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Kenyan woman found murdered in Birmingham, Alabama

Posted by Administrator on June 13, 2010

Ruth Munene who was found with three stab wounds in her apartment

Ruth Munene who was found with three stab wounds in her apartment

Birmingham – “She just was a kind-hearted person.”


This woman, who asked ABC 33/40 not to identify her, is talking about her life-long frined, Ruth Munene, who was found dead in her apartment late Friday night.


Birmingham Police have not yet officially released the name of the deceased.

But according to friends and family, the deceased inside the 240 21st Avenue South apartment, was Munene.

“I was thinking she was in a car wreck,” her friend said. “That was my first reaction.”

She recalls the night as a constant game of phone tag. Friends calling saying Munene was unconscious, but no one knew whether she was alive or dead. Then the friend says she received a heartbreaking phone call around 3 a.m. Saturday.

“I could tell she was crying on the other end of the phone and she said ‘Do you know what has happened?’ I said I was told she was unconscious, do you know anything else? She said believe it or not she has left us,” Munene’s friend said.

According to family, Munene was murdered…stabbed three times.

Outside the apartment, crime scene tape hangs from a handrail and a piece of window glass is broken just beside the front door. But right now, that is all the facts they know.

Munene’s friend says she’s devastated and doesn’t understand why anyone would kill her friend.

“I was really, really shocked to hear she had passed away,” she said.

Source: http://www.abc3340.com/news/stories/0610/745337.html

Posted in Crime, Diaspora News | 14 Comments »

Police looking for teacher who recruited killer

Posted by Administrator on June 9, 2010

By NATION Correspondent
Posted Wednesday, June 9 2010 at 21:21

Detectives were last night trying to trace a female teacher whom the serial killer, Philip Onyancha, claimed recruited him into a blood-sucking cult.

Detectives piecing together 17 murders in different parts of the country want to question the woman, believed to have once taught at a school in Mahiga, Othaya.

There was drama as Mr Onyancha, a security guard, was taken to Nyeri town to identify the lodgings where he killed one of his victims in April 2007.

Drank her blood

Police had a hard time controlling angry wananchi who wanted to lynch him as he led them to the lodging.

Mr Onyancha, 33, said he killed a 20-year-old woman at the lodging on Gakere Road and drank her blood.

He easily identified room number 13 at Ngurunga Bar where he said he had negotiated with the watchman and paid Sh200 instead of the Sh350 fee, on condition he did not get a receipt.

The woman was found with her throat slit. Even after arresting the watchman, police made no headway because no identity records had been left.

Mr Onyancha freely chatted with journalists as police officers waited for managers of the lodgings to open the gate to the rooms.

The former guard said he had schooled in Kericho where his parents worked in a tea farm and later at Kenyatta High School, Mahiga near Nyeri where his brother worked for the Kenya Power and Lighting Company.

Mr Onyancha refused to disclose details of his family only saying he had many siblings. He also explained why he had refused to pick his KCSE certificate at his former school.

“That has only a grade C-. After leaving school I enrolled privately for KCSE and have another certificate with Grade B-. Why would I need the C- certificate,” he said as he waited to be ushered into the Ngurunga rooms.

Source: Daily Nation

Posted in Crime, Kenya | 2 Comments »

Kenyan serial killer targeted 100 victims

Posted by Administrator on June 9, 2010

Thirty-two year-old Philip Onyancha who confessed to the murder of 19 people and intended to kill 100. Capital FM

Thirty-two year-old Philip Onyancha who confessed to the murder of 19 people and intended to kill 100. Capital FM

NAIROBI, Kenya, Jun 9 – A former G4S security guard who has confessed murdering at least 19 people has now revealed that he was targeting to kill 100 people.
Thirty-two year-old Philip Onyancha who has already given police the name of his accomplice says he was recruited into a cult that convinced him he would become one of the wealthiest men in Kenya if he killed and drank the blood of his victims.

“It is an urge you develop once you are initiated, and since I got into this thing, I have always had a passion to kill,” Mr Onyancha who spoke under heavy police guard told Capital News.

“My target was 100 people… once I achieved that I could have been very rich.  It is that power of conviction in me, but all that is now gone because I have confessed,” he added.

