Today marks the 3rd anniversary since you went to be with the Lord. How time flies? it seems like yesterday. We are left with precious memories, still fresh in our – minds.Your personality and influence still shaping our lives.
We forever cherish the life we shared, the love you gave and the guiding hand you provided.All this will forever be etched in our hearts, a warm reminder of your Love. We know you surround us in the great cloud of witnesses, eternally watching over us.
Fondly remembered by your husband Kiarie Gachichio, Sons; Gideon, Solomon and Samwel, Mother Teresia, brothers, sisters, relatives, friends and colleagues.
There will be a service to unveil her cross on Saturday 29th April 2017, Starting from 2.00pm at their home.
“Bible Verse John I I :25B,Anyone who believes in me will live even after dying”
It is with humble acceptance of God’s will that we announce the passing on of Clement Nyota Kang’ara who was called to glory on 19/4/2017. Nyota suffered a stroke on 8th April 2017 and was admitted at the ICU Mombasa Hospital where he fiercely fought for his life, but sadly lost the fight after I I days.
Son of John Nduati Kang’ara and Mary Njeri Kang’ara, Loving father of two lovely daughters: Castine Njeri and Valentine Wanjiru. Fondly referred to as “Nyosh” he is brother of Njacu, Maina,Wairimu, Mukami and Kamau. His family hails from Kiamunyi farm, Rongai Sub-county in Nakuru County.
Family and friends are meeting in Nairobi (Holy Family Basilica) and Nakuru (Kokeb Restaurant) from 5:30 pm for prayers, funeral planning and fundraising for a hospital bill of 2.5 Million and funeral expenses.
His journey home starts at Pandya Hospital mortuary Mombasa, on Thursday, 27th April 2017. The funeral procession leaves Umash Funeral Home Nakuru on Friday, 28th April 2017 at 7:00 am. Funeral service and burial will take place at the family home in Kiamunyi from 9am.
Friends and well-wishers may contribute towards medical and funeral expenses via: Mpesa pay bill No. 726626, Account Name: Nyota.Transaction Payment is to Nyota Kang’ara Medical Fund. There will a fund-raiser on Wednesday, 26th April 2017 at Holy Family Basilica at 5:30 p.m.
Psalm73:26 ‘My flesh and my heart may fail, but God is the strength of my heart • and my portion forever’.
It is with humble acceptance of God’s will that we announce the demise of Samuel Kiago Wachira who was a Senior Forester in charge of Dagorretti and Lang’ata sub-counties in Nairobi conservancy. He was the son of Daniel Wachira and Annan Njeri. Husband to Magdalene Kiago. Father of Ann Kiago ,Dan Kiago ,Simon Kiago and John Kiago. He was brother to Elianah, John, Charles, Lucy, Mary ,David and Peter. He was Uncle to many. Family and friends are meeting daily at his home in Limuru- Karanjee, Emma- Accra Hotel and Othaya for funeral arrangements.
The cortege will leave Kenyatta University mortuary on Wednesday 26th April 2017 at 7.00 a.m for a funeral mass at Mutitu catholic church in Karima, Othaya.
In Gods hand you rest in our hearts you live forever.Adios Dad!!
It is with great sadness and heavy hearts. that we announce the untimely passing of Dr. Dan Kamunya Waihenya.
Beloved husband of Terry Wanjiru Waihenya. Father of Keshi,Willis, Dr.Sally-Anne Ekpo and David. Son of the late Dr. Wilson Waihenya and the late Lydia Kagechi Waihenya. Son-in-law of the late David Mwaura and Hannah Mwaura. Brother of Karen Njoroge, Rachael Gitau, Dr. Terra Waigwa, Wangari Karuoro, Dr. Peter Waihenya, Waceke Mbaki, Gachambi Waweru, Jack Waihenya, Michael Wangai and Wangui Njui. Father-in-law of Dr. Iboro Ekpo, Brother-in-law of Norman Mbaki, Henry Njoroge, Karuoro Mwangi, Joy Waihenya, Khadija Waigwa, Rose Waihenya,Wangui Wangai, The late Edwin Gitau, Jeddy Kirara and Anthony Njui. Grandfather of Idara Ekpo. Uncle, cousin and dear friend to many.
Friends and relatives are meeting at Naivasha Pyramid Hotel daily from 6:30pm, St. Andrews Church Nairobi from Tuesday 25th from 5:30pm, and Safari Halt in Chaka on Tuesday and Wednesday from 5.00pm Funeral arrangements will be announced later. M-pesa contributions can be sent to Paybill No. 745601 DR. DAN WAIHENYA FUNERAL FUND A/C No (Sender’s Name)
“You have fought a good fight, you have finished the race and you have kept the faith. Rest with the angels Dad.”
It is with profound sorrow that we announce the sudden passing of Zipporah Bunger on Thursday 20th April 2017 in California, USA, fondly referred to by family and friends as Taabu.
Beloved wife of John Bunger, adoring mother of Lincoln Bunger. Daughter of the late Ernest Asewe Gwena and the late Sarah Wagasa Asewe. Daughter in law of Charles Kenneth Bunger and Linda Bunger. Sister in law of Tina Bunger Spencer, Michael Bunger, Scott Bunger Brooke Bunger-Studt and Sera McClay. Sister of Joab Asewe, Ruth Asewe, Margaret Skalberg. Step sister of Dennis Ochieng, Michael Osodo and others. Sister in law of Judy Nyang’oa, Joshua Kamima, Rosemary Gwena and Alex Musembi. Loving auntie of Davy, Josh, Neville, Evans, Tracy, Cindy, Michelle, Natasha, Vin, Adori, Prince, Sarina, Adriana and Jayden.
Relatives and friends are meeting at All Saints Cathedral on Thursday 27th April 2017 for a fundraiser from 5.30pm.
Contributions towards funeral expenses can be sent by M-Pesa +254 722 704 998.
Memorial Service to be announced later.
Rest in Peace Taabu, forever in our hearts
In Loving Memory 10 Years On
Fondly remembered and deeply missed by
your family and friends.
Forever in our hearts
Colourful top diplomat
Casually dressed and on his head a mat of grey hair, the aging Dr Munyua Waiyaki looks a pale shadow of the high flying diplomat who traversed the world in the 1970s, trying to persuade world leaders to end apartheid in South Africa and the remnants of colonialism in Africa.
A gentleman who could lose his cool, Waiyaki was so passionate about freedom from the Boers’ grip that he once candidly told off a colleague and friend, Attorney-General Charles Njonjo, when the latter suggested that Kenya normalise relations with apartheid South Africa. “Over my dead body”, he declared.
In the 1970s, Waiyaki was called the Kissinger of Africa because, as Kenya’s Foreign Minister, he armtwisted US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger into authorising sale of F5 fighter jets to Kenya.
Waiyaki was born in 1926 at Kiawariua (“place of the hot sun”) at Muthiga, Kikuyu, to Tirus Waiyaki and Elizabeth Wairimu. His mother is more than 120 years old. The father, the first African police chief inspector, was stationed at Nairobi’s Central Police Station and among Muslims at Pumwani, near the mosque.
