President Uhuru Kenyatta and Deputy President William Ruto welcome
Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari on arrival at Eldoret International
Airport, Uasin Gishu County on January 27, 2016.
Eldoret was Wednesday sucked by an unprecedented whirlwind of
protocol as three presidents landed for a requiem service for Kenya
Defence Forces.
Host President Uhuru Kenyatta and his
deputy William Ruto welcomed Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari at the
Eldoret International Airport early afternoon, shortly after Somalia’s
Head of State Hassan Sheikh Mohamud had landed at the same airport.
The
Somalia President was received by Mr Ruto and travelled by road to the
Moi Barracks, where the inter-denominational prayers for the Kenyan
troops killed in the January 15 attack on their El-Adde base in Somalia
were being held, while Presidents Kenyatta and Buhari flew from the
airport to the barracks.
President Kenyatta arrived at
12.30 p.m with President Buhari landing at 2.35 p.m with his advance
delegation having arrived an hour earlier in another aircraft.
President
Mohamud, who landed at the Eldoret airport at 11.10a.m, just 10 minutes
after Mr Ruto’s arrival at the airport, briefly held talks with members
of the Parliamentary Committee on Defence and Foreign Relations before
meeting potential investors at Eldoret’s Boma Inn hotel.
Somalia President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud
received by Deputy President William Ruto when he arrived at Eldoret
International Airport on January 27, 2016. PHOTO | DPPS
At
the Moi Barracks, security was tight with journalists asked to assemble
at the Sirikwa Hotel in Eldoret at 11a.m before being shepherd to the
barracks, about 25 kilometres away, by uniformed military officers.
The journalists, clergy and family members all underwent through body searches and security checks at the main gate.
And
once inside the barracks, journalists were not allowed to access the
survivors of the Al-Shabaab attack and were gathered at a secluded area.
KDF flags were flown at half-mast all around the barracks with Kenya, Nigeria and Somalia flags at full mast.
Armed
soldiers, including those in armoured vehicles, were stationed at
strategic positions inside and outside the barracks as snipers kept
vigil atop surrounding buildings and along the busy Eldoret-Kitale
highway.
A team of choirs, including one from the Moi
Barracks Primary School, along with children of some of the slain
soldiers consoled the mourners with their well-rehearsed hymns, while
other recited poems in praise of the gallant soldiers.
DNA SAMPLES
The
prayers were led by, among others, Bishop Philip Anyolo, the chairman
of the Kenya Conference of Catholic Bishops, who represented the head of
the Catholic Church in Kenya, John Cardinal Njue.
A group of retired soldiers, including Major (Rtd) John Seii, were also present.
The government is yet to reveal the exact number of casualties in the January 15 attack.
Once
identified, their names will be etched in a plaque at the Moi Barracks’
main gate alongside the names of Eldoret’s 9th Kenya Rifles soldiers
killed in action in 2011 and 2012.
President Kenyatta
and Buhari along with Kenya’s Chief of Defence Forces Samson Mwathethe
landed at the barracks in three helicopters at around 4:10pm to kick off
the formal part of the programme.
President Buhari is
on a three-day State visit to Kenya and will on Thursday hold private
talks with President Kenyatta, before a bilateral meeting at State
House, Nairobi.
Members of affected families who spoke to the Nation said
some of them were yet to hear from their kin who were in Somalia and
feared for their fate. The families of the missing officers have since
submitted their DNA samples.
Lorna Kosgei from
Kapseret in Uasin Gishu County said she last spoke with her husband of
11 years Abraham Kimeli Kosgei, a KDF sergeant on January 6, but was yet
to hear from him since then.
His phone has since gone off.
“I
only hope he is safe wherever he is. The children have been asking me
where their father is and I don’t have the answers,” said the mother of
three while fighting back tears.
Report by Elias Makori, Wycliffe Kipsang, Stanley Kimuge, Barnabas Bii, Dennis Lubanga and Gerald Bwisa.
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