Tom Mboya, mwanasiasa maarufu kuuawa nchini Kenya

Tom Mboya, mwanasiasa maarufu kuuawa nchini Kenya

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Tom Mboya​

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Tom Mboya aliuawa tarehe July 5 1969

Mimi nilikuwa darasa la sita hapa Dar es salaam na siku hiyo kupitia vyombo vya habari, tukapata habari za kusikitisha Afrika Mashariki kuwa, Thomas Joseph Odhiambo Mboya, aliyejulikana zaidi kama Tom Mboya ameuwawa mjini Nairobi.

Wazazi wetu walihuzunika sana tena sana, sisi tukikaa miaka hiyo nyumba za serikali ambazo karibu yetu walikuwepo wafanyakazi wengi wa East African Community, Harbours na East African Railways.

Hakika ilikuwa siku ya masikitiko makubwa tarehe July, 5, 1969 .

Tom Mboya alikuwa bado kijana akiwa na umri wa miaka 39, lakini alikuwa mmoja wa waanzilishi wa Taifa la Kenya, pamoja na Mzee Jomo Kenyatta na Jaramogi Oginga Odinga, kama Waziri wa Sheria. Kwa umaarufu wake ,k ina Moi au hata Kibaki, wao walikuwa hawajulikani kabisa.

Alikuwa Waziri katika serikali ya Kenyatta. Siku ya kuuwawa, Tom Mboya alikuwa ametoka kununua dawa toka duka la Mkemia, (Chhani's Pharmacy) mjini Nairobi. Na wa mbalialikuwa amepaki gari yake aina ya Benz.

Zikasikika risasi na Tom Mboya alianguka chini na kufariki muda si mrefu. Muuaji ambaye alikuwa akifahamika vizuri to na Tom Mboya , alikuwa jamaa anaitwa. Nahashon Isaac Njenga Njoroge,naye miaka 39, ambaye alikuwa ana mafunzo ya ukachero toka Bulgaria.

Njenga alikamatwa baada ya wiki mbili na kupelekwa mahakamani, lakini kesi yake mpaka leo ni utata mtupu kwani sababu ya mauaji na nani alimtuma, kikawa kitendawili kwa wakenya wengi.

Hata hivyo hisia za lawama zilienda kwa kabila la wakikuyu, ambao walikuwa wanaona huyu nyota anaweza kumoiku mzee Jomo Kenyatta kisiasa na kuchukua nchi.

Kule kwao Tom Mboya, Kisumu, na hata vile vile Nairobi,vurugu za kutisha zilitokea wakati wananchi wanaomboleza na kupinga mauaji hayo.

Hata hapa Dar es salaam, watu wengi waliingiwa na majonzi makubwa kwa kumpoteza mwanasiasa nguli wa Kenya.
 
Inasikitisha sana. Jamaa alikuwa na IQ kubwa kuwazidi wao. Hata Robert Ouko naye alikatiliwa vibaya.
Hizi ni figure kama Lumumba sijui watapatikana
 
Kuuwawa kwa Tom Mboya kwa kweli ni kielelezao cha ukabila uliokubuhu Kenya.
 
Tom Mboya alikuwa na kipaji cha kipekee sana kwani alikuwa akiongea Kiingereza na Kiswahili kwa umahiri wa hali ya juu sana.

Waingereza walitaka yeye ndiye aje amrithi Kenyatta baadaye lakini Wakikuyu hawakupenda hilo litokee.
 

Sunday, March 2, 1975

JM KARIUKI’S FINAL 48 HOURS​




Source : KTN Kenya March 3, 2020


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MURDER MOST FOUL: JM KARIUKI’S FINAL 48 HOURS​


By DUNCAN KHAEMBA

F orty-five years ago on March 2, an assassination shook Kenya to the core. The only other political killing to have threatened the Kenyatta State was that of the young charismatic Minister for Constitutional Affairs, Tom Mboya, on July 5, 1969. JM’s assassination was, in a way, a macabre reenactment of political murder its foulest form, writes KTN’s DUNCAN KHAEMBA

It was on Sunday, March 2, 1975, when then firebrand Nyandarua North MP Josiah Mwangi Kariuki, popularly known as JM, was reported missing only for his body to be discovered 10 days later at Nairobi City Mortuary.