“Over the holidays, my brother Kimani and I would be shipped from our rural home to the city where my father would tutor us especially in English. I was, therefore, a child of two worlds — I was born among, went to school with and was surrounded at home by Christians of the Church of Scotland Mission, but in the city most of my playmates were Muslim youth,” he said.
His grandfather was a priest, with whom Waiyaki stayed occasionally. He recalls that the house at Pumwani, before his father built his own (Pumwani 490) near Solidarity Building, had an indoor pit latrine for Muslims. He says: “I do not know how this was managed, but there was no bad smell.” Apart from his Muslim friends, Waiyaki mingled with children from Murang’a and Nyeri whose parents worked and lived in Nairobi. “At that time, there were no primary schools for Africans in the city and most fathers brought their children to the city to tutor them,” he says.
Of his friends from Pangani and Pumwani, Waiyaki remembers one Mutisya, a hustler, who decades later campaigned for Waiyaki when he contested the Mathare (now Kasarani) parliamentary seat. One other thing Waiyaki remembers was how soldiers from the Gold Coast (Ghana) who had been recruited by the British to fight in the Second World War would pick up fights with locals, especially over women. “As with soldiers everywhere, especially in times of war, the Ghanaians, whose military camp was where the Central Bank of Kenya stands today, were aggressive and occasionally engaged our people in fights,” he remembers.
At Alliance High School, where Waiyaki went in 1942, his classmates included Paul Ngei, Jean-Marie Seroney, Mbiti Mate and Kyale Mwendwa. Unlike many former Alliance students of his generation, he does not remember school principal and mathematician Carey Francis with much favour. He recalls a “huge, bad tempered bachelor”, who, when angry, menacingly stamped his feet, took repeated long strides and puffed his cheeks.
Apparently Waiyaki was not one of Carey Francis’ favourites and, at the end of the first term, the teacher told him to his face that he would never master algebra. Luckily for Waiyaki, someone else, J. M. Ojal, another teacher of mathematics, took Waiyaki’s side. “Ojal gave me extra classes in his house in the evenings five days a week until I became as good as anybody else in algebra,” he says. According to Waiyaki, the only boy who could outwit the principal was Ngei. Even without authority, Ngei would take the principal’s bicycle and ride from the office to the principal’s house undetected.
Discipline was taken so seriously at Alliance that, Waiyaki recalls how students were literally hanged on window frames for one hour. “I will, however, always remember the punishment I one day got from my botany teacher, James Stephen Smith. We had been asked to put a plant stem in the microscope, but I instead put a strand of my hair in it. Smith slapped me so hard that I saw stars. I can never forget that slap,” he recalls.
After Alliance, Waiyaki spent a year of high school at Adams College, Natal, South Africa, and then joined Fort Hare University. He met a Kenyan, Jonah Kinuthia, who worked in the laboratory at the McCord Zulu Hospital and through him got to do elementary clinical work at the hospital for a year.
At Fort Hare, where he read physics, chemistry and botany for three years, he met Njoroge Mungai, who was studying physiology, Kyale Mwendwa, Mbiti Mati and the later PCEA Moderator, the Rt Rev Chrispus Kiongo, among others. “We met the first crop of African professors who included Z. K. Mathews and Mukwena from Botswana,” Waiyaki recalls.
To go to South Africa in 1946, Waiyaki had sailed in an Indian ship, the SSS Kalagola, through Beira and Lorenzo Marques (Maputo) to Durban. When he returned in 1951, he was met at the Port of Mombasa by his retired father, a senior policeman in uniform and ululating women, among them Nguvu Mombasa, whose real name was Wanjiru from Nyeri. Waiyaki explains the importance of his return: “She was a Mau Mau leader at the Coast and her ululation meant that the Mau Mau were welcoming one of their own, while the police officer who had saluted me and in whose house my father and I stayed for two days before travelling to Nairobi was a Mau Mau mole in the force.”
In April, 1951, in defiance of the colonial government, which refused to clear him, Waiyaki and others, including Dr Jason Likimani, renowned lawyer Sammy Waruhiu, two Asian boys from Mombasa and a “brilliant” mathematician Minjo from Luhyaland, boarded a ship for Britain. “For 28 days, we travelled through the Indian Ocean and the Suez Canal to the Mediterranean, then through Gibraltar to the English Channel and finally landed at the Albert Docks in the east side of London,” Waiyaki remembers.
In Britain, it was a struggle for Waiyaki. The Director of Colonial Scholars had denied him a place at universities, insisting that instead of going to Britain, he should have taken a course at Makerere. If he had gone to Makerere, he would have graduated as an African assistant medical officer instead of a full medical doctor. That was why he travelled to Britain without the blessings of the colonial government.
In London, Waiyaki met Mungai, who had gone there before him. Mungai, an older man from Ndeiya in Kikuyu, worked with the Ministry of Education. Later Njonjo tried to help Waiyaki get a placed in British universities. Njonjo was a friend of the leader of Ghanaian students and the two conspired to put me on the Ghanaian list of students so that I could be admitted. But the Director of Colonial Scholars found out.
Waiyaki spent a year seeking admission to a university, and most of the time was at the “affordable, yet classy”, East African Students Club at the Marble Arch. He lived in nearby apartments where at one time he stayed with Achieng’ Oneko who was on Kanu business in London with Mbiyu Koinange.
One day, he travelled overnight to St Andrew’s University in Scotland and begged the Dean of Students, whose daughter was a doctor in Northern Rhodesia (Zambia), to admit him. He explained his association with and influence by the Scottish missionaries through education and religion and begged him to spare a place if one of the students did not show up. He had gone to the college two weeks before it opened.
Two days after Waiyaki’s trip to Scotland, Njonjo sought him out and told him the colonial director, a Mr Anderson, was looking for him. When Waiyaki met Anderson, he was told of his admission to St Andrew’s Medical School. His joy knew no bounds: “That was in 1952 and even before I set foot on he campus, I felt that I was now a medical doctor.” He graduated in general surgery, neuro-surgery and psychiatry in 1957, and was interned for a year.
In 1958, he returned to Kenya, leaving his brother Kimani and Njonjo in London. In Kenya, the Director of Medial Services offered him a job at the Murang’a District Hospital. He declined the offer because he did not like the house he was given. He later took up a surgeon’s job at the Machakos District Hospital, where, apart from performing up to seven surgeries a day, he doubled up as a psychiatrist.
Waiyaki left government employment a year later and started a clinic at the Rajab Manzil Building on Victoria (now Tom Mboya) Street. He later moved to the more convenient Mfangano Street, where “there was an underground car park and I could exchange patients with another doctor in the same building”.
Waiyaki, who became politically active in 1959 through Tom Mboya’s People’s Conventional Party (PCP), abandoned competitive politics in 1983, when Andrew Ngumba beat him for the Mathare parliamentary seat. He then taught diplomacy at a university in the US, worked for the World Population Council, engaged in underground politics during Kanu’s iron-grip and practised medicine for a while. But now, in his twilight years, he has become a real estate developer, farmer and owner of a tertiary institution. “We have put up villas on my Kathini farm, known as Rosslyn Heights Estate. On another part of the farm, we are building other houses in an estate that will bear the name Rosslyn Gardens,” Waiyaki said in a recent interview at his home near Gachie in Kiambu.
