ELDORET, Kenya
Dickson Ndiema, the man accused of setting Ugandan Olympian Rebecca Cheptegei on fire, leading to her death, is dead.
Sources at an Eldoret
hospital on Tuesday told our correspondent that Ndiema, who was
admitted to the facility with burn wounds, breathed his last on Monday night.
Ndiema was accused of
attacking Cheptegei at her home in Trans Nzoia, western Kenya, over an
unresolved land dispute.
He allegedly ambushed the
marathoner as she returned home, before dousing her with petrol and setting her
alight.Dickson Ndiema
Efforts by the athlete to save
her life were unsuccessful as her attacker continued to douse her with more
petrol.
Cheptegei sustained more than
80 percent burns, according to medical teams that attended to her at Moi
Teaching and Referral Hospital (MTRH), while Ndiema sustained over 30 percent
burns.
Cheptegei, 33, will be buried
on Saturday in Uganda.
Cheptegei, who finished 44th
in Paris, is the third elite sportswoman to be killed in Kenya since October
2021. Her death has put the spotlight on domestic violence in the country,
particularly within its running community.
Rights groups say female
athletes in Kenya, where many international runners train in the high-altitude
highlands, are at a high risk of exploitation and violence at the hands of men
drawn to their prize money, which far exceeds local incomes.
“Justice really would have
been for him to sit in jail and think about what he had done. This is not
positive news whatsoever,” said Viola Cheptoo, co-founder of Tirop’s Angels, a
support group for survivors of domestic violence in Kenya’s athletic community.
“The shock of Rebecca’s death
is still fresh,” Ms Cheptoo told Reuters.
Cheptoo co-founded Tirop’s
Angels in memory of Agnes Tirop, a rising star in Kenya’s highly competitive
athletics scene, who was found dead in her home in the town of Iten in October
2021, with multiple stab wounds to the neck.
Ibrahim Rotich, Tirop’s
husband, was charged with her murder and has pleaded not guilty. The case is
ongoing.
Nearly 34 percent of Kenyan
girls and women aged 15-49 years have suffered physical violence, according to
government data from 2022, with married women at particular risk. The 2022
survey found that 41 percent of married women had faced violence.
Globally, a woman is killed by
someone in her own family every 11 minutes, according to a 2023 UN Women study.
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