During police interrogation and interviews with journalists, the suspect said he planned to accomplish his mission in a span of five years and was mainly targeting women and children under 10 because they are weak.

“I always went for the weak in the society.  You know women and children are always weak and vulnerable which makes them an easy target,” he said in fluent English.

Mr Onyancha who was detained last week said he was grateful to the police for arresting him because it had helped him speak against the “evil spirits” which have been haunting him.

“I feel relieved, I am happy to have confessed all this.  It was troubling… it was not my wish to do these evils, I know it is a crime to kill and it is against the 10 commandments of God, but you see I was not myself,” he said amid pauses to catch a glimpse of a surging crowd that wanted to lynch him as he took police around Thika.

“I even told these police officers when they came to arrest me… they were all armed and they thought I was armed.   I told them I am just a simple guy, and if they have managed to arrest me, then they are too powerful.  I thought so because I was very sure nobody could ever arrest me, I had this power of conviction out of spirits I got when I was initiated,” he said.

“I regret a lot.  I share the pain with the grieving families but then it was not my fault, it was the spirits in me.  I will not repeat what I have been doing because my initiators warned me that if I ever reveal it to anyone or confess, I lose the spirits and the power,” he said “I am now back to my senses.”

“I have killed a total of 19 people, and I can recall each incident very well, it is like it occurred today, I can take you to all the scenes, the only problem is that in some cases the bodies are not there like in the lodgings where I killed women,” he said.

The Head of the Special Crime Prevention Unit (SCPU) Richard Katola said they were equally shocked at the revelations made by the suspect.

“He has helped us a lot in resolving murder cases which were a mystery to us.  We are still investigating the cases and will take him to court once we are through with him,” he said.

Since Sunday, the suspect has been showing police where he dumped bodies of his victims and investigators have been able to recover skeletons, skulls and clothes of the victims.

He first took the police to a forest near Lenana School on Sunday where the skull and clothes of a nine-year-old boy he confessed to have killed three months ago were found.

On Tuesday, he took police to Naivasha where he showed them a spot where he dumped the bodies of a woman and a young boy he killed while working as a guard at a flower farm.

Police were only able to recover clothes and sandals of the young boy which were subsequently identified positively by his mother.

Later that evening, he led police to the Nairobi Water and Sewerage Company (NWSC) offices in Karen shopping centre where the decomposed body of a woman he confessed to have killed in November 2008 was found.

Employees at the firm were shocked to learn that there has been a decomposing body stashed in the ceiling for nearly two years.

“I just lured her like the other victims and she followed me.  I asked her to climb with me (up the ceiling) and she did.  That is when I strangled her and sucked blood.  I was very sure the body would not be found unless I showed people,” he said and added that he committed the offence when he worked there as a security guard.

The woman’s brother Mathew Korir identified the clothes found at the scene as those of her sister Catherine Chelangat, 32, who went missing in November 2008.

“We have been looking for her.  We even made radio announcements with no success. On several occasions, a man called and demanded a ransom of Sh30, 000 and we paid part of the money before the mobile phone they were using went off.  We even reported the matter to the police.”

On Wednesday morning, the suspect led police to the residential compound of a diplomat on Riverside Drive where another decomposing body of a woman was recovered in a septic tank, along with her personal belongings.

“I lured her into the compound sometimes in 2008 and I killed her.  Her purse is in that septic tank and the body is in that other one,” he told police who immediately opened the septic tanks and found the remains before heading to Thika to identify lodgings where he confessed to have killed four commercial sex workers in March this year.

Business came to a standstill in the town when he led police to Room 5 at the second floor of Suitable Bar and Restaurant and confessed to have killed two women on diverse dates in March.

“I just rented the room and I invited a woman whom I killed and left her body there. It was recovered the following day and it was all over in the news. I did not panic at all because my spirits convinced me I will not be caught.  After sometime, I did the same to another woman,” he said and directed police to yet another room at Rwambogo Bar and Restaurant located on Nkrumah Road where he confessed to have killed another woman.

Police said they would visit more scenes in Nyeri and Nakuru where the suspect has pledged to reveal more.