When the Waiyaki family left their ancestral home in Muthiga to settle at Kathini, most of the 250-acre farm was under coffee. But when the coffee prices plummeted, the bushes were uprooted and the land was sub-divided and most of it sold. What is left now comprises the two classy residential estates, the family home and farm.
Waiyaki was Kenya’s unequivocal voice in the 1970s on the local and international scenes. He clearly articulated the country’s position, especially on two contentious international issues — apartheid and colonialism. Credited with bringing pride and recognition to the Foreign Ministry, Waiyaki valiantly fought the apartheid regime and even publicly disagreed with Njonjo, his friend and former college-mate.
Career diplomat Ochieng Adala recalls: “When Njonjo made overtures to the apartheid regime, Dr Waiyaki was outside the country. But on arrival, he clearly articulated the non-engagement policy of Kenya and the OAU on apartheid South Africa, asserting that this could only happen ‘over my dead body’.”
Waiyaki adds: “Njonjo believed we could talk with the Boers without jeopardising the position of Nelson Mandela and the ANC. But I reminded him how we (as students in South Africa) had suffered under the apartheid rule. Despite our friendship, I categorically refused to entertain the notion of normalising relations with South Africa and even refused to talk to Roelof (“Pik”) Botha (South Africa’s Foreign Minister at the time). I told him to instead talk to Mandela and (Steve) Biko.”
Waiyaki and Njonjo had been students at Fort Hare in South Africa, had carried the “pass” that identified black people in that era and could not forget how the Boers persecuted Africans. “They used to chase us like dogs and even let their fierce dogs loose on us. In my college days, I met a man whom I remember only as Khumalo. I can never forget his eyes when he asked me not to forget South Africa when I went back home,” he remembers
The only pleasant encounter with a Boer that Waiyaki recalls was when he and Mungai, a classmate in medicine, went to a Boer farm in search of a rabbit to dissect. He explains: “We wanted to buy the rabbit, but we approached the farm owner in fear as we were afraid he would let his dogs loose on us even before we told him what we wanted. There was no incident, Mungai was given drinking water when he asked for it and the farmer gave us a rabbit each for free! That was the only good Boer I ever met.”
In 2007, Bethuel Kiplagat, a former diplomat and now the chairman of the Truth, Justice and Reconciliation Commission, described Waiyaki as “a committed Pan-African, a great and outstanding Foreign Minister and a pleasant individual”.
“He provided a no-nonsense leadership, was courageous and spoke his mind. He was brilliant, wise and did not throw his weight around,” says Kiplagat.
Adala says it was difficult, for example, to brief Mungai who had occupied the same office before, “but it was so easy to brief Waiyaki and where he allowed you five minutes, you ended up spending half an hour with him.”
Adala, who was then the head of the African Division in the ministry, travelled often to international and continental meetings with Waiyaki and recalls that his stature overcame the perception that Kenya was a “conservative” country compared to the likes of Tanzania. To Adala, the only other person who could be compared with Waiyaki was Murumbi, who served as the first Foreign Minister for barely a year.
Says Adala: “Ouko was good, but he was a technocrat who would be sent to meetings by the President with a specific brief. He was not a politician. Waiyaki, like Murumbi before him, was a man of his own, a man who developed ideas and initiatives. He was able to handle situations that arose outside the prepared text and make impromptu decisions.”
Adala recalls an instance at the height of post-independence chaos in Angola when Africa was divided vis-a-vis two warring parties — Jonas Savimbi’s Unita and Agostinho Neto’s MPLA. “At a Council of Ministers meeting in Addis Ababa, there was a proposal that the OAU support one of the movements. But Dr Waiyaki opposed the proposal, saying Kenya would support one party only if it would unite Angola, which was not the case at that time,” Adala remembers. Kenya had in vain held two reconciliation meetings in Mombasa and Nakuru for the warring parties.
Waiyaki was also keen on South-South cooperation and a believer in the Non-Aligned Movement, but “not much of a friend of the West”. US voluble Secretary of State Henry Kissinger liked to talk to Waiyaki apparently to understand his strong feelings against apartheid South Africa.
“There was this time Mzee (Jomo Kenyatta) had sent me to America to try to persuade the government to sell us F5 jet fighters and an aircraft simulator (the arms were apparently to be used to deter Ugandan dictator Idi Amin, who was claiming huge chunks of Kenyan territory and had seized Kenyan assets in Uganda, from attacking Kenya), but the US government was not giving me much attention,” recalls Waiyaki.
His alternative was to lobby senators to whom he took a “scary” message from President Kenyatta: “Kenyatta had told me to tell them that if they did not give us the F5 fighter jets, we could seek military assistance from the Communist bloc,” Waiyaki says. This was during the Cold War.
Waiyaki told Kissinger the same thing when they met. The Secretary of State wondered: “You would change your allegiance just like that?”
“Yes, that is what Mzee told me,” Waiyaki replied.
Kissinger, who had earlier received a Turkana spear from Kenyatta as a gift, eventually persuaded his government to sell the jets to Kenya and to train those who would man them. He, however, told Waiyaki that the simulator would be too expensive. Waiyaki adds: “I am not sure whether the Kenya Air Force ever got to buy an aircraft simulator.”
The minister was also at the forefront in the fight against the Law of the Sea that would have given developed countries the right to mine 200 miles offshore. As one writer recently put it, Waiyaki brought to the fore “effective, colourful and moral Kenyan diplomacy”.
Though he rebelled against Kenyatta’s inner circle after the fallout between the President and Odinga, Waiyaki remained loyal to Kenyatta, who later made him Foreign Minister. In his own words: “I liked Mzee too much”. He first met Kenyatta at the Green Hotel Restaurant on Latema Road, Nairobi, in 1951 after Waiyaki’s graduation in South Africa. His father took him to the restaurant for lunch and they found Kenyatta and Mbiyu Koinange at one of the cubicles. Waiyaki suspects his father knew Kenyatta would be there and purposely took him there to meet him.
“I knew Mbiyu as he was my father’s age-mate. I was introduced to Kenyatta, a man who was interested in young educated men as the struggle for independence intensified,” Waiyaki says. His attachment to Kenyatta went back to the old man’s detention and the colonial government started propaganda that the old man was not medically fit to become the Kenya’s leader. “When Dr Mungai, Dr John Nesbitt, Dr Jason Likimani and myself went to see Mzee in Maralal to make nonsense of the contention by the Mzungu that he was not fit, we found a jolly, intelligent and fantastic man who not only was fit medically but had a very sharp brain,” Waiyaki recalls.
Before Kenyatta was released from detention in 1961, young leaders in Kanu identified the party as the vehicle he would use to seek political leadership. But because he could not be elected in absentia, they asked James Gichuru to take up the party’s presidency and hold it for Kenyatta. “I remember Dr Mungai and I driving in my old Citroen car in heavy rain on muddy roads to Gichuru’s restriction house in Githiga to urge him to take up the presidency of the party on condition that he would vacate it for Mzee once he was released,” he explains.
