Four dead after police fire shots, teargas to disperse crowds at Raila viewing

The body of former Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga who had been receiving treatment in India when he died, arrives at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport in Nairobi, Kenya October 16, 2025. REUTERS/Monicah Mwangi

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Four people were killed in Kenya's capital Nairobi on
Thursday after security forces fired shots and teargas to disperse huge crowds
at a stadium where the body of deceased opposition leader Raila Odinga was
lying in state, local media reported.
Odinga, a major figure for decades in Kenyan politics who
was once a political prisoner and ran unsuccessfully for president five times,
died on Wednesday, aged 80, in India, where he had been receiving medical
treatment.
With thousands of his supporters on the streets from early
morning, chaos erupted when a huge crowd breached a gate of Nairobi's main
stadium, prompting soldiers to fire in the air, a Reuters witness said.
A police source told Reuters that two people were shot dead
at the stadium. KTN News and Citizen TV later said the death toll had increased
to four, with scores of people injured.
After security forces fired shots, police lobbed tear gas to
disperse thousands of mourners, the two broadcasters showed, leaving the
stadium deserted.
Earlier in the day, thousands of mourners briefly stormed
Nairobi's international airport, interrupting a ceremony for President William
Ruto and other officials to receive Odinga's body with military honours.
DEVOTION
Crowds also flooded nearby roads and tried to breach
parliament, where the government had originally scheduled the public viewing.
Though mainly known as an opposition figure, Odinga became
prime minister in 2008 and also struck a political pact with Ruto last year in
a career of shifting alliances.
He commanded passionate devotion among supporters,
especially in his Luo tribe based in western Kenya, many of whom believe he was
cheated of the presidency by electoral fraud.
Odinga's mourners, many of whom were not yet born in 1991
when Kenya became a multi-party democracy, paid tribute to Odinga's efforts as
an activist.
"He fought tirelessly for multi-party democracy, and we
are enjoying those freedoms today because of his struggle," university
student Felix Ambani Uneck told Reuters at the stadium where thousands had gone
on foot and motorbikes.
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