Source: http://www.capitalfm.co.ke/news/Kenyanews/Kenyan-serial-killer-targeted-100-victims-8743.html#ixzz0qNscZgtm

Posted in Crime, Kenya | 1 Comment »

Jailed illegal immigrants pose policy dilemma

Posted by Administrator on June 6, 2010

A U.S. program to check the immigration status of everyone booked into jail runs into local rules against such actions.

Chicago Gang Leader Mwenda Murithi now serving 55 years in jail

Chicago Gang Leader Mwenda Murithi now serving 55 years in jail

By Ken Dilanian, Tribune Washington Bureau

8:11 PM PDT, June 6, 2010

Reporting from Washington

Mwenda Murithi, the Kenyan-born leader of a notorious Chicago street gang, was arrested 26 times after his student visa was revoked in 2003. Charged with at least four felonies, he served 30 days in the Cook County Jail for a 2007 drug violation. By law, he could have been deported immediately.

But Chicago officials did not report him to immigration authorities because city and county ordinances prohibit them from doing so.

Not long after he got out of jail, Murithi ordered a gang hit that resulted in the death of 13-year-old Schanna Gayden, struck by a stray bullet as she frolicked at a playground.

Murithi, now serving 55 years, is just the sort of person U.S. immigration officials say they want to target under a program known as Secure Communities, which seeks to match the fingerprints of everyone booked into jail against immigration databases.

But the program, launched by the Bush administration and continued under President Obama, has become entangled in the suspicions and recriminations that characterize the debate over immigration policy.

Critics of the program say that turning illegal immigrants over to federal authorities would undermine the efforts of local law enforcement to win cooperation from immigrant communities. And they worry about providing immigration authorities with the fingerprints of those arrested on petty charges.

“I’ll be reporting minor offenders, misdemeanants, people who are arrested on a traffic fine that they fail to pay,” San Francisco Sheriff Michael Hennessey said. “I think that this throws too broad of a net out over the residents of my county.”

David Venturella, who runs the program for the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency, or ICE, said minor violators are not a priority unless they also have more serious criminal histories.

“Our focus is on criminal aliens,” he said.

Many major city police agencies forbid officers from inquiring into the immigration status of witnesses and suspects, a policy adopted by local officials to shield illegal immigrants from federal authorities. But the Secure Communities program has divided those cities and the politicians within them.

Houston and Los Angeles are participating in the fingerprint sharing program despite such rules, and San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom opposes the efforts of the sheriff and some county supervisors to keep his city out of it.

The federal program was designed to assuage such cities, Venturella said, because it doesn’t require their active cooperation. The fingerprints are shared automatically, and ICE officers arrest those they intend to deport.

This arrangement stands in contrast to a more active federal-local effort known as the 287(g) program, under which ICE signs agreements that allow local police to arrest and detain people under immigration laws. Few big cities participate in that program.

Still, out of political sensitivity, ICE currently is not matching fingerprints from counties, such as Cook County, that object to the Secure Communities program, he said.

Secure Communities is operating in 193 counties, including Los Angeles County, and ICE has checked 2.2 million sets of fingerprints submitted by local law enforcement agencies, spokeswoman Randi Greenberg said. Through April 30, there were 216,000 hits against a database of people who previously had been fingerprinted by ICE, she said.

Of that number, 24,000 had been charged with or convicted of what ICE classifies as the most serious offenses, including rape, murder and kidnapping. The remainder involved lesser offenses, ranging from bribery and fraud to petty violations, such as gambling.

ICE deported 6,100 of those charged with or convicted of the most serious offenses, and 14,300 who were charged with or convicted of lesser offenses, she said. The goal is to expand the program nationwide by the end of 2012.

Despite Venturella’s assertion that ICE won’t focus on people charged with lesser offenses, immigration rights activists aren’t so sure.

“We think it’s an ill-conceived, ill-functioning program,” said Joan Friedland, a senior attorney with the National Immigration Law Center. “Regardless of how or why a person got into police custody, whether it was based on racial profiling, whether it was a minor offense, whether the person is found not guilty, they are subject to deportation.”

Friedland said she would be more comfortable with referrals based on convictions, not arrests.

