Cloud Of Grief Shrouds Mai Mahiu As Floods Claim 48 Lives

20 Days(s) Ago    👁 26
What you need to know:
  • By Tuesday afternoon, the slowly receding flood waters revealed the painful truth of 48 people swept away.
  • One family suffered the tragic loss of four loved ones, leaving a void too deep to fill.
  • The Kenya Red Cross Society has donated a mobile refrigerator that can hold 40 bodies.

  • As the sun set in Maai Mahius Jerusalem and Kamuchiri villages on Tuesday, a mournful and subdued atmosphere covered the neighbourhoods following the deaths of 48 people in flash floods.

    Family members were coming to terms with the devastating loss of relatives and property, beginning the arduous task of picking up the shattered pieces of their lives, one fragment at a time.

    By Tuesday afternoon, the slowly receding flood waters revealed the painful truth of 48 people swept away and the damage caused by the unforgiving torrential currents.

    One family suffered the tragic loss of four loved ones, leaving a void too deep to fill. The family of Naomi Wanjiru, a resident of Ngong in Kajiado County, is yet to come to terms with the huge loss.

    Wanjiru says she received a phone call from her elder sister at 4 am on Monday informing her about the tragedy. She learnt that some family members were missing.

    She said that three family members; her mother and two sisters, were rescued. During the time of the incident, there were 11 people in the house four adults and seven children.

    The family acquired the piece of land and built the house near a bridge before the unfortunate incident.

    Those who died are Wanjirus sister Elizabeth Mugure,16, her nephews Owen Kimani, 3, Ivan Njoroge, 8 months and niece Mary Muthoni, 4.

    Those missing are siblings Blessing Muthoni, 8, Lewis Ngige,1, Ann Muthoni (Kimanis sister), 4, who are Wanjirus nieces and nephew as well as her sister-in-law Isaac Muthoni, 28.

    My mother was admitted to Naivasha Sub-County Hospital and is responding well to treatment. My sister was at Maai Mahiu Hospital and was discharged but she was rushed to hospital after her condition worsened,' she said.

    For David Kinyanjui, Monday's events will forever linger in his mind.

    The loss of his nine-year-old son continues to haunt him.

    Living just meters from the river, Kinyanjui was abruptly awakened by the loud floods, catching him and his two children off guard as they slept.

    Amidst the chaos, his daughter's frantic cries pierced through the night, signalling the impending danger.

    Together, they sought refuge, but the relentless waters overpowered them. Kinyanjui was injured while his children were swept away.

    'My daughter, a secondary school student, was swept away by water as was my son. After the water subsided, I went to look for them. I found my daughter holding onto a tree. I called for help and she was rescued, he said.

    'We spent the entire day searching for my son, but he was not found. I described his features to the rescue and search team. I told them that he had a mark on the chest resembling the map of Kenya. To my shock, they told me that his body was found downstream trapped in the mud and had been taken to the mortuary, he said.

    Kinyanjuis home, once a place of solace, now lies in ruins, along with their livelihoods and cherished memories.

    His five-bedroom house was brought down, more than 900 chickens and 20 pigs were swept away by the raging waters.

    Only 20 chickens and four pigs remain.

    Kinyanjui said that his wife and their younger son had travelled upcountry to visit an ailing relative last Friday, surviving the tragedy.

    They were to return on Sunday but his wife called him to inform him that she had opted to travel on Monday instead after the condition of the patient worsened.

    'I have nowhere to go, I have been left homeless. All household items were swept away. My source of livelihood was swept away. I appeal to the government to help us rebuild our lives,' said Kinyanjui.

    Another victim, Mary Wanjiku, 34, said that they were woken up by a loud bang and they scampered for safety.

    Wanjiku was in the house with her three children. The children were swept away by water; two were rescued but her youngest, Blessings Mumbi, 4, was not so lucky.

    Wanjiku, who sustained injuries on her forehead and left leg, also lost her mother-in-law Agnes Nyambura, her sister Lucy Njeri and her niece Ruth Njeri,14.

    Wanjiku was among the families that received counselling and identified the bodies of their loved ones at the disaster centre yesterday.

    Grishon Waiganjo, yet another victim, is among the many distraught residents grappling with the aftermath of Monday's tragedy.

    Waiganjo recounts the heart-wrenching loss of his son, Njenga Waiganjo. His body was later found entangled in a tree trunk.

    Despite being discharged from Mai Mahiu Hospital after treatment, Waiganjo now fac