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Saturday, October 18, 2025
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Heavy security after deadly violence in Kenya

publish time

18/10/2025

publish time

18/10/2025

NBO119
People line up to view the body of former Kenya prime minister Raila Odinga at Kasarani Stadium in Nairobi, Kenya on Oct 16. (AP)

NAIROBI, Kenya, Oct 18, (AP): Heavy security has been deployed to Kenya’s western city of Kisumu ahead of the final public viewing of the body of former Prime Minister Raila Odinga, after five people died in the last two public funeral events. Military officers, regular police and air surveillance teams were present Saturday at the soccer stadium where thousands of mourners stayed overnight awaiting the opportunity to view Odinga’s body.

Odinga was a respected and significant figure in Kenya and beyond, a veteran politician lauded by many, including former US President Barack Obama, for his fight for democracy. He died Wednesday in India at the age of 80 and is expected to be buried Sunday at his rural home in Bondo in western Kenya. 
Police fired live bullets and tear gas, killing three people at a soccer stadium Thursday when a confrontation ensued during the first public viewing.

Odinga’s supporters, known for their passion and resilience, have been turning out by the thousands since his body arrived in the country Thursday. On Friday, a stampede occurred shortly after dignitaries left the venue of the state funeral service, leaving two people dead and 163 others injured. Odinga’s widow, Ida, had appealed during the service for Kenyans to mourn peacefully.

His brother, Oburu, called on mourners not to give police any reason to use tear gas or force. “Raila should not be teargassed in death. He has been teargassed enough when he was alive. Please let us not cause a situation where he is teargassed again,” he said. Odinga ran for Kenya’s presidency five times over three decades, and although he never succeeded in becoming president, he is revered for a life of activism that helped steer Kenya toward becoming a vibrant multiparty democracy.