When Kenyatta became Prime Minister in 1963, Waiyaki had been elected MP for North-Eastern Nairobi (Kasarani) and he became the Parliamentary Secretary (Assistant Minister) in the PM’s office in charge of Internal Security and Defence. He spent a lot of time with Kenyatta discussing the answers he (Waiyaki) would give on the PM’s behalf in the House of Representatives.
“These were the days of the Shifta War and Mzee keenly followed what was going on. Most of the time, he asked me to brief him on what I would tell the House. I was also handling the Mau Mau issue to ensure that freedom fighters left the forest now that we were independent, an assignment Mzee followed keenly,” he says. He also recalls visiting Kenyatta’s Gatundu home, where they would sit on the grass and Kenyatta would tell stories about nature and history even as they briefed him about happenings across the country.
At independence, in 1963, Waiyaki was elected MP for Nairobi North-East on a Kanu ticket. With Kenyatta as Prime Minister, Waiyaki, who was an in-law, “as Mama Ngina is related to my mum”, was elevated to the position of Assistant Minister. He was re-elected in 1969, 1974 and 1979. In 1974, the constituency was renamed Mathare and in 1997 Kasarani.
Waiyaki visited Kenyatta’s home in Gatundu regularly. “I got on very well with Mzee and had free access to his home. When I became Foreign Minister, he allowed me to be accompanied by my wife on official duties outside the country,” a grateful Waiyaki says.
But earlier, he had fallen out briefly with the President and left his government when “Mboya put a wedge between Kenyatta and Odinga” in 1966. Waiyaki was eventually rehabilitated as a member of the Parliamentary Remuneration Committee, “to ensure that MPs were eating good food”. This became a butt of jokes by his friends. Njonjo would tease him: “Muitu [thug, nickname the two had used during their days in South Africa], niwakiona niwaheo wira wa biu” (hey man, you have been given the real job). “A few months later Charlie [Njonjo] told me that Kenyatta wanted Fred Mati and myself to go to State House immediately. I asked him what it was all about, but he told me he did not know and not to worry,” he says.
The two apprehensively went to State House and sat in an outer office where they were joined by Vice-President Moi. When Kenyatta came in he asked Moi: “Have they signed?” The two were given forms to sign and become Speaker (Mati) and Deputy Speaker (Waiyaki) of the National Assembly. Parliament rubber-stamped the appointments.
As Deputy Speaker, Waiyaki chaired the parliamentary session when Martin Shikuku (Butere) declared that Kanu was dead and Jean Seroney (Tinderet), the Speaker pro tem, agreed, and when Shikuku talked of planting maize on Kenyatta’s grave, “I was not amused and I called on Shikuku to maintain order in the House. Furiously, Koinange left the chamber and when Shikuku and Seroney left the House, it was straight to detention,” Waiyaki explains about those tumultuous political times in the 1970s. Waiyaki remembers Kenyatta as a no-nonsense President and one who would “never rethink his decisions though he never made decisions unless he had been properly briefed and was certain they were right.
When Kenyatta died, Waiyaki was the Foreign Minister and was in Mombasa with Kenyan diplomats during their annual retreat. He was among the first people to see Kenyatta’s body. Waiyaki was summoned by Kenyatta’s son, Peter Muigai, from the comfort of his Nyali Beach Hotel bed at 3am to State House Mombasa to confirm the death.
Kenyatta’s successor Daniel Moi moved Waiyaki from the Foreign docket to a “lesser” ministry, signalling the beginning of the end of the Mathare MP’s political career.
Waiyaki lost his wife a few years ago after a devastating battle with cancer. “In 2003, my wife was diagnosed with cancer. She underwent surgery, and we were convinced that the disease had been controlled. But it spread to her kidney eight weeks later,” an agonised Waiyaki recalls.
Today, Waiyaki spends part of his day at construction sites, a mineral water bottling plant and looking after his dairy cows and sheep in his farm.
“I enjoy visits to the animal kingdom in a valley on the farm. It doubles up as part of my daily exercise routine as I walk downhill and up for about 500 metres,” he says. Waiyaki also owns the Global Institute College at Muthiga and has a lot of interest in the Presbyterian Church of East Africa (PCEA).
“Though I donated the plot on which the nearby Loresho PCEA Church is built, I am keen on my original Kihumo Church at Muthiga and that is where I attend most Sunday services,” Waiyaki says. He is a keen reader of medical journals and books that interpret the Bible. He also spends time at meetings and casual discussions with wazee (fellow old men) and visitors.
Sunrise: July 2013 Sunset: April 2017
It is with humility, submission and acceptance of the will of God in great sadness that we announce the death of our beloved baby Babra Kerubo Nyachwaya on Wednesday 19th April 2017 after a long battle with a cancerous brain tumour.
Beloved daughter of Mr Bonface Nyachwaya Amima and Elizabeth Mogere Nyarondia. Sister of Britney Kemunto and Brayden Sankara. A doting a grandchild of Juvenalis Obano Amima and Mary Jerono Amima, Samuel Nyarondia and Jemima Nyarondia. Loving niece of Fred Amima, Diana Amima, Innocentor Amima, Purity, Hellen, Lilian, Erick, Oigo and Isabella.
Family and friends are meeting daily at their home in Utawala Nairobi and Maosi Village in Bomabacho sub-location, Nyamira County. There will be a fundraising on Tuesday the 25th April 2017 at All Saints Cathedral Nairobi from 5pm and on Wednesday 26th April 2017 at Maosi village in Nyamira County to cater for funeral expenses and outstanding hospital bills.
The cortege leaves Umash Funeral Home at 6,30am on 27th April 2017 for a church service at Nairobi South SDA Church, thereafter the cortege will proceed to their rural home in Maosi village in Nyamira County. Burial will take on Friday the 28th April 2017.
It is with humble acceptance that we announce the passing on to glory of our dear Thomas Nyakango Abere. Son of the late Onchonga Abere & Teresia Moraa of Nyamare Village. Husband of the late Milkah Nyakango and Lucy Mokeira Nyakango. Father of Linda, Edwin, Perpetual, Celestine, Leonard and Arnold. Grandfather of Milkah. Brother of Samuel Morande, Marisera, the late Mary Bosibori, the late Andrew, Nyamoita, Serina, Boisabi and Nyakundi. Son-in-law of the late Mr Nyarangi & the late Mrs Nyaitondi and the late Mr. Omboga Masanya & the late Mrs. Catherine Omboga. Brother-in-law of Omenta, Esther, Osindi, Sibia, Rebecca,. Rhoda, Grace, Lazarus, the late Richard, late Julius, the late peter, Sabina,Mary and Jane among others. Cousin of the Otiso, the Maenya and the Arisa among others. Nephew of the late Kinanga Onserio. Uncle of Simeon Abere (USA), Fred Nyangwono, Alloys, Winnie Abere, Ben Mogaka, Bosire, Anne, Meja (USA) and Stanly Onyambu among others. Relatives and friends are meeting daily at Garden square from 5pm. The main Fundraising will be tomorrow Tuesday 25th from 5:00pm at professional centre.The cortege leaves Chiromo Mortuary on Thursday 27th. Burial will take place on Friday 28th at his Nyamare village in Nyamira County.