In Cook County, authorities can do neither. While the policies in Los Angeles and other cities allow police to notify immigration authorities about felons they suspect are illegal immigrants, Cook County forbids that, said Steve Patterson, a spokesman for the Sheriff’s Office.

Asked why, Chicago Alderman Roberto Maldonado argued that the law does allow the reporting of felons to immigration authorities. “We’re not protecting criminals,” he said.

The text of the law, however, contains no such provision.

Asked about the case of the Kenyan gang leader, Maldonado noted that ICE, the immigration enforcement agency, routinely peruses county arrest reports. “If ICE didn’t have their eyes open, that is not our fault,” he said.

In Los Angeles, a case in 2008 reenergized a long-standing debate about the city’s policy toward police questioning of immigrants.

Jamiel Shaw II, a 17-year-old football star who had been recruited by Stanford and Rutgers universities, was gunned down in March 2008, allegedly by gang member Pedro Espinoza. Espinoza, a 19-year-old illegal immigrant, had been released from the Los Angeles County jail a day before the shooting after serving time on a gun charge.

Although Shaw had been in the custody of the sheriff, not the Los Angeles Police Department, activists unsuccessfully sought to use the case to overturn Special Order 40, the LAPD rule that limits the circumstances in which officers may inquire into a person’s immigration status. An effort to repeal the policy by referendum failed last year when backers couldn’t muster enough signatures to put the measure on the ballot.

Unlike in Chicago, nothing prohibits Los Angeles police officers from referring people they arrest to immigration authorities, said Jorge Villegas, commander of the LAPD operations office.

If police arrest a gang member who has already been deported, for example, officers notify ICE, he said.

ken.dilanian@latimes.com

Copyright © 2010, The Los Angeles Times

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Posted in Crime, Diaspora News, Immigration | 1 Comment »

Kenyan Man Charged With Murder In Stabbing Death

Posted by Administrator on June 3, 2010

Jackson Mwangi, 28, is escorted into court in Brentwood, N.H., Wednesday, June 2, 2010. Mwangi was charged with first-degree murder in the stabbing death of Randi Huntley. (AP Photo/Jim Cole)

Jackson Mwangi, 28, is escorted into court in Brentwood, N.H., Wednesday, June 2, 2010. Mwangi was charged with first-degree murder in the stabbing death of Randi Huntley. (AP Photo/Jim Cole)

DANVILLE – One day before allegedly murdering the mother of his small son, Jackson Mwangi posted a message on his Facebook page hinting at trouble in his life.

“Only God can help me,” he wrote.

The next day, authorities say the 28-year-old Manchester man repeatedly stabbed Randi Huntley and may have hit her with a hammer and ran her over with a car as the couple’s 4-year-old son watched.

For the second time in two years, authorities are investigating a brutal killing in town.

In June 2008, Paul McDonald bludgeoned his Danville landlord with a hammer and was convicted of first-degree murder earlier this year.

“You hear about this in cities, not in small towns,” said Amanda Faia, 20, who grew up next door in Sandown and works at Mayo’s Market, the only convenience store in Danville.

Mwangi, of 447 Cartier St., Manchester, was arraigned in Exeter District Court yesterday on a first-degree murder charge and ordered held without bail. He appeared only briefly and said nothing before being led from court and returned to Rockingham County Jail.

Mwangi was arrested by New Hampshire State Police Tuesday, shortly after he allegedly attacked Huntley, 25, at her home at 67B Cobbler’s Ridge Road. He had lived there until a couple of months ago when he moved out.

Assistant Attorney General Peter Hinckley said he wasn’t sure of the relationship between Huntley and Mwangi most recently, but they had been together for some time.

Police responded to the Cobbler’s Ridge Road address just before 4 p.m. Tuesday for a report of a hit-and-run accident. Officers arrived and found Huntley, who had apparently been stabbed, authorities said.

She was rushed to Parkland Medical Center in Derry where she died.

An autopsy was scheduled to be performed yesterday; the results were not yet available.

