Kisumu Village Buries Its 22 of 26 Loved Ones Killed in Horror Coptic Roundabout Accident

Kisumu Village Buries Its 22 of 26 Loved Ones Killed in Horror Coptic Roundabout Accident

  • Nyakach is mourning 22 victims of last week’s Kisumu bus crash as the Korwa and Katieno clans hold a joint funeral, uniting the community in grief
  • Processions from Jaramogi Oginga Odinga Teaching and Referral Hospital to Naki Primary School featured 22 hearses, gospel hymns, and thousands of mourning residents
  • Survivors and relatives described the overwhelming sorrow, carrying flowers, photographs, and handwritten notes, struggled to grasp the scale of the tragedy

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Didacus Malowa, a journalist at TUKO.co.ke, brings over three years of experience covering politics and current affairs in Kenya.

Kisumu - Nyakach is reeling in grief that words cannot capture as the Korwa and Katieno clans face a loss unprecedented in living memory.

Nyakach funeral
The families will have a joint burial service before they are interred. Photo: Brian Kawere Rutha.
Source: Facebook

This comes as 22 of their loved ones, killed in last week’s Kisumu-Kakamega Highway bus crash, were returned home for a joint funeral that has left the community both broken and united in sorrow.

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On Friday, August 8, 54 members of the clans set out from Naki Secondary School to Nyahera in Kisumu West to attend the burial of 78-year-old Risper Akeyo Ogendo.

What began as a sombre journey soon became a nightmare that would shake the village to its core.

Chrispine Otieno, a relative of one of the survivors, recounted the mood as they left, revealing that they were in high spirits.

"They left here in high spirits; some hadn’t seen each other in months. It felt like a reunion, even though it was in grief," Otieno stated as reported by Nation.

That spirit was brutally cut short at Kisumu’s Coptic Roundabout, where the bus carrying the mourners was involved in a horrific crash.

According to official records, 21 people died on the spot, and five others succumbed to their injuries in the hospital.

How did the 22 victims arrive in Nyakach

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On Friday, August 15, a week after the tragedy, the village faced the enormity of the loss as Naki Primary School was transformed into a field of mourning.

When the procession from Jaramogi Oginga Odinga Teaching and Referral Hospital mortuary reached Koguta Katombo village for a vigil, the scale of the tragedy became even clearer.

Loudspeakers blasted gospel hymns across the grounds, calling thousands of grieving residents to pay their respects.

The 22 hearses, each bearing the name of the deceased, moved slowly in solemn formation, with some locals standing beside the road in muffled discussions.

Mourners wandered from home to home, carrying flowers, photographs, and handwritten notes, trying to offer comfort amid a loss too immense for anyone to fully grasp.

"I don’t know which home to start from. The pain is too much. We’ve never seen anything like this," said Jane Anyango.

Why are political speeches banned at Nyakach funeral?

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Engineer Vincent Kodera, chairperson of the funeral organising committee, confirmed that a joint memorial and burial service would take place today, Saturday, August 16, at Naki Primary School.

Kodera emphasised that the decision to hold a collective service was meant to help the community grieve together and begin the long process of healing.

Coptic roundabour
Kisumu Coptic Roundabout where the bus killed 26 people. Photo: KeNHA.
Source: Facebook

He also stressed that the funeral would remain apolitical, explaining that they would not allow political speeches.

"If any politician attends, let it be to mourn with the families, nothing more," he warned.

How did leaders support Nyakach families?

As earlier reported, ODM leader Raila Odinga donated KSh 1 million to support the families of 26 victims who died in a tragic road accident at the Coptic Roundabout in Kisumu.

Kisumu governor Anyang' Nyong'o joined families at the Jaramogi Oginga Odinga Teaching and Referral Hospital as they collected the bodies.

Governor Nyong'o announced a fund drive to support the bereaved families, with details to be published in newspapers.

Proofreading by Asher Omondi, copy editor at TUKO.co.ke.

Source: TUKO.co.ke

Authors:
Didacus Malowa avatar

Didacus Malowa (Political and current affairs editor) Didacus Malowa is a political and current affairs editor at TUKO.co.ke. He holds a Bachelor's Degree in Communication and Media Technology with IT from Maseno University in 2021. He has over two years of experience in digital journalism. Email: didacus.malowa@tuko.co.ke

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