Mrs Christine Obondi, mother of Lydia Akoth, who was killed in Garissa
University College by terrorists last week, mourns her daughter at her
home in Kisumu. PHOTO | TONNY OMONDI |
NATION MEDIA GROUP
At 6.54am on Thursday last week, Mrs Christine Obondi received
an SMS from her daughter, a second year student at Garissa University
College.
“The message said gunmen had attacked the
institution and started shooting people,” Mrs Obondi, a teacher in
Kisumu, told the Nation yesterday at her home in Otonglo as she recalled
the seven-hour agony she endured before her 21-year-old daughter, Lydia
Akoth, was shot dead by terrorists the day before Good Friday.
About
an hour after Lydia sent the text message, she called her mother to
tell her that she was hiding in a room in the girls’ hostel with five
other female students.
Between 11am and noon, Lydia
called both her father and mother and told them she was safe but
terrified as she could hear gunshots within her hostel.
At
about 12.45 pm, Mrs Obondi tried to call her daughter but the phone
rang unanswered several times, prompting her to send a text message.
Lydia replied asking her mother not to call her because the gunmen were near her room.
The late Lydia Akoth. PHOTO | COURTESY
At 1.30pm, her father, Mr James Obondi, called. This time, Lydia was screaming, saying she was about to be shot.
“Dad our lives are at the mercy of Al-Shabaab. Don’t call me again. Bye,” she told him.
Before
they could finish the conversation, one the attackers snatched the
phone from her and talked to Mr Obondi, telling him that that was the
last time he was speaking to his daughter.
“I talked to
one of the Al-Shabaab. There was a language barrier since they spoke in
Somali language. The only words I had were “mnafiki wewe! (you
hypocrite!),” said Mr Obondi.
TRAUMA
Mr Obondi, a chemistry teacher at Lions High School in Kisumu, said the worst part has been the trauma of identifying the body of his firstborn daughter, whose face was disfigured by the bullet.
Mr Obondi, a chemistry teacher at Lions High School in Kisumu, said the worst part has been the trauma of identifying the body of his firstborn daughter, whose face was disfigured by the bullet.
“With
the help of my other daughter and fingerprints, we were able to
identify the body of Lydia. She loved wearing bangles and this also
helped us identify her easily,” said Mr Obondi, who was in Nairobi
waiting to take Lydia’s body to Kisumu. Many families of the 148 victims
will be doing that between today and tomorrow.
Mrs
Obondi, who teaches music at Monao Teachers Training College, a private
institution in Kisumu, believes her daughter would have been saved if
security forces had responded faster to the attack.
According
to her, the nearly seven hours it took, from the time Lydia first
informed them of the danger she was in and the moment she was shot dead,
security forces would have saved her and many other students.
“I last saw her in January,” she said of their last meeting.
“We
communicated two weeks before the attack and she told me that they
would break for two weeks for holiday, after which she would proceed for
her teaching practice.”
Unknown to her, this was not to be.
Lydia’s family is not alone in mourning. Four other families from Busia County also lost their sons and daughters.
Milton
Mukhwana from Bulanda in Matayos Sub County, Ruth Esiromo from Teso
North, Peter Magio Mulindiro from Bunyala and Obedi Okumu Okodoi from
Teso South, were among the 142 students killed by terrorists who did not
discriminate between men and women, unlike in past attacks at the Coast
where they only targeted men.
According to Mukhwana’s
brother, Isaac Hamisi, the student last sent a text message to his
grandfather at 5.47am on the ill-fated Thursday.
“Grandpa,
we have been attacked by Al-Shabaab. We are in deep trouble,” the
message said. It would turn out to be his last words to his family. His
body was positively identified at Chiromo mortuary on Monday.
Magio, the other victim, hailed from Mundere village in Bunyala Sub County. He was a first year student pursuing of Education.
Identified the body
Identified the body
His
fisherman father, Mr Okello Mulindiro, said that although relatives had
positively identified the body, the government was yet to release it.
“We want the government to fast-track the process so that I can bury my son,” he said.
“We want the government to fast-track the process so that I can bury my son,” he said.
Like other families, they too are seeking closure after the heinous attack.
Busia Knut Executive Secretary Mark Oseno sent his condolences and those of teachers from the region to the affected families.
“It is sad and shocking to lose 147 intellectuals,” Mr Oseno said and asked the government to take measures to improve security.
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