Shortly after the attack, a bulletin was issued urging police to look for a 1999 Infiniti. By about 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, dispatchers began receiving reports of a man trying to flag down motorists while parked along Route 101 east near Exit 9 in Exeter. When state and local police arrived they realized that it was Mwangi, authorities said. Police cruisers swarmed the car and Mwangi was arrested. A police dog was also brought in to search for evidence along the highway.

Hinckley said he wouldn’t speculate on why Mwangi was trying to get the attention of passing motorists.

As investigators searched for answers yesterday, Huntley’s family remembered the good times they shared.

“Every time I saw her she was smiling and she was happy. She would make you laugh and she could find the humor in everything,” said Huntley’s aunt, Darlene Zimmermann, who is the sister of Huntley’s father, Christopher.

Huntley was described as a loving mother who held two jobs and worked hard. She worked full-time at East Coast Lumber in Hampstead and had a second job at a Dollar Tree store.

The middle child of three girls, Huntley grew up in Raymond and graduated from Raymond High School in 2003. She earned a bachelor’s degree in child psychology from Hesser College and was looking forward to finding a job in her field.

Photographs posted on her Facebook page show a mother who adored her boy; she often referred to him as “lil man.”

Miles away in Manchester, a neighbor of Mwangi expressed shock when told about his arrest.

“Honestly, he seemed like a hard-working, easy-going, laid-back kind of guy,” said the woman, who asked her name not be used. She lived upstairs from Mwangi. Like him, she was new to the neighborhood. Her daughter quickly befriended Mwangi’s son, who visited on the weekends.

Mwangi was proud of his boy but didn’t speak much about himself, she said. He did lament the breakup with the boy’s mother, the neighbor said.

“He couldn’t believe it turned out like that. He missed her a lot,” she said. On Monday, Mwangi borrowed her telephone to call the boy’s mother. He complained about “baby Mama drama,” she said.

Hinckley said Mwangi appears to be a Kenyan born U.S. citizen.

Details surrounding the investigation into Huntley’s death are contained in an affidavit sealed by the court at the prosecutor’s request. Search and arrest warrants were sealed as well.

Hinckley said the documents were sealed because the investigation is ongoing.

“It’s not a closed investigation after an arrest is made,” he said.

With the area around Huntley’s residence still cordoned off yesterday and a truck from Major Crime Unit and other police vehicles parked out front, neighbors said they were too upset to talk.

“All I can think about is the family,” one woman said as she arrived home.

Union Leader reporter Mark Hayward contributed to this article.

Source: http://www.unionleader.com/article.aspx?headline=Danville+slaying%3a+Child+may+have+seen+mom+die&articleId=b7f41f29-a50f-461e-a578-8b6f1ea6c3ff

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Top terror suspect vanishes from police station

Posted by Administrator on March 21, 2010

A high-level terror suspect arrested by police in Kenya has mysteriously disappeared from custody at a border police station.

The man, who was arrested on March 13, was reported missing at 9 pm on Tuesday last week from Busia police station where he was awaiting further profiling by Anti-Terrorism Police Unit officers from Nairobi.

Three police officers, a sergeant and two constables, have been arrested in connection with the suspect’s disappearance. They are suspected to have accepted cash from the suspect to release him.

Anti-terror detectives identified the man as an operative of the Somalia-based al-Shabaab which has links to the al-Qaeda terror network and had been placed on an international watch list.

The suspect had an Australian passport identifying him as Farah Hussein, but Immigration officers arrested him after suspecting that the document was forged.

Two Busia businessmen were also arrested and charged in court for “aiding a prisoner to escape” as they had visited the man at the station.
The man had $3,400 (Sh258,400) on him when he was arrested just after crossing the Uganda border.

Senior officers dispatched from the Western provincial headquarters to investigate the escape found that the suspect was given “special treatment” while in custody.

And in Lamu, 11 suspected Somali pirates were arrested yesterday after they tried to hijack a fishing vessel in what is believed to be the first incident where pirates have been intercepted by local security personnel.

“It is true, we have arrested 11 suspects believed to be pirates in Kiunga area,” Coast Criminal Investigation Officer Nyagah Reche said.

More than 100 suspected pirates have been arrested by foreign navies in the Indian Ocean and Gulf of Aden.

