KABARAK, Kenya Feb 12 – Thousands of mourners started arriving at the Kabarak University as early as 4am Wednesday for the burial of former President Daniel arap Moi.
But they had to wait until 4 am for the gates to be opened.
Many said they traveled from various parts, some as far as 300 kilometers to attend the burial of Kenya’s second and longest-serving Head of State who ruled from 1978 to 2002, with an iron fist.
Each mourner was given half a loaf of bread, a soda, water and the funeral program on entry.
“We’re here to bid goodbye to our leader,” Mathew Koech said.
Some mourners travelled to Kabarak on Tuesday and spent the night outside Kabarak University, just to ensure they do not miss out.
Mercy Chepkoech, 17, told Capital FM News that she travelled with her grandmother from Olenguruone to Kabarak covering 94 kilometers, just to attend the state funeral which she described as historic.
“I don’t want to miss a chance to say goodbye to Mzee,” she told Capital News, holding her 5-month-old baby who obviously knows nothing about Moi, whose 24-year rule saw Kenya become a one-party state where critical voices were ruthlessly crushed. He died on February 4 aged 95.
The three hope to join over 30,000 mourners expected at the funeral service, which will be attended by President Uhuru Kenyatta as well as local and international dignitaries.
We caught up with Chepkoech, sitting on a Maasai shawl they spread on the ground.
“Moi means everything to my life,” she said, and revealed that they spent Sh500 each for bus fare.
Her grandmother Esther Chemutai, just stared blankly at space, and could be heard asking “Where are we going to stay here.”
Chepkoech told Capital News that they are attending Moi’s funeral service “because the place we call home is a piece of land we were given by Moi when he was president.”
Both Chemutai and Chepkoech works at a tea farm owned by the former President.
“We will sleep here,” Chepkoech told her grandmother, pointing to the shawl spread on the ground.
And they’re certain they will not get a chance to meet Moi’s immediate family “to pass our condolences but the fact that we are here attending the [funeral] service is satisfying to us.”
They are among dozens who traveled for kilometers, some from Moi’s maternal home in Baringo County among other parts of the country, to witness history.
-Kabarak glued on Television-
Thousands of Kenyans on Tuesday gathered to mourn Moi, the country’s longest-serving leader, as a week of mourning climaxed with a state funeral.
Mourners began gathering at a national athletics stadium before dawn to pay their respects.
Moi, who towered over Kenya between 1978 and 2002, lay in state for three days in parliament, with tens of thousands of people filing past.
On Tuesday morning, he was taken on a gun carriage draped in Kenya’s flag through the streets of Nairobi to the crowded Nyayo national stadium flanked by soldiers.
President Uhuru Kenyatta, who opened the memorial with the national anthem, called Moi “a champion of Pan-Africanism.”
– Forgiveness –
The cortege entered the stadium flanked by long lines of red-coated soldiers and a brass band playing marching tunes and Christian hymns, their boots glinting in the bright sun.
“The Last Salute”, Citizen TV wrote. “Fare thee well, 1924-2020” national broadcaster KBC headlined.
Former opponent Raila Odinga, who was jailed for several years under Moi, called the late leader a “greater fighter” but who had eventually accepted multiparty politics.
“I was one of the victims… but he was also forgiving like I am also forgiving, and we made our peace, and we shook hands, and then worked together,” Odinga said.
“We remember the good things that he did,” he added.
Those targeted by his regime included human rights and environmental activists, including the writer Ngugi wa Thiong’o and the future Nobel Peace Prize winner Wangari Maathai.
Moi was however praised for keeping Kenya a relative haven of peace during a chaotic period in East Africa which saw the genocide in Rwanda and civil wars in Burundi and Somalia.
His later return — under significant pressure — to multiparty elections in 1992, and peaceful handover of power to opposition leader Mwai Kibaki in 2002 also won him some praise.
– Loved and feared –
Vice President William Ruto, who comes from the same Kalenjin people as Moi, mourned a “father of the nation.”
Several foreign leaders from regional nations attended the ceremony, including Djibouti’s Ismail Omar Guelleh, South Sudan’s Salva Kiir and Uganda’s Yoweri Museveni.
Ethiopian President Sahle-Work Zewde and former Tanzanian presidents, Jakaya Kikwete and Benjamin Mkapa, spoke at the ceremony to offer their condolences to Kenya.
“One of the gallant leaders of this great country,” Rwandan President Paul Kagame said.
The body of the late president will be buried on Wednesday in his home area of Kabarak, 220 kilometres (135 miles) northwest of Nairobi.
The usually congested and noisy streets of Nairobi were quiet, with Tuesday declared a national holiday.
While those at the stadium had come to pay their respects to a ruler they revered, others in Kenya remembered a man that they had long feared.
Moi’s 24-year rule saw critical voices crushed, corruption becomes endemic and tribal divisions stoked and turn bloody.
Moi was however praised for keeping Kenya a relative haven of peace during a chaotic period in east Africa.