Sunday, January 5th 2014 at 22:03 GMT +3
Georgia, USA:
A 37-year-old Kenyan
man has been killed in mysterious circumstances in the US just as he was
preparing to relocate home after 15 years abroad.
Eric Kiptui was brutally murdered in
his apartment in Atlanta Georgia, US. The reality is yet to sink in for
Kiptui’s 65-year-old mother that she is not going to see her son alive again.
While holding a picture she took with Kiptui when she visited him in the US in
2006, Sote Chepkuto says she still can’t believe her son is dead. Since she
received information that her son had been killed, the news has kept torturing
her. “No, I can’t believe my son is dead. No, no,” she said as she almost turns
hysterical. It took some few minutes of comfort from Baringo Women
Representative Grace Kiptui who had visited the family home at Rafiki in
Kabarak to bring her back to the conversation. “Look at his house,” she said
pointing at the three bedroomed house a few metres from the family house.
Relocate in April “He had just completed so that when he relocates in April, he
would live there,” said Sote. Kiptui was found murdered in his house on Sunday,
December 29, by unknown people.
The family spokesperson Ambassador
Michael Sergon said they received a call from a Kenyan in the US who broke the
sad news. According to a post by Gotaabgaa Atlanta, an organisation that brings
together Kenyans of Kalenjin community in the US, they were shocked to be
informed of Kiptui’s death in his apartment in Sandy Springs, Georgia on
December 29.
The post says the circumstances
surrounding his death left the Kenyan community and friends of the deceased
astonished. “The circumstances surrounding his death left us completely
astonished. We could not believe that he was gone. We are still extremely
shocked and looking for answers,” read the post. It says the detectives found
Kiptui’s body with bullet wounds in his house and there were no indications
that the killers forced their way into the apartment. “Detectives are still
doing their job but what is clear is that there was no forced entry into
Kiptui’s apartment by those who killed him,” reads the post. The posts adds
that during Kiptui’s stay in the US, he worked extremely hard and he would
always carry himself with dignity and made friends with everyone, a trait that
won him admiration and trust of one elderly White family. “He was gentle and
kind to everyone. At his workplace, he made friends with everyone. In fact, he
found an elderly White family close to his workplace that he quickly made friendship
with. He would go to their house and help them work on the farm, including
planting vegetables.” The group says the White family, having lost their son,
treated Kiptui as one of their own and in 2006, the couple, as an appreciation
of the deceased’s assistance asked him what they could do for him as present.
“Eric requested them to help invite his mother to the US and the family made
arrangements and catered for everything,” read the communication from the
group. And it is this trip which the deceased’s mother recalled when The
Standard visited her at her home in Rafiki, Kabarak. “My son invited me to the
US in 2006 and stayed for over six months. This was the last time I met my son
and we were planning for a big re-union this April when he could have come home
to settle down,” said the distraught mother, while showing pictures she took
with the son during the visit.
“He has always been a humble son
every mother would be proud of and heart-broken when told he is no more. He has
always assisted us and even paid school fees for three of his siblings. To be
told he was killed, you just do not understand why someone should kill such a
good boy,” said the mother. According to Kiptui’s father Chepkuto Cherono, his
son left the country in 1998 for studies. After completion, he decided to look
for a job to assist his family.
“For the last 15 years, we have seen
him work hard to make life better for himself and for us all as a family. It is
quite unfortunate that when things were looking better for him, death came
knocking,” said Cherono, 75. “This farm we are living on, he bought for us and
relocated us from Kerio Valley. We were just starting to prepare for his
homecoming when the news reached us that he was killed,” said Cherono. And in a
twist of events, instead of the family organising a grand welcome for their
son, they are now making arrangements for his funeral. Their son’s body is
currently at West Cobb Funeral home awaiting transportation back home after the
family raises enough money to allow the airlifting of the body. “Already
meetings to organise for fundraising are ongoing. We are appealing to
well-wishers and the Government to chip in to allow the family receive the body
and bring this tragedy to a closure, especially for the parents,” said Baringo
County Women Rep.
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