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Pastor jailed for marrying school girl

Posted by Administrator on March 19, 2010

A pastor has been jailed for 15 years for marrying a 17-year-old school girl.

The accused, Pastor Charles Odumba Otieno, was also charged with defiling the form three student on diverse dates between December 1 2009 and January 5 this year.

The Aluor Secondary School students failed to report to her school prompting her parents to report the matter to the police who instituted a search and traced her to the pastor’s home.

The accused was arraigned in court and released on bond pending hearing, but court prosecutor Peter Omare said the pastor eloped with the girl again, prompting the court to cancel the bond this month.

Resident Magistrate Bernard Omwansa said the pastor’s actions showed he was intent on keeping the schoolgirl as his wife and said a deterrent sentence was necessary.

Meanwhile the hearing of a case in which a university student has been charged with defilement took place in a magistrate’s chamber following fears that the scores of the students who had jammed the courtroom would intimidate witnesses from testifying against their colleague.

George Kimani, a student at Laikipia University College has denied defiling and sodomising a minor inside a room at Ewaso Hostels at the main campus on March 8, 2010. Kimani also denied stealing the girl’s cellphone worth Ksh 15,000 and Ksh 1,800 in cash.

Intimidating witnesses

cores of students caused a stir as they thronged the Nyahururu courtroom where Senior Resident Magistrate Alice Mong’are was sitting prompting her to adjourn the case to provide for time for the police to call in reinforcement.

Mrs. Monga’re said the students were intimidating witnesses from testifying prompting her to order for extra security detail within the courtroom and its precincts as she adjourned the hearing till afternoon when adequate security measures were in place.

In her testimony, the minor narrated how the accused lured to the hostel claiming he and his wife would accommodate her for the night as they travelled from Western Kenya to Nyahururu at night.

He said the journey was too dangerous and even cited to her an incident where his cousin was allegedly murdered on a section of the road near Nyahururu town in a carjacking incident.

However when they got to the room, Kimani allegedly raped the girl and sodomised her before locking her inside the room until the following morning. forcefully undressed and raped her severally.

The girl reported the matter to the university’s security officers.

The accused was denied bail and will remain in custody until April 24 when hearing of the case resumes.

-KBC

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Care worker helped her husband launder £6m from mortgage scam

Posted by Administrator on March 12, 2010

Ruth Ayinde-Azeez (formerly Ruth Mungai) drove a Bentley, took luxury holidays and had £1.6million in her bank accounts

Ruth Ayinde-Azeez (formerly Ruth Wambui Mungai) drove a Bentley, took luxury holidays and had £1.6million in her bank accounts

A care home assistant who led a life of luxury by helping her crooked husband launder the profits of a £6 million mortgage con was facing jail today.

Ruth Ayinde-Azeez, 26, lived in a six-bedroom house with 12 plasma televisions and drove a Bentley and Land Rover.

She took holidays in Dubai and the south of France, kept £1.6 million in her bank accounts and blew huge sums at expensive bars and restaurants. But her life was funded by crime, Southwark crown court heard.

Her husband Victor led a mortgage fraud gang which plundered nearly £6 million from high street banks in six weeks.

He “bought” 22 houses around the South-East and, with his accomplices, applied for mortgages from high street lenders including Bradford and Bingley and Abbey National. The paperwork was signed off by crooked solicitors.

When Ayinde-Azeez was arrested, she was about to leave the country after her husband texted her a warning that the police were on their way. He is believed to be abroad.

The Kenyan national was told by Judge Martin Beddoe: “It seems to me that I’m going to have to pass on you a significant sentence, without credit for a guilty plea.”

-Source: This is London

Posted in Crime | 6 Comments »

Kenyan girl stabs boyfriend to death in Kampala Campus

Posted by Administrator on March 10, 2010

A KENYAN student of Kampala International University (KIU) is held at Kabalagala Police station for allegedly stabbing her boyfriend to death. Jane Nyiha, a second-year student of bachelor’s of public administration, is accused of stabbing David Musunga Ivita in the throat, causing him to bleed to death.

She was yesterday picked from her room in Kansanga, a Kampala suburb, where she allegedly committed the crime at around 11:00am.