You have fought a good fight, you have finished the race and you have kept the Faith. Rest with the Angels Dad.
We regret to announce the death of Mohamed lqbal Mohamed Raffiq Abdulla Kanji of M. Raffiq & Company Limited, M Raffiq Investments Limited and Milestone Cars (K) Limited the family regretably announce his demise, in the Holy City of Karbala, Iraq on the 20th of April 2017.
The family would like to thank and convey our sincere appreciation to all friends, community members and well-wishers for their prayers and support throughout his life and at this difficult time.
The family humbly request any messages of condolence or letters of condolence be addressed to
Mohamed lqbal Mohamed Raffiq Abdulla Kanji Milestone Cars (K) Limited. P.O. Box 80543-80100, Mombasa, Kenya alternatively via e-mail to sales@milestone carsasv.com
May the Almighty Rest His Soul In Peace.Amen
It is with humble acceptance of God’s will that we announce the promotion to Glory of Mzee Samson Riechi Nyanga’u which occurred on 21st April 2017 in Nairobi. Son of the late Maari Nyangau the late Kemunto Nyangau and the late Teressa Kemuma of Rianloni Village Nyamira County. Husband of Catherine Mongina Riechi and Rebeccah Barongo Riechi. Brother of the late Ombwori, the late Miinda, the late Bosibosri, the late Nyabero, the late Nyaboke, jerusa Mititi, Marita Ogwora, Meshack Okebiro, the late Joseph Otaro and Temu Nyangau. Father of Hon. Justice Stephen Riechi, Monicah Makori, the late Tom Gwaro, Elkanah Riechi, the late Susan Riechi, Josephene Magori, the late Christopher Nyarori, Jemimah Kanisa, Elizabeth Kemunto, Reuben Miinda, Bilhah Nyaboke, Elijah Omara and Jonah Meroka. Father-in-law of Jane Riechi, Leah Gwaro, Naum Monayo, late Florence Nyarori, Grace Miinda, Lily Omara and Julian Meroka. Relatives and friends are Meeting daily at his rural homes of Riamoni and Mokomoni Village Nyamira County and Professional Centre Nairobi form 5.30 pm. Major fundraising will be held on Wednesday 26th April 2017 at Hotel 680. Funeral announcements will be communicated later.
One year after you went to rest with the Lord, we still miss that welcoming cup of tea you insisted on humbly serving each of us, your prayers and spiritual encouragement, your shy infectious laughter during happy times, your comforting “take it easy” during difficult times, and your wise words motivating each of us to improve ourselves and achieve more.The knowledge that you are enjoying the company of Mum, Hito and the Angels gives us comfort.
We express our sincere gratitude to all family and friends who stood by us during Babu’s illness and who have continued to pray for and comfort us in the last year.
Babu you are dearly missed by your great grandchildren, grandchildren, children, family and friends.The memory of the love we shared is an everlasting treasure to each one of us.
It is with humble acceptance of God’s will that we announce the passing of Chrisantus Ongeta Makori on 12th April 2017 after a 14 year illness. Son of the late Evaresto and Tekera Makori. Husband of Prisca Moraa. Father of the late Gerald, Harmon, the late Caroline, Henry, Stella, Anthony, Dennis, Benard and Kevin. Brother of Salome Mogaka, the late Hon. Andrew Omanga, Nyamokami Orogo, Cyrillus Machuki, Magatarina Arasa, Simeon Omboga, the late Onyinkwa, Cornelia , Tekera, Rosa, Gilbert Nyaanga, Consolata, Florence, the late Leo and the late Lasco, Father-in-law of Aisha, Ruth, Norah, Kate, Nancy. Nephew of Nyabera, Nyatichi, Mosigisi, Mariita, Orango and Neeri Angwenyi. Abuta,Ongubo, Osebe (all late). Cousin of Hon. Jimmy Angwenyi, Mathias, Nyakundi, Mobe, the late Ondieki, the late Akama, Ragira, Rev. Fr. Clement, the late Mariita, Onkunya, the late Piripo, Ongeta, British, and Joseph. Uncle of Richard, Ken, Charles, Nyabera and Nita Omanga, Sixtus, Adv. Makori Omboga, Tekla, Polycarp, Prof. Akama (VC Kisii University), Onyambu, Ogoti, Orogo, Brian, Luciah, Florence, Paulina, Prof. Arasa, Hon. Richard Arasa, Amwoma, Onyambu, Dan, Imelda, Anthony Akama. Cosmas, Richard Onkunya (USA) among others. Korerea of Mwinyi, Dr. Keburi, Ongoro, Mwiti, Nyakweba and Mwirigi. Grandfather of Gavin, Gerald, Felistas, Lola, Andrew, Onsango, Meltrisa, Natalie, Hesborn, Allen, Mathew. Semo of Morris, Nyambego,Nyakundi. In Law of Clare and Grace Omanga, the late Mogaka, late Orogo, late Arasa, the late Micah, Prisca and the late Dorcas Machuki. the late Rose, Boyani, Josephine, James and Joseph Oira, among others. Main Fundraising will be on Tuesday 25th April 2017 at Professional Centre Nairobi, from 5:30 pm. (Mpesa No. 0798 747 786 Anthony Ongeta). Cortege leaves Nyansiongo Mission Mortuary of Thursday 27th April 2017 for Mass and overnight stay at his home and Burial shall be at his Chebingombe/Esise Settlement scheme (Mabeno Riangombe Sub- Location) home Nyamira County on Friday 28th April 2017.
You are now in the hands of the Lord.You are very safe in his hands.
It is with humble acceptance of God’s will that we announce the promotion to glory of our beloved mum Celine Wera Abiud. Wife of Abiud Otieno of Sakwa Waraya Gobei, on April 18th 2017, after a short illness. Daughter of the late Michael Mali and Jerusa Akello of Asembo Nyagoko. Step-daughter of the late Joyce Moli, Lucia Moli and Dorcila Moli. Daughter-inlaw of late Yusuf Onguru and Trufena Onguru. Mother of James Langi Odhiambo of KRA, Joyce Andere, Janet Akinyi, Florence, Jane, Edward, Erick, Rosemary, Elvis and Elvin. Sister of Peter Moli, Mary Agutu, the late Margaret, Dorcas and Richard. Mother-in-law of Mary Awuor, Florence Atieno, Dougla Ochieng, Paul Abuor and Dickens. Sister-in-law of Philip Agutu, Zephenia Odhiambo, the late Sila Mayienga and Peter Odhiambo. Aunty of Paul, Philip, David, Salome, Seline, Shaadrack, Willis, Adede, Solomon, David, Michael, George, Betty, Wilfred, ason, Susan among others. Grandmother of Lucy, Barbra, Eugene, Jackline, Sally among others.
