When Moses Etyang
boarded a military vehicle on a routine patrol in Afmadow, Somalia, in 2014, he
had no idea it would change his life forever.
The vehicle was ambushed
and overturned, he was violently thrown against its metal frame.
Etyang walked away with
what were dismissed as “minor soft tissue injuries” to his head — no scans, no
hospital stay, just basic first aid. He was told to suck it up and get back to
duty.
In the months that
followed, however, something inside him began to unravel. He suffered memory
lapses and confusion.
The fog wouldn’t lift. By
the time he returned to Nyali Barracks in 2015, Etyang was no longer the man he
once had been.
His health deteriorated,
and so did his ability to serve. Instead of receiving medical care or support,
he was labelled insubordinate, charged with malingering and locked in the brig
for 42 days before being dishonourably discharged by the KDF the same year. It
cited a vague clause of “services no longer required.”
Now, more than a decade
since the day of the accident, Court of Appeal on July 31 awarded
Etyang Sh25 million in damages — ruling that his dismissal was unlawful, cruel
and a violation of his constitutional rights.
The judges affirmed that
his mental health struggles were not only real, but directly linked to the
injuries he sustained in Somalia, and that KDF failed both in its duty of care
and ensuring a fair process during his disciplinary proceedings.
Etyang had petitioned
the Employment and Labour Relations Court, which initially awarded him
Sh30 million for the trauma, lost income and violation of rights. The ELRC
initial ruling was on February 18, 2023.
The government, through
the Attorney General and Chief of Defence Forces, appealed the decision,
arguing his dismissal had followed due process and he had already been
compensated through a military disability scheme.
The Court of Appeal
acknowledged the government's concerns and reduced the compensation to Sh25
million — calling the original figure “excessive and punitive” — it upheld the
core of the earlier judgment.
It said KDF had failed
to provide proper medical investigation, ignored the respondent’s declining
mental state and denied him the basic fairness of a trial he could understand
the charges and defend himself.
By 2018, a KDF Medical
Board had officially diagnosed Etyang with schizophrenia, confirming the link
between his mental illness and the injury in Somalia.
His legal team argued
successfully that he had not been in a position to defend himself during
disciplinary proceedings, yet no mental capacity assessment was conducted, nor
was he allowed representation.
The case underscores a
broader problem in the way institutions, particularly security forces, handle
invisible wounds. Despite being decorated for service, Etyang was treated as a
disciplinary problem rather than a patient.
The ruling signals a
growing recognition of mental health rights as part of constitutional
protections, especially in high-risk professions like the military.
With the damages now
affirmed, less the previous compensation already paid, the judgment not only
brings closure to one man’s long, painful journey, but also sends a strong
message to state institutions: injury, especially to the mind, must not be met
with punishment, but with care, dignity, and justice.
Instant analysis
The judgment marks a
critical shift toward recognising mental health injuries as legitimate grounds
for state accountability. It also exposes systemic gaps in the military's duty
of care, punishing trauma instead of treating it.