The Police also recovered a knife which she is suspected of having used in the crime.

Musunga, who also comes from Kenya, was a third-year student pursuing a bachelor’s degree in mass communication. He was due to sit his final exams in April and graduate in September. Almost 80% of KIU students are Kenyans.

Musunga died during examination at the university clinic where he had been rushed. The two, who had been staying in the same room, were described as long-time lovers by their landlord, John Male.

“They have been friendly and calm since they rented my house in 2008. Although the boy would drink, he was generally very cool,” he said.

Neighbours reported that trouble started yesterday morning when Musunga returned home drunk at 4:00am. Nyiha declined to open the door for him.

The landlord narrated that Musunga spent almost an hour knocking at the door but his girlfriend only peeped through the window, laughed and ordered him out of her sight.

Musunga slept at the house of a friend, David Mwenda, who is also a Kenyan.
When he returned to his room at 11:00am, a brief quarrel ensued between the two, a neighbour said.

“We heard the boy groaning and wondered what had happened.”
When some neighbours went to check, they said they were shocked to find the boy in a pool of blood.

His girlfriend reportedly dashed to a boda-boda stage to rush the victim to the university clinic where he died on arrival. By press time, the body was still in Nsambya Hospital.

For several hours, Police detectives cordoned off the scene of the crime. They broke the padlock of the deceased’s room and picked blood-stained bed sheets, photographs and a knife among other exhibits.

Other students who knew Nyiha said she was a born-again Christian and not quarrelsome. They described the deceased as a quiet, intelligent youth.

Kansanga residents complained that many of the foreign students at the university’s main campus were rowdy and indisciplined.

“They drink a lot, sparking off conflicts. I often receive complaints from landlords and residents concerning the improper behaviour of Kenyan students,” the LC1 chairperson, Francis Sseguya, said.

He called for collaboration between the Police, the community and university authorities to guarantee security in the area.

Muhammad Ndaula, the university vice-chancellor, regretted the incident but defended the Kenyan students.
The incident is just the latest in a series of murder cases involving students over love and alcoholism.

In 2007, a Kenyan student, Duncan Njogu Kamore, was expelled from Busoga University for stabbing a colleague, Paul Mogaka, after they fought over a girl.

In October 2008, 17-year-old Tadeo Bukye, an S4 student of Mpanga SS in Fort Portal, was stabbed to death by a jealous girlfriend at a school party.

Last year in September, Phiona Mutamba, a student of Makerere University Business School, was stabbed by her boyfriend, also a student at the same school, before he committed suicide at Workers House in the centre of Kampala.

Source: New Vision

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Man Who Killed Former Girlfriend’s Daughter to Die

Posted by Administrator on February 27, 2010

Nairobi — A man who killed a seven-year-old girl after being denied sex by her mother has been sentenced to death.

John Irungu Macharia lost his last chance to save his life when three judges rejected his appeal and upheld the death sentence that had been imposed by Mr Justice Muga Apondi on January 22, 2008.

The jilted lover differed with Catherine Njeri’s mother, Ms Elizabeth Nyawira, a day before he picked up the girl from school, then killed her on March 11, 2005, in Nairobi. His sexual advances had been turned down.

“It is obvious he killed her to punish the mother,” ruled Mr Justice Erastus Githinji, Mr Justice Philip Waki, and Mr Justice Alnashir Visram. “A week later her body was found floating in sewage with broken legs and missing upper teeth. “She was still in her school uniform,” they noted.

Ms Nyawira and the convict had an affair which blossomed between August, 2003, and October 24, 2004, when he attempted to commit suicide. The judges said the appellant visited his former girlfriend on March 10, 2005, and insisted that he sleep in Ms Nyawira’s house.

She refused. When she rejected his advances, he assaulted her in the presence of her cousin, Ms Jane Wanjiku, and her daughter.

He only left after he was told that a security guard would be called to eject him. Ms Nyawira dropped her daughter at school and the convict later picked up the Standard One pupil. That was the last time she was seen alive.

Efforts by her mother, school authorities, and the police to trace her did not yield any results until a local TV station announced that the body of a school girl had been found in a sewer in Pangani.

Daily Nation

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