IN
THIS WORLD WE HAVE OUR TROUBLES
When Mark Kipyego Sugut, 32,
sent his relatives to represent him in dowry negotiations, nothing had prepared him for tragedy.
Sugut asked his mother, Milka Chesumei, to lead
an engagement party of nine to Mihu, Bungoma District, to seek fiancee, Diana Khaira’s hand in marriage.
Sugut, who is from a humble family,
stayed home, as the dowry costs would have been higher if he was present during the negotiations.
"According to the customs of my fiancee’s
Tachoni community, I would have been compelled to give more in dowry if I was there," he said.
The customs, however, allow relatives to represent
the suitor.
It
was Tuesday, September 2, when Sugut’s mother, his brother, Daniel Kogo and his wife, Rosebella, and two sisters, Salina
Tuwei and Rael Chepkemoi, prepared for the big day. They were joined by Sugut’s five neighbours whose assistance Sugut
had sought to help the family in the dowry negotiations.
"Since we did not have money to hire a vehicle, we escorted them to the main Eldoret-Webuye
highway to board a bus to Bungoma," said Sugut.
Sugut and his younger sister, Hellen Rotich, stayed home praying for good news of fruitful
negotiations between the two families.
"I communicated with them on their mobile phones, to find out if they had arrived well and on
time," says Sugut.
The engagement party arrived safely at Mihu and got down to the business of the day.
We have a wife
"I called again at about
2pm and my mother told me they were concluding the talks," he says.
He went on: "At 5pm, I called again and my mother was so overjoyed. She told me they
had found a wife for me. I was so happy."
Because it was late, Sugut’s in-laws asked two of their family members to escort
the engagement party back home.
"When they got to Webuye, they called me to say there were no buses heading to Eldoret as it was
late," says Sugut.
But the 11 members of the engagement party caught the eye of a matatu crew, which offered to transport them although
they had concluded the day’s business.
They boarded the vehicle and called Sugut to say they had been lucky to get a matatu.
"They asked us to meet them
at a junction on the Webuye-Eldoret highway since they would arrive around 8pm," says Sugut.
Sugut and his sister, Hellen, waited in vain
for the party and at 8pm, they got apprehensive and decided to call.
After making frantic calls without response, Sugut started suspecting something was amiss.
"I informed families of
the neighbours who had accompanied my family," he said.
They would, however, receive a chilling telephone call from a Good Samaritan who broke
the distressing news that the engagement party had been involved in a serious accident.
voice of the caller
"I was shocked. My knees
weakened and I almost collapsed," says a distraught Sugut who pauses as if hearing the voice of the caller being replayed.
Accompanied by his uncles, Sugut
hitched a ride to the accident spot.
"I did not know what to expect. I was anxious and at the same time afraid of what lay ahead,"
he said.
But
on arrival, Sugut and his uncles were met with the devastating reality that only his sister, Rael, had survived the accident.
The accident occurred near Kaburengu
trading centre, a few kilometres from Webuye town.
Bungoma OCPD Maurice Matano blamed a stalled tractor, which had been abandoned on the road,
for the accident.
The public transport vehicle Sugut’s relatives were travelling in, tried to avoid hitting the stationery tractor
before it collided head on with an oncoming matatu.
With tears filling his eyes, Sugut painfully says he is yet