Later it was concluded his death was a brazen political assassination. Forty-five years later we piece together his last 48 hours on earth.

It is reported that JM knew too well that he was living on borrowed time and that any minute, he would be killed by government operatives.

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JM's killers planted a bomb in this Mombasa-bound OTC bus he had booked but he cancelled his journey after a tip-off. [Archive, Standard

Sources say that as they were playing darts over a drink at Nakuru’s Stag’s Head Hotel together with his bosom buddy former Nakuru town MP Mark Mwithaga, the town’s Mayor Mburu Gichua and his associate stormed the hotel, went straight to JM and Mwithaga and uttered these chilling words; “You want to cause trouble in Nakuru. Just be warned. Your days are numbered. We are going to finish you.”

Mwithaga died in August 2016.

The threat got JM sweating because earlier on, while in Nairobi, an assistant minister, Godfrey Gitahi better known as GG Kariuki (who died in June 2017) had whispered to him that a secret meeting had taken place in Nakuru and decision made to eliminate him by all means. The plan KTN was told, was to stage a political and security scare then blame it on him.

Mwithaga would say GG had further revealed to JM that those plotting his assassination had been hosted at State House, Nairobi, and pieced together some excerpts of JM’s fiery speeches as concrete evidence that the firebrand lawmaker was setting a stage for a revolution against the government.

For instance, they banked heavily on JM’s slogan that it was morally unacceptable to have a Kenya of 10 millionaires and 10 million beggars.

As a concerned friend, GG implored JM to meet the then President Mzee Jomo Kenyatta and explain himself since he was considered a threat to the aging president’s regime.

James Lando Khwatenge is a former member of the dreaded Special Branch (the precursor of today’s National Intelligence Service, NIS).

He says, from his knowledge as a Special Branch officer, JM Kariuki was not supposed to be killed on that fateful Sunday of March 2, 1975.

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Riots broke out in Nairobi after the announcement of JM's death.[Archive, Standard]

“When we joined the Special Branch as form sixes [A’ Level graduates], we were treated as elites and handed access to all government secrets because were replacing the illiterate group,” recalls Khwatenge.

After Mburu Gichua’s threat in Nakuru and the GG disclosure, JM is said to have approached the late Njenga Karume seeking his assistance in setting up a date with President Jomo Kenyatta. Karume died in February 2012.

Before the appointment could be secured, JM was asked by his doctor to go to a warm place like Mombasa and relax since one of his legs had a problem occasioned by the beatings he received while in detention during the Mau struggle.

JM is said to have planned to travel to Mombasa by bus on March 1 but was quickly tipped that he was being trailed and advised to cancel the trip.

Since the besieged leader knew he was living on borrowed time, he aborted the journey without informing anyone.

A few minutes before the OTC bus he would have boarded would leave Nairobi for Mombasa, a bomb exploded and killed at least 27 passengers.

JM could have been among the casualties. He had escaped death by a whisker but the cloud of death still hovered over him.
In less than 24 hours he was assassinated.

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JM Kariuki's burial: Finance Minister Mwai Kibaki was the only government official the mourners allowed to speak. Provincial Commissioner Simeon Nyachae was heckled until he changed the message. [Archive, Standard]

On the second day of March 1975, JM is said to have been lured into an emergency meeting by then GSU Commandant and his childhood friend, the late Ben Gethi, where he was to be interrogated by Special Branch officers.

Knowing what was at stake, JM is said to have been hesitant because earlier on, his pistol had been withdrawn by the Nyandarua District Commissioner Joseph Thuo leaving him defenseless. However, Gethi prevailed upon JM to honor the summons, promising to cover him by accompanying him to the meeting at the then Special Branch headquarters on Kingsway House along University Way, Nairobi.
Says Khwatenge: “JM had a sixth sense telling him all was not well…he told Gethi he was reluctant since he was not armed… Gethi gave him a loaded service pistol…so he went for the meeting armed and only Gethi knew about it.”
He continues. “From Ole Dume Road, they drove to the meeting where he found a hostile interrogation panel. Mean looking men who appeared impatient.