Friends and relatives will be meeting on Tuesday April 25th, 1948 – 2017 2017 at 5.30 pm at Vesba Restaurant 1st floor Development House, Moi Avenue for final fund raising. The cortege leaves JOOMRH on Friday April 28th, 2017 at 1.00 pm for a funeral service at St. Peter ACK Gobei Church at 2.30 pm. Burial will take place on April 29th, 2017 at their home in Gobei North Sakwa Bondo.
“…he who believes in me, though he die, yet shall be alive…” john 1 1:25
It is with humble acceptance of God’s will that we announce the passing on Richard Mutinda Kivindyo on 11/04/2017 at Shalom hospital after a short illness.
Husband of late Josephine Mbinya and Elizabeth Nduku (principal st Joseph’s Katheka secondary). Son of late Haron Kivindyo and Pauline Syombua. Father of Pauline, Mary, Mercy, Gladys (Laikipia university), Boniface (Nairobi technical), Shirleen and peace (St. Francis of Assisi Nguluni). Son-in-law of Mr and Mrs Pius Mati of Kyeleni. Nephew of Kavoi, Albunus, Mutulu and others.
Brother of Margaret Kakuvi. Family members and friends are meeting daily at his rural home (Mukalwa), Maria Green Tala and Jafrer hotel for funeral arrangements. There will be a. fundraising on Tuesday 25th April at Maria green hotel (Tala) starting from 6.00 pm.
The cortege leaves Kenyatta university funeral home on 26th April 2017 for Requiem mass at Holy Trinity and thereafter burial at his how Sengani Sub-location Matungulu Subcounty Machakos county.
In God’s handsyou rest in our hearts you remain forever.
Alexander Muthamia (Mwalimu) of Kibui-Mpuri, Ntima West, Imenti-North, Meru County, at the Nairobi West Hospital on Sunday the 16th of April 20 17 after a long battle with lung cancer.
Devoted husband of Rebecca Muthoni and loving father of Kenneth Mwenda, Nkirote & Koome, Martin & Purity and Godfrey Muthomi. Son of the late Alexander Magiri Muthamia and the late Alice Alexander of Kaing’inyo Village, Nthimbiri location, Meru County. Son in-law of the late M’mwongera and the late Zippora M’mwongera of Katheri-Central Imenti. Brother of Kirimi & Wanjiru, MCA Elizabeth & Mwiti, the late Dr. John Mugambi & Irene, Washington & Catherine, Sammy & Jackline, Dr. Solomon & Alice, Isaac & Mary, Charles & Consolata and Joyce Karim’. Brother in-law of late Kathurima, Kinanu, Riungu, Judy, Gikunda, Margaret & Julius among others. Doting grandfather of Nicole Makena, Michelle Nkatha & Morgan Gitonga, uncle and cousin of many.
Family and friends in Nairobi will be meeting at San Valencia restaurant-Anniversary towers on Wednesday 19th, Thursday 20th and Monday 24th April 2017 from 6 pm. Family and friends in Meru will be meeting daily at his Kibui-Mpuri home from Tuesday 18th April – and at Paramount Hotel Meru town on Wednesday 19th,Thursday 20th and Monday 24th April 2017 for funeral arrangements.
The burial will take place on Wednesday the 26th of April 20I7.The cortege will leave Montezuma Monalisa funeral home, Nairobi at 6am for the funeral service at St.Augustine Catholic Church, Kiamiriru, Meru at 11 am and thereafter burial at his home.
Son of Alex, in God’s hands you rest, in our hearts you live forever.Amen
It is with humble acceptance of God’s will that we announce the promotion to glory of Grace Kagwiria of Kupenda Africa following a tragic road accident in Uganda on 18th April 2017.
Daughter of the late M’Mungania M’Ikiara and Mrs Lydia M’Mungania of Mitarune Village, Mikumbune, Nkuene Location, Imenti South, Meru County.
Loving partner of Jason Cobbet Smith of Kupenda Africa. Mother of Faith Makena of Thika School of Medicine and Health Sciences and doting grandmother of Audrey Mesoni.
Sister of late John Kimathi, Charles Kirimi, Peter Muriungi (Ntaagu), Lucy Kithiira, Julia Gaceri, James Mwongera (Kata) and Patrick Muthomi. She was a niece, aunt and cousin to many.
Family and friends are meeting at San Valencia restaurant, Anniversary Towers and at her parents’ home in Mitarune village from 5,30pm for prayers and funeral arrangements.
The cortege leaves Kenyatta University Funeral Home on Friday 28th April 2017 at 6am for funeral mass at Mikumbune Catholic Church at 10am and thereafter burial at her parents’ home.
You were truly amazing Grace. Rest in peace till we meet again.
1910 – 18/4/2017
It is with humble acceptance of God’s will that we announce promotion to Glory of Esther Kagure Munjuga of Nairutia village. Wife of the late Charles Munjuga Wachiuri. Daughter of the late Irungu Kanyi and the late VVangechi Irungu. Sister of the late Samuel Kanyi lrungu, Mrs Serah Warukira Ihiga & Mrs. Grace Mukami Mwangi. Mother of Hellen Wanjiru and Johana Kabia, the late Esther Njugu and James Karugu, the late Margaret Wairimu, JustusVVachiuri, Lucy Njugu and the late Richard Ndiritu, Lydia Wamahiga, John Wachiuri and Alice and Margaret, Benard Wambugu and Mary, Edward Wambugu (Formerly of NIS) and Hellen (Consolata Hospital Mathari), Josphine Wangui and the late John Ndiritu, Beatrice Wangechi and Wambugu Ndegwa, Benard Kinyua and Nduta, Lydiah Njeri and the late Joseph Kara*, Gerald Ndoho and Margaret Warnbui and Jane Warukira. She is grandmother of Muthoni’s, Njoki’s Wanjiku’s and Wangari’s. Great grandmother of many.
Friends and relatives are meeting daily at her Nairutia home and Holy Family Basilica Nairobi (Bakita Hall) on Monday 24th April and TueSday 25th April at 5.30 P.m. for prayers and funeral arrangements.
The cortege leaves Nyeri Funeral Home Outspan Hospital for her Nairutia Home on Thursday 27th April 2017 at 8.00 a.m. and thereafter funeral service at 11.00 A.m. and thereafter she will be laid to rest at the same place.
It is with deep sorrow and humble acceptance of God’s will that we announce the demise of Stanley Maren Swakei which occurred on 18/04/2017 after a long battle with cancer. Son of Rebecca Swakei. Loving husband of Martha Auma,. Father of Abigail Naipanoi. Brother of Elizabeth Ngare, Pauline Naserian, the late Catherine Resiato and Beatrice Soila. Brother-in-law of Samuel Ngare, Erick Davies, Leonard Omondi, Bernard Ochieng Agai, Millicent Akoth, Isdorah Atieno, Gorety Achieng among others. Nephew of Simon Swakei, Mike Swakei, Josephine, Sitoi, Joan Kiu, Alice Munke, Zipporah Parmuala, Peris , Joyce Swakei, Stanley Tiampati among others. Uncle to Lucy Mashon, Shycco Ngare, Faith Ngare, Everlyne Nashilu, Rose Ngare, Beatrice Saila, Rachael Ngare and Joan Resiato. Grandfather to Kayleen. Cousin to Margaret Kashu (Nku), Grace, Janet, jacksonjonah, James (Parmuala’s), Agnes, Juliana, Sanau & Naimutie (Sitoi’s), Sanankah, Nkini, Silvia ,Santei,Vivian, Diana, Sadera Swakei,Beaty Senteu,Peter Kiu , Mike Santeto, Senei Nalang’u, Simaton Munke among others. Relatives and friends are meeting for funeral arrangements at Chambai Hotel in Narok and at Simmers Restaurant in Nairobi. Funeral service and burial will be held on Tuesday 25th April, 2017 at Napaasha near Duka moja -Narok Bomet Highway.
