Two dead in stampede at Raila Odinga's State funeral

Kenyan Police and Military Officers attempt to control crowds as supporters and mourners surge forward to get a glimpse of Kenya’s opposition leader and former Prime Minister Raila Odinga's body which lay in state for public viewing during his State Funeral in Nairobi on October 17, 2025. PHOTO|AFP

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Two people died and dozens were injured in a stampede at the
state funeral of Kenya's revered opposition leader, Raila Odinga, on Friday as
crowds rushed to see his coffin, Doctors Without Borders said.
It came a day after at least three people were killed when
security forces opened fire to disperse a crowd that had gathered to see
Odinga's body in a separate ceremony.
Odinga, 80, died from a suspected heart attack at a health
clinic in southern India on Wednesday, triggering a huge outpouring of grief
for a man known affectionately as "Baba" (father) by many Kenyans.
Friday's state funeral began calmly at Nairobi's Nyayo
stadium, with President William Ruto telling the crowd that Odinga "walked
among us as a man but also charged among us as a movement for change, a
movement for justice... for a better and greater Kenya."
Moments later, a surge of mourners trying to reach the
coffin on the pitch turned deadly.
AFP journalists saw people trampled underfoot, leaving some
with broken bones or difficulty breathing.
Doctors Without Borders, also known as Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), said emergency responders "attended to 163 patients and referred 34 others for further care".
"Most injuries involved blunt trauma and fractures.
Tragically, two lives were lost in the stampede," MSF said in a statement.
Arguably the most important political figure of his
generation in Kenya, Odinga served as prime minister from 2008 to 2013 but
never succeeded in winning the presidency despite five attempts.
But he outlasted many rivals and is credited as a major
player in returning Kenya to multi-party democracy in the 1990s and overseeing
the widely praised constitution of 2010.
"I have freedom of speech because of Raila... I'm here
because he is the father," said Paul Oloo, a supporter at the funeral.
There were also chaotic scenes on Thursday as Odinga's body
was repatriated from India and taken to another stadium on the outskirts of
Nairobi to be viewed by mourners.
As huge crowds surged towards a VIP gate, security forces
opened fire, killing at least three people, according to prominent rights group
VOCAL Africa based on information from the city morgue.
It was not clear if the security forces fired directly into
the crowd or used live rounds. Autopsies are due on Tuesday.
AFP met families of the victims at the city morgue on Friday
and saw photos of the bodies that appeared to show bullet wounds.
"He was not disorderly in any way but he was
shot," said the brother-in-law of one victim, Vincent Otieno Ogutu.
Another victim was named as Evans Kiche. The third has yet
to be identified.
"The excessive use of force against mourners is
totally unwarranted," said Hussein Khalid, head of VOCAL Africa, at the
morgue.
"We are calling on the police to exercise utmost
restraint... We don't want to see more deaths associated with this
funeral," he added.
Odinga's body will next travel to western Kenya, his
family's home region, where more huge crowds are expected on Saturday, before a
private burial service on Sunday.
His death leaves a leadership vacuum in the opposition, with
no obvious successor as Kenya heads into a potentially volatile election in
2027.
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