The murder of an Olympic marathon runner has "highlighted a horrifying trend" in Kenya, said The Sunday Times. Rebecca Cheptegei (pictured above), Uganda's marathon record holder and a runner in this summer's Paris Games, died of severed burns last week in Eldoret, western Kenya. Dickson Ndiema, her ex-partner, had doused her with gasoline and set her alight as she and her young daughters were collecting clothes from their washing line.
Ndiema, who accidentally set himself on fire, also died of his injuries. But his murder of Cheptegei is "a grimly familiar occurrence" in Kenya, where successful women athletes are targeted for their wealth and challenge to gender norms, the Times said.
Cheptegei, 33, is at least the third elite woman athlete killed by a male partner or ex-partner in Kenya since 2021, the CBC said. Agnes Tirop, a 25-year-old Olympic long-distance runner, was stabbed to death in her home in Iten in 2021. Her husband was charged with her murder. Kenyan-born runner Damaris Mutua, 28, was found strangled in Iten in 2022. Her partner fled and is still wanted for her murder. "We are failing our women," said Zaina Kombo of Amnesty International Kenya.
More than 500 Kenyan women were killed between 2016 and 2023 — nearly two-thirds by their partners or ex-partners, according to Africa Data Hub. This year thousands of women all over Kenya protested against the "epidemic of femicide" after a series of gruesome murders.
Local rights groups have called on the government to declare a national emergency and define femicide as a crime distinct from murder, said the BBC. Despite Kenya's already "robust laws against gender-based violence, most perpetrators go unpunished." |