It was at this juncture, says Khwatenge that the life of the Nyandarua North MP was brutally brought to an end by none other than his childhood friend and GSU Commandant Ben Gethi who had walked him to the gallows.


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The Chairman of the Select Parliamentary Committee that investigated JM's assassination, Elijah Mwangale, hands over the team's findings to President Jomo Kenyatta. [Archive, Standard]

Explains Khwatenge: JM’s last minutes on earth were as follows……there was somebody called Wanyoike Thungu who argued with JM…he struck him and his teeth came out… JM went for his gun…before he could pull the trigger, Ben Gethi who was seated behind him shot him and fractured his hand….”

Athur Wanyoike Thungu was a lethal civilian who was part of President Jomo Kenyatta’s security detail and that is the reason Gethi decided to sacrifice JM by shooting him to save his job.

Thungu was not a police officer but held titles of Inspector of Police and Senior Superintendent of Police on various occasions because of the ties he had with Mzee Kenyatta. Thungu was a youth winger in KAU party (Kenya African Union, later Kanu) whose duty was to provide escort and security to luminaries in the pre-independence party. It is during this period that he earned Jomo Kenyatta’s trust since it is, said, he was a tough nut, ready to die or kill for the boss. He hailed from Gatundu as well.

After independence, Mzee Kenyatta demanded that Thungu and his ilk be included in the presidential security detail even though they had never had any police training.

Owing to the fact that they did not qualify for training in VIP protection abroad, the gang was taken to Czechoslovakia for basic training in gun handling.

It is this squad that is reported to have shot dead a madman in Nakuru who once rushed to the main dais at a presidential event.

According to Khwatenge, “JM shooting Thungu using a GSU pistol would have landed Gethi in trouble… a decision was made to silence JM forever to avoid him telling the whole country that he had been shot inside Kingsway House] They knew that JM with a plastered hand would not keep quiet... that is when a decision was made to kill him.”


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Members of the Parliamentary Select Committee at the spot where JM's body was dumped in Ngong Hills: Fortunately hyenas did not eat it as had been calculated by his killers. The body was found by a local herdsman called Musaite Ole Tunda [Archive, Standard]

But then, the Sunday afternoon assassination was abrupt both the scene and the time. There was panic and confusion reigned. The killers didn’t know what to do next. What to tell President Kenyatta and the biggest predicament was where to take JM’s lifeless body.

Says Khwatenge: “Here was somebody who was not supposed to be killed … they went down and carjacked a pickup transporting meat…”

JM’s body was discreetly taken to Ngong Forest and dumped there, hoping that he would not be traced but surprisingly, wild animals simply refused to eat the body of the former Assistant Minister for Tourism and Wildlife.

“Funny people killed around the area had their bodies eaten by hyenas…but JM’s wasn’t eaten.” JM Kariuki was reported missing that very Sunday after he failed to return home. A frantic search by his family and friends started.

Journalist Victor Riitho and a friend of JM's recalls “there was a small report … a filler stating a smartly dressed African male body [had ben] found in Ngong Forest and taken to City Mortuary ...we concealed a camera and entered the morgue … we lied to the attendant that we wanted to identify OTC explosion casualties.”

In parliament, JM’s colleagues were breathing fire and brimstone following his disappearance as Mark Mwithaga and late Martin Shikuku once stated. The government was hard-pressed to explain.

Shikuku would later say “when parliament was discussing his disappearance, we heard a woman yelling, yelling.”

In a dated footage Mwithaga says: “When Moi heard this, he took out his handkerchief and wiped tears and said if that is true and he had been made to tell Kenyans lies, then he is very sorry about it.”

[After the disappearance of JM, Moi in his capacity as the Minister for Home Affairs was misled into reading a statement that indicated JM was in Zambia on business]

It was about 6.30 pm when JM Kariuki’s first wife Doris Nyambura together with other family members stormed the chambers wailing…..the session abruptly came to an end as furious MPs rushed to the city mortuary to confirm what JM’s wife had reported. Already the security apparatus was making plans to sneak the body out that evening and didn’t know JM’s family would return that very evening accompanied by MPs.”