Rest in Peace, Maren Gone, yet Not Forgotten,Although We Are Apart,Your Memory Lives Within Us. Forever,
It is with humble acceptance that we announce the passing on to glory of our dear Levi Gachanja jibsam on the 16th Apr 2017.
Husband of Rose Njoki Gachanja. Son of late jibsam Mwaura Nyugi and late Rhoda Wanpru Mwaura. Father of Edwin Mwaura, Hezekiah Murimi and Moffat Mwangi. Brother of Moffat Mwangi, Mercy Gathiongo, Mary Wanjiku, Jane Mwaura, Leah Toro, Martin Maina. and Ben Mwaura.
Friends and family are meeting at norwichtowers and at his home in Ongata Rongai.as from thuraday 20th April 2017, Spm,
Burial will take place at the Langata Cemetary on 25th Apr 2017 from 11.00am.
It is with great sadness that we announce the passing away of Mr. Gurdev Singh Bhamra of Sterling Enterprises Ltd, Kisumu on 19th April 2017.
Husband of the late Parminder Kaur Bhamra, father of Jaspal Singh Bhamra, late Jasminder Singh Bhamra, Lado Sembi and Pavleen Bhachu. Brother of the late Amrit Kaur Sagoo,Avtaar Singh Bhamra, Poly Kalsey, Chindo Gabri and Dindi Arri.
The cortege leaves the Bhamra Residence on 22nd April 2017 at 2:00pm for the Guru Nanak Darbaar, Kisumu and proceeds thereafter to the Hindu Shamshan Bhumi, Kisumu.
May Wahe Guru ji rest our Gurdev’s Soul in Eternal Peace
It is with deep sorrow and humble acceptance of God’s will that we announce the death of Dr Ricky Gatumu Ireri of KALRO Embu (Formerly of KARLO Muguga) after a short illness.
Son of the late Canon Bedan Ireri and Elizabeth Njura Ireri. Husband of Dr. Hilda Ireri. Father of Remmy Gatumu and Mureithi Ireri Gatumu.
Brother of Mukami lreri, the late Gitari Ireri, Mike Njeru lreri, the late Nancy Anne Nthiga, Grace Wanjiru Ndugu, James Namu Ireri, and Liz Njura Njeru.
Brother-in-law of Margret Njeru, Dr.Geoffrey Nthiga, Julius Gikonyo Ndugu, Pamela Muthoni Namu, Njeru, Monidora O’hara, the late Margret Rose (Mara, Celestine O’hara, Joseph O’hara and Zaituni O’hara.
Family and friends are meeting daily from 3.00pm at his home Matiru village Manyatta-Embu County for prayers and burial arrangements.
The funeral procession will leave Gakwegori funeral home at 10.00am on Tuesday 25th April 2017 for funeral service at the Gravesite in Matiru village, Manyatta-Embu County. 1st Thessalonians 5:18 “In everything give thanks: for this is the will of God in Jesus Christ.”
We regret to announce the sudden death of Boniface Willy Muraya Nyaga of GSU Gilgil. Which occurred on 14th April 2017 through a road accident. Son of Augustine Nyaga and Joyce Wairimu. Brother of Anne Wangechi. Husband of Roselyn Wairimu. Father of Leakey Jeremy Muhoro and Francis Ndegwa. Son-in-law of Mr & Mrs. Joseph Muhoro. Uncle of Franklin Nyaga and others. Brother-in-law of Peter Nyaga, Jane, Loise and Susan.
The body is at Mukurweini District Hospital Mortuary. Daily prayers and burial preparation are being held at Magomano Hotel from bpm – 8pm and at his home in Mukurweini.
The burial will take place at his home in Mukurweini Nyeri County on Tuesday 25th April 2017.The requem Mass will be held at Gikondi Catholic Church at 12 noon there after burial at their home, Nyuthe Village, Mukurweini Nyeri County.
“We love you but God loves you more. May his soul rest in eternal peace till we meet again”.
20/04/1957 – 18/04/2017
It is with deep sorrow and humble acceptance of God’s will that we announce the death of Dr Ricky Gatumu Ireri of KALRO Embu (formerly of KALRO Muguga) after a short illness.
Son of the late Canon Bedan Ireri and Elizabeth Njura Ireri. Husband of Dr Hilda Ireri. Father of Remmy Gatumu and Mureithi Ireri Gatumu.
Brother of Mukami Ireri, the late Gitari Ireri, Mike Njeru Ireri, the late Nancy Anne Nthiga, Grace Wanjiru Ndugu, James Namu Ireri and Liz Njura Njeru, Brother in law of Margaret Njeru, Dr Geoffrey Nthiga, Julius Gikonyo Ndugu, Pamela Muthoni Namu, Njeru, Monidora O’hara, the late Margaret Rose O’hara, Celestine O’hara, Joseph O’hara and Zaituni O’hara.
The funeral procession will leave Gakwegori funeral home at 10am on Tuesday 25th April 2017 for funeral service at Graveside in Matiru Village, Manyatta-Embu County.
For more information kindly contact: 0729-223091
In everything give thanks: for this is the will of God in Jesus Christ
1st Thessalonians 5:18
It is with great humility and acceptance of God’s will that we announce the passing of Grace Wanjiku Mbugua which occurred on Ilth April 2017.
Daughter to the late Samuel Mbugua Njoroge and the late Edith Wairimu Mbugua. She was sister to the late Hannah Wambui Njehu Of Githunguri, Douglas Giathi of Waki Bookshop Kitale, Stephen Ngugi, James Ndung’u, David Njoroge of USA, the late Serah Wangari and Hannah Merl.
Grace was loving mother to Mary Mukuhi Njaramba of Kitale, the late Samuel Mbugua and Faith Wairimu Steve of Nakuru. Beloved grandmother to Mbugua jack, Shuni,Wambui, Njoroge, Giathi, Kariuki, Ngugi, Mumbura, MbuguaWairimu and Kyle.Aunty to the many Wairimus, Mbuguas, Njehu,Wanjiku, and many more.
Family and friends are meeting daily at her parents’ home in Gataka and Upcountry Dairy and Hotel in Limuru town for prayers and burial arrangements. The cortege leaves Tigoni Hospital Mortuary Limuru on Saturday 22nd April 2017 at 9.00am for funeral service and burial at her home in Gataka Village, Githiga Location Githunguri Subcounty, Kiambu County.
