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Kisumu weeps as 26 mourners perish in crash

26 members of the Korwa and Katieno clans, perished in a bus crash along the Kisumu-Kakamega highway

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by FAITH MATETE

News11 August 2025 - 07:00
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In Summary


  • They were mourners from Nyakach subcounty travelling to the burial of one of their own, Risper Akeyo, in Nyahera.
  • They went to condole and stand with the family. By sunset, on the way back, however, some of their own names had been added to the list of the dead.
Accident survivors at Jaramogi Oginga Odinga Teaching and Referral hospital in Kisumu 




It is grief too heavy for one village to bear.

In Koguta village in Kisumu, entire homesteads sit in silence. Doors stand ajar. Cooking fires are cold. Wails drift over the hills in an unending lament.

In a cruel twist of fate, on Friday, 26 members of the Korwa and Katieno clans — bound by blood, marriage, and lifelong bonds — perished together in a bus crash along the Kisumu-Kakamega highway

They were mourners from Nyakach subcounty travelling to the burial of one of their own, Risper Akeyo, in Nyahera.

They went to condole and stand with the family. By sunset, on the way back, however some of their own names had been added to the list of the dead.

Twenty-six others survived.

The bus carried at least 54 passengers, including an 18-month-old baby. Others from the clan had travelled in separate vehicles.

Wards tell their own story at the Jaramogi Oginga Odinga Teaching and Referral Hospital in Kisumu. Twenty-six survivors lie in beds, some swathed in bandages, others with limbs in plaster. Faces are etched with pain and disbelief.

Nurses move quietly between them, adjusting drips, checking vitals. Some patients groan softly; others stare blankly at the ceiling, adrift in shock. A few have not yet been told the full truth — that the relatives they travelled with will never come home.

From his hospital bed, Kenneth Ochieng Omollo recalls the final moments:

“The journey back began without incident, until we started descending towards the roundabout,” he says. “The driver tried his best, but it’s like the brakes failed. I saw what was happening, but there was nothing we could do. Then suddenly, we were in the ditch. The next thing I knew, I was in hospital with a swollen face, a head injury, and pain in my legs.”

Omollo wipes away tears. “Everyone in that bus was family — by blood or marriage. I was with my wife, my uncle, and my cousins. I still don’t know who survived.”

Mourine Auma, her head and neck injured, speaks in a faint voice.

“Our people died before our eyes. Some broke their necks, some their heads. I believe I’ll heal in Jesus’s name, but I’ll never forget that day.”

Nearby, Philgona Anyango sits quietly, her eyes distant beneath a bandaged head.

“My waist is painful, my back too. I have a head injury. Where do I even start? I have children about to join campus. How will I help them now? Twenty-six of my people are gone. The whole family, just like that.”

Eighteen-year-old Valery Onyango lost both her parents in the crash.

“They left early for the funeral and told me to stay home. Later, I got the call. Both of them were gone.”

At the morgue, grief is raw and unrestrained. Florence Akoth Mbok can barely speak through her tears.

“I have never seen anything like this in my life. Thirteen of my close relatives are dead. When I heard the news, I couldn’t sleep. I came to the hospital, then to the morgue, but I couldn’t go inside. The grief was too much, my blood pressure went up.”

For elderly Lawrence Agai, the pain is sharpened by memory.

“That morning, we raised money and hired the AIC Naki Secondary School bus,” he recalls. “My four brothers were inside. I stayed behind. Now, two are gone, and the other two are in hospital. We prayed before they left. Later, I saw photos of the bus on social media. This tragedy has shattered our family and the whole village. We are mourning as one.”

At the hospital, doctors work frantically to save the injured. Medical Services PS Dr Ouma Olunga said the government mobilised additional health facilities in Kisumu to ensure all survivors received surgery within the day.

“Every patient requires a different form of surgery. We are working with several hospitals to make sure all operations are done in time,” he said. With JOOTRH’s 10 theatres already busy, cases were distributed to other facilities to avoid delays.

Additional pathologists from the region were also called in to speed up postmortem examinations, allowing families to begin burials without unnecessary delays. Kisumu county Health CEC Dr Gregory Ganda said medics first worked to stop bleeding and stabilise patients before moving to surgeries.

The government has pledged full social and financial support. Dr Olunga assured that no survivor would pay medical bills, and no bereaved family would bear the cost of burying their loved ones.

“There is not one single patient who will pay, and no single family will incur burial costs,” he said.

Now, Nyakach subcounty is under a heavy cloud. The air is thick with sorrow, the sound of wailing carrying from homestead to homestead.

In one merciless twist of fate, a funeral meant to unite a community in mourning for one life has multiplied that grief 26 times over.


 

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