In the footage, Shikuku says: “…we surrounded the morgue, we found a Special Branch officer who worked at Bunge wearing a “mortuary attendant” tag... We had not figured out…it was MP Grace Onyango who noticed him and spoke to him.

Recalls Shikuku: “We looked around and couldn’t find him (JM)…he had been defaced….” The special branch agent was supervising the process of releasing JM’s body to a group that was waiting outside the mortuary late in the evening, a matter that is unusual. JM’s body had a tag on his toe labeled LUO GANGSTER. His killers had knocked off three of his lower incisors to justify that indeed he was a Luo.

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A generous harambee donor, JM rubbed the Kenyatta regime the wrong way by maintaining that it was wrong have a Kenya of 10 millionaires and 10 million beggars. [Archive, Standard]

Footage obtained by KTN has Mwithaga saying: “On the legs, there was a label...” unclaimed body of a Luo gangster. Luos were out already waiting to carry the body. “I was very angry,” recalls Riitho.

Rosemary Kariuki Machua is the second born child of JM. She was in primary school when their father was assassinated.

“Every March 2nd is always a painful reminder to us…there are some of my family members who prefer being out of the country,” she says. Ten days later on March 12, Police Commissioner Benard Hinga finally confirmed to an anxious nation that JM was dead and he had been killed by two bullets.

The assassination raised tension across the country, a situation that made the government uneasy amid riots staged by Nairobi University students, even as the government denied involvement.

“The songs and slogans were basically to defy the system,” recalls former Chief Justice Willie Mutunga.

“If the government was not involved, why the cover-up? Why did Kenyatta bring out the military and inspected a guard of honour all the way from Ronald Ngala Street to Moi Avenue outside Kenya Cinema?

Says Pheroze Nowrojee a High court advocate and former lecturer at the University of Nairobi: “As Kenyatta wanted it to be, the Kanu dictatorship was really to scare any revolution by ordinary people”.

Vernon Mwaanga, is Zambia’s former foreign affairs minister and was JM’s friend whom he had paid a visit when the Kenyan went missing. He met JM’s family many years later.

“The death took place under highly suspicious circumstances,” he says.

As anticipated, on the day of the burial, an already shaken government machinery made sure that it instilled fear among the mourners.

Recalls Wanyiri Kihoro a former student leader and later an MP... “Heavily armed police officers were planted from the Gilgal junction and they spread all over a 16-kilometre stretch and the mounted roadblocks, searching all vehicles.” Infuriated mourners refused to have a message of condolence from the government read by then area Provincial Commissioner Simeon Nyachae.

“Nyachae who was the representative from the government was helpless…..he changed tune and also started singing along…” recalls Kihoro.

Mwai Kibaki, the man who, three-and-a-half decades later became Kenya’s third president, was the only serving as a cabinet minister to attend the burial and when he was given a chance to address the mourners, he made a promise which has never been fulfilled
“He said we will have to get to the bottom, however long it takes even if its 100 years,” recalls Kihoro.

A report by the parliamentary select committee that was chaired by the late Elijah Mwangale was manipulated by the executive. When the committee chair tabled the report, Kisumu Town MP Grace Onyango pointed out that it had been doctored at State House.

Unknown to many, Onyango and Shikuku had hidden a copy of the original report in Committee Room 7 in parliament which contained the names that President Kenyatta had removed. Mwithaga was the committee’s vice-chair.

Says Mwithaga in archive footage: “When the time came for us to table the report, we were called to State House. We found Kenyatta in a special room. His color hand changed from black to chocolate. He removed three names from the report.

Khwatenge maintains the unplanned execution caught the perpetrators by surprise in that they didn’t have an elaborate cover-up plan which exposed the government. “His killing was haphazard, they didn’t do a good job like in other previous assignments,” says Khwatenge. Mwithaga is in the record as telling Kenyans: “Whoever tries to absolve the government from blame is just playing with Kenyans’ intelligence. Every successive regime bears responsibility”.

Copyright © 2020
 
29 November 2021

George Morara’s 48-hour ultimatum and death



George Morara was a member of parliament who lasted barely 9 months in the August house before death snatched him away.

The young law maker both in age and the political scene is said to have given the government a 48-hour ultimatum to produce a convict who had assassinated Tom Mboya but before the lapse of those 48 hours, Morara perished in a road accident.

