kenyans on social media demanding government intervention.
The State Department for Diaspora Affairs, which handles issues affecting Kenyans overseas, has also remained silent on this specific incident.
This troubling case emerges just days after Kiambu Senator Karung’o wa Thang’wa raised alarm about Kenyan mothers stranded in Saudi Arabia after losing their jobs.
The State Department later explained that established procedures exist for repatriating distressed citizens, but acknowledged these protocols are often not properly implemented.
Kiplimo’s ordeal fits a disturbing pattern of abuse, exploitation, and abandonment facing Kenyan migrant workers across the Gulf states.
Stories of confiscated passports, withheld wages, physical abuse, and sexual harassment have become tragically common, yet meaningful protections remain elusive.
Many workers find themselves trapped by employment contracts that favor employers, immigration systems that tie workers to specific sponsors, and the simple reality of having no resources to escape.
The attack on Kiplimo also highlights another dimension of vulnerability that male migrant workers face, one that is rarely discussed openly.
Sexual harassment and assault of men working in isolated conditions like taxi driving happens more frequently than reported, but shame and stigma often prevent victims from coming forward or seeking help.
For Kiplimo’s family, each day brings new worry.
They fear for his physical safety while he remains in Dubai, his mental health after such a traumatic attack, and his future prospects now that his employer has turned hostile.
They worry about the mounting medical bills he’s paying out of pocket, the penalties the company is threatening, and the possibility that he could face legal consequences in a system they don’t understand.
Most of all, they want their son and brother home safely, but without his passport and without government intervention, that simple wish seems impossibly far away.
The silence from authorities on both sides is deafening.
Kenyans watching this case unfold are asking hard questions about what their government is doing to protect citizens who leave the country seeking opportunities.
If a documented assault captured on camera cannot prompt swift action and protection for a Kenyan citizen, what will?
As Kiplimo lies in his hospital bed in Dubai, unable to work, unable to leave, and unable to get justice, his case has become a symbol of a broken system that sends workers abroad but abandons them when they need help most.
His family’s plea is simple and heartbreaking: someone, anyone, please help bring their loved one home.
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