“………….the Lord gave and the Lord has taken away. Glory be to God
It is with humble acceptance of God’s will, that we announce the promotion to glory of Martha Wambui Gatheru. Which occurred on 4/4/17 at Boston USA after a short illness.
Wife of the late Samuel Gatheru Njihia. Daughter of the late Kamau Maigua & Mariamu Wahu. Beloved Mother of MaryWanjiru Karanja, he late Njihia Gatheru, Kamau Gatheru Landcruiser Grogon), Ndiithi Gatheru USA, ne Gatheru USA, the late Mwaura Gatheru, aniel Gatheru & Kiarie Gatheru. Sister of ahab Wanjiku Kamau, Moses Mwaura Kamau Paul Mwaura Kamau. Family & friends are meeting daily at his home in Martha Naivasha Kirima Gituuro.
The cortege leaves Lee Funeral Home at 8pm Saturday 22nd April 2017, thererafter mass & burial at his home Naivasha Kirima Gituuro
“You fought a good fight; you finished the race and kept the faith” 2nd Timothy 4:7
It is with great sadness that we regret to announce the passing on of Isaiah Kiptum Chebet of Department of LLL, Egerton University, Njoro, after a long illness bravely borne. Son of the late Mr.& Mrs. Joseph Chebet of Kapchepkoiwo Village, Kabartonjo Ward, Baringo County. Beloved husband of Margaret Kobilo Chebet of Kaptumin Primary School. Father of Vivian, Peter, Cornelius, Janet, Ruth (RVIST), Grace and Stella (Kapropita Girls).
Father in law of Josphat and Grandfather of Liam. Brother of the late David, Enock (Society-ElRavine), the late Antony, Richard and Emmy Limo. Son-in-law of Mr. and Mrs. Kangor of Boin, Kaptere Village. Brother-in-law of Isaiah, Dorcas,Mark, Dina, late Jacob, Silvia and Cecilia.
Friends and relatives are meeting daily from 5.00 pm at his home in London Estate Nakuru and Kapchepkoiwo Village.
There will be a fundraising to defray medical and funeral expenses to be held on 23/04/2017 at Kapchepkoiwo, 25/04/2017 at Kabarnet, Eldoret and Nairobi.The final fundraising will be held on Wednesday 26/4/2017 at Bontana Hotel Nakuru. For M-Pesa Contributions please send to Daniel Chebet 0701484896.
Funeral will take place at his home in Kapchepkoiwo Village Baringo County on Saturday 29th April 2017.
“I fought a good fight, I have finished the race and I have kept the faith (2 Timothy 4:7).”
It is with the humble acceptance of God”s will that we announce the passing on to glory of Mzee Clement Akeye after a long illness bravely borne. He hailed from Matera Village. Mur Malanga Sub Location, South Alego, Siaya County. Son of the late Andrew Akeye and Mama Rusalia Adera Akeye. Beloved husband of Leonida Amolo Akeye (daughter of Japuonj Hosea Pala Agik) of Seme, Kombewa. Loving Father of Douglas Odhiambo, the late Byron Georgiadis, the late Dr Chris Owuor, Peter Ochieng, the late Onyango, the late James Pala, Andrew Akee Akeye, Agnes Akelo Otieno, Nicholas Kombo and Raymond Adera Onyango. Brother of the late Felgona Alice Owiti. Son in law of the late Jaduong Hosea Pala and Mama Agnes Bolo Pala of Diemo Village, Seme Kombewa. Brother in law of the late David Owiti Onginjo (Gem, Ogero), Patricia Oleo, the late Francis Otieno Pala, the late Grace Oleche, Mary Odhiambo, the late Phoebe Obaso, Prof Achola Pala, the late Orlando Pala and Captain Taa Pala. Father-in-law of the late Hezbon Otieno Oyoo (Kano, Kobura), Bettina Odhiambo, Emma Ochieng, Muthoni Thuo and Sharlene Onyango (Colorado, Denver). Doting grandfather of Owuor Odhiambo Pala, Dan Ochieng, Sinani Akee Akeye, Adera Nyambura Akeye, Tekidi Pala Akeye, Yvette Akinyi Otieno and Amolo Tula. Loving Uncle of Aggrey Owiti, Archibald Owiti, Christine Sika, Liz Odera (USA), Milton Obote (USA),Arwindah Oleche, Oyunga Pala,Victor Onyango, Odhiambo Okeyo (USA), Okumu Orlando, Francis Otieno amongst others. Relatives and friends are meeting daily for funeral arrangements at his home in Alego, Mur Malanga. There will be a fundraising at All Saints Cathedral Main Hall on Tuesday, 25 April 2017 at 0500pm and at. Mur Malanga,Alego Home on Wednesday 26 April 2017. The cortege leaves Star Hospital Mortuary, Kisumu on Friday 28 April 2017 at 1100am, thereafter a church service at Mur Malanga,Alego. Burial Service will be held on Saturday 29 April 2017 at his rural -home in Matera Village, Mur Malanga Sub Location, South Alego, Siaya County.
Dad, your love is a memory that will live with us forever. Rest In Peace.
It is with humble acceptance of God’s will that
we announce the death of Rtd. Rev. Philip George
Moses Ngigi. Husband of Mary Murugi Moses.
Brother of the late Esther Wangari, the late Samuel
Njoroge, the late Emily Mukami and Ruth Wambui.
Father of Henry Wanyoike, Zipporah Wangui Maina,
Jane Wanjiru Macharia, Onesmus Wanyoike Ngigi,
the late Esther Wangari, Esther Njeri Nsubuga and
Emmah Mukami.
He hails from Kirundu village, Kaharo Sub-Location,
Nginda Location, Maragua in Murang’a County.
Relatives and friends are meeting at his Kirundu
home.
The cortege leaves Murang’a County Mortuary
on Tuesday 25th April, 2017 at 9:30a.m for funeral
service at A.C.K Kaharo Church. Burial will follow
thereafter at his Kirundu home.
in God’s hands you rest, in our hearts you remain forever.
It is with humble acceptance of God’s will that we announce promotion to Glory of Samson Anami Shikondi a retired chief Shinyalu Division and retired pastor Solyo Friends Church.This occurred on 12th April 2017.
Loving husband of the late Sabet Anami. Beloved father of David Anami, the late Rebecca, Dina, Ruth, Salamu, Fridah, late Risper, Museti, Gethia, the late Shabuka, late Joshua, Jane and Shitemi. Grandfather of 96 and great grandfather of 50, great great grandfather of 7. Grandfather of Antony, Patrick, Festus, Wilson, Agrippina, Fanuel, Shiloya, Angolia, Fredrick, Judith, Sammy, Dominic, Caleb, Mukatia, Anami among others.
The cortege leaves Kakamega Funeral Home on 22nd April 2017. There after funeral service at Solyo Friends church .Burial at his home, Shinyalu Division, Imambo village on 24th April 2017.
You have fought a good fight and you have finished the race and have kept the faith. 2 Timothy 4:7 Rest in peace.
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