Was is it a normal accident or was is premeditated? 51 years after his death, his daughter has embarked on a quest of establishing what caused their father’s death saying all they want is closure. Duncan Khaemba brings us that report, George Morara’s 48-hour ultimatum and death.

Source : KTN News Kenya


In depth

Kenya: 50-Year Mystery of MP’s Death​


By admin
September 14, 2020


As he sipped his drink one late evening in Lusaka, Zambia, early September 1970, West Mugirango MP George Justus Morara bumped into Nahashon Isaac Njenga Njoroge – the man who assassinated Constitutional Affairs Minister, Tom Mboya, on July 5, 1969.

An astonished Morara, who was among members of the Social Welfare and Employment parliamentary committee on official duty, confronted Njenga who, in panic, bolted out of the club. The government had announced the previous year that Njenga had been sentenced to death and hanged for shooting dead the powerful Cabinet minister along Nairobi’s Government Road (present-day Moi Avenue).

Upon arrival at Nairobi’s Embakasi Airport, Morara and a few members of the House team, chaired by Kandara MP George Mwicigi, headed to Parliament buildings for a scheduled press conference.

Without mincing words, Morara spilled the beans on the group’s encounter with Njenga in Lusaka, and gave the Government a 48-hour ultimatum to produce the Bulgarian-trained Njenga.

Forty-eight hours later, the MP was dead — killed in a suspicious road accident along the Kakamega-Kisumu highway. He was only 34 years old and was seen as one of the most promising politicians — even mentioned as a possible future president.

Assassinated

This week, 50 years later, the fiery politician’s death remains a mystery. While friends and family maintain he was assassinated by President Jomo Kenyatta’s state agents as part of a wider cover-up scheme of the assassination of Mboya, others believe it was an unfortunate accident.

In his condolence message on the evening of Saturday, September 12, 1970 – the day Morara died – Mzee Kenyatta said: “I have learnt with great sorrow of the untimely death of Mr Morara, who had kicked off his political career with vigour and vitality. Within a short time he had clearly shown his interest and ability to serve the nation and had contributed greatly through Parliament and extensive tours throughout the republic.”

Describing him as straight-talking and a thorn in the flesh of the government, Mr Benson Kegoro, who succeeded Morara as West-Mugirango MP in a subsequent by-election, observes that his predecessor had a singular determination to serve the people.

“We have no idea what exactly happened. He may have died in a road accident as stated or someone might have plotted to silence him owing to his consistent criticism of the government,” the former MP told Sunday Nation this week.

On Saturday, Morara’s family marked the 50th anniversary since the MP’s death in a low-key ceremony in Kisii County, punctuated by interviews of family members on local radio and TV stations. Only two members of Morara’s nuclear family were in attendance – his eldest daughter, Sandy, and last born child, Innocent. The politician’s wife died in India in October 2010 over heart-related complications. The second born, Duke, fled the country fearing for his life following repeated protests to the government over his father’s alleged assassination.

Sandy regrets the golden jubilee event was rather low-key despite the respect his father commanded: “Today we are on our own as a family, with no politicians or government officials to celebrate this great man.”

Speaking to Sunday Nation on Thursday in a phone interview from an undisclosed location abroad, Duke said he would attend mass “to pray for the soul of my late father”. He regretted the circumstances of his father’s death had greatly affected the family.

The quiet anniversary is a contradiction of a man who lived loud and who spoke his mind fearlessly. Although he served as MP for barely nine months, parliamentary colleagues and residents of the present-day Kisii and Nyamira counties are convinced he left behind an indelible mark.

That he is a revered political hero to many, observes former South Mugirango MP Omingo Magara, is demonstrated by the fact that hundreds of children in Nyamira, Kisii and neighbouring counties have been named after him.

“Members of the Kisii community traditionally name their children after the dead. However they are named only after the very popular amongst us, and those who have touched other peoples’ lives,” says the politician.

Although he was only in lower primary school when Morara joined Parliament, Magara vividly recalls that the Morara’s image was that of a “fearless and firm leader with a promising future”.

