When Dr Swarup Mishra first set foot on Kenyan soil in 1997, he was an ambitious gynaecologist with nothing but a suitcase and a dream.
A son of Odisha, India, he came to Eldoret alongside his wife, Pallavi, in search of opportunity.
After successfully working as a lecturer of Medicine at Moi University, the obstetrics and gynaecology specialist founded Mediheal Group of Hospitals alongside his wife Pallavi, also a medic.
What followed was a two-decade transformation from a modest medical lecturer to a flashy Member of Parliament, adored by constituents and feared by rivals.
But in 2025, that dream lies on shaky ground, threatened by creditors, alleged political betrayals, and perhaps most damningly, allegations of being at the heart of an illegal global kidney trade.
Mishra, popularly known as Kiprop arap Chelule, a Kalenjin name bestowed on him meaning 'boy born during the rainy season', was once Kenya’s darling medic-turned-politician.
He gave generously, launched one of the region’s top-tier private hospitals, and in 2017, secured a seat in Parliament under the then-dominant Jubilee Party.
Mishra would later defend it as an independent candidate in 2022 after a dramatic fallout with President William Ruto. He failed after a bitter fallout with President William Ruto.
“I thought I had found a home. Kenya gave me everything, respect, opportunity, even a name,” he once said proudly from the vast colonial mansion he built in Eldoret, complete with walk-in closets housing 200+ designer suits and over 1,000 pairs of shoes.
But as fate would have it, storms soon gathered over Mishra’s empire.
In late 2022, the National Health Insurance Fund (NHIF) delisted his flagship Mediheal Hospitals, a blow that was followed by teachers’ insurer Minet cutting ties as well.
What had once been a bustling hospital empire started to bleed patients and profits. Auctioneers followed, listing multiple properties tied to the Mishras for sale to recover massive debts.
“After two years of living on my knees under constant threat and losing millions to systemic blackmail, I wake up to find everything I have worked for over 20 years being auctioned,” Mishra lamented bitterly on X.
Yet, even as financial fires raged, a far darker cloud loomed.
In 2025, an explosive exposé by German broadcaster Deutsche Welle (DW) implicated Mediheal Hospital in an alleged organ trafficking syndicate.
The report alleged the Eldoret facility was a hub for illegal kidney transplants, where desperate young Kenyan men were lured into selling their kidneys for meagre sums, some as low as Ksh 500,000, far less than promised.
Among the alleged victims was Amon Kipruto, who said his health deteriorated following the procedure.
The exposé triggered a frenzy. Health Cabinet Secretary Aden Duale confirmed that the Ministry was investigating.
A multi-agency team flagged inconsistencies at Mediheal and seven other hospitals. Even the Transplantation Society had issued a warning as far back as July 2023, alleging regulatory breaches.
But Dr Mishra and his team have pushed back hard.
Speaking on Spice FM, Mediheal Group’s Vice President of Operations, Maryline Limo, denied the claims.
“Mediheal wishes to categorically state that we strictly adhere to legal guidelines,” she said. “All patients present their own donors, we do not source them. The patient claiming to have been paid did not name Mediheal, but an individual.”
The hospital insists it only charges for medical services and does not get involved in financial arrangements between donors and recipients.
Limo also accused DW of broadcasting unverified allegations, despite the outlet’s claim that it sought comment beforehand.
Yet, questions continue to swirl. Why has Mediheal performed over 450 kidney transplants since 2018, far more than most local institutions? Why the influx of foreign kidney patients, particularly Israelis?
And why has the facility repeatedly failed to submit morbidity and mortality data to the Health Ministry?
For now, Dr Swarup Mishra’s once-sparkling legacy teeters on the edge, part visionary medic, part political cautionary tale, and now, the face of one of the most disturbing medical scandals in recent Kenyan history.