Speaking during his charged burial ceremony on September 17, 1970, attended by Speaker of National Assembly Fred Mati, six Cabinet ministers and several MPs, Public Works minister James Nyamweya summarised it aptly by stating that Morara “was born a fearless and courageous fighter whose main interest in life was to fight for justice of all people”.

Maiden speech

When indeed he made his maiden speech in Parliament in February 1970, Morara kicked off with bold observations on President Kenyatta: “Mr Speaker, I would like to make my maiden speech by making this point. His Excellency has an exceptionally good personality. However, he is being misguided and misled and being misadvised by some individuals who otherwise want to get the best of the national cake. And as a result the rest of the country suffers”.

And for the rest of the short stint in Parliament, the West Mugirango MP never shied away from criticising the government or publicly asking the Head of State to put his house in order. In one of the Hansard reports, he is quoted protesting at the government’s failure to address tribal conflicts.

“Right now while we are speaking in this House, Mr Speaker, some people are dying. There are daylight robberies, there are daylight raids of cattle and people are being killed. When they kill one, we kill 20. However this is nothing to be proud of. How can we live in peace when something is said in this House and nothing is done? The credibility and dignity of government have been challenged,” he protested at Deputy Speaker, Dr Munyua Waiyaki.

Morara’s sentiments may sound harmless and common place today, but at the time only a handful of politicians — including J.M Kariuki, Mark Mwithaga, Martin Shikuku among others — dared to challenge the President and his administration.

Former Commerce and Industry minister, James Nakhwanga Osogo, for instance, remembers Morara as a firebrand who was eloquent in articulating his position. When he passed on, a grieving Osogo pointed out that Parliament would greatly miss his “fiery speeches”.

Born in 1936 in a small village of Nyakeore in West Mugirango, in the current Nyamira County, Morara attended Sironga and Kamagambo primary schools before joining Kisii High School.

He later proceeded to Buffalo University, Michigan, US, and upon his return in 1964, served in the civil service as a District Officer in various stations including Kisumu, Maseno, Homa Bay, Eldama Ravine and Maralal. He later quit government and worked briefly at BP/Shell at a senior level before resigning to venture into politics.

As the family seeks answers 50 years after his death, many theories remain. Duke is, for instance, convinced his father was assassinated. It is not an isolated view.

On the day he met his death, Morara is said to have been in the company of parliamentary colleagues Mark Bosire (Kitutu Masaba) and Nyarangi Moturi (North Mugirango). The trio reportedly left Nairobi for upcountry in Morara’s car, with his colleagues alighting (after a brief argument) in Nakuru.

Morara proceeded alone to Kakamega for official duty, including a meeting with his friend, Kakamega District Commissioner Ezekiel Nyarangi.

According to family sources, the DC tried to dissuade him from proceeding to Kisii that night where his wife and family were, but he insisted. He never made it. That evening he died near Chavakali market. Police reports indicate the MP, who was driving a Peugeot 404, registration number KKZ 058, was involved in a head-on collusion with a Police Land Rover, GK 1357, driven by Constable Fredrick Kugo.

The MP’s abrupt death was particularly devastating to his young family. His wife, Mary, was only about 24 years old, while the children Sandy, Duke and Innocent were only 2 years, 1 year and 5 months respectively.

Feel pain

“I cannot even clearly express how I feel to date. What I know is that I just feel pain and more pain,” says Sandy, 52.

Except for the pictures of him carrying her on his laps or pecking her on the cheeks, she said she never really experienced the love of a father. “I keep asking myself, why would anyone do this to another person’s child?,” poses Sandy.

Duke concurs that the 1970 tragedy “terribly affected our lives and even though my siblings and I are all in our 50s, we are not close to each other as we live separate lives”.

Duke, a lawyer, all along tried his luck in politics but his mother would hear none of it. Having been robbed of a husband at a tender age and her family life disrupted, she developed a dislike for politics. Duke nonetheless unsuccessfully vied for West Mugirango parliamentary seat in 2007 but lost to James Gesami.

Mr George Kegoro, the executive director of the Kenya Human Rights Commission, says death of the politician needs to be officially classified as an assassination, so that is treated alongside similar deaths like Mboya, Robert Ouko, and JM Kariuki, among others. He also says there should be an official investigation.

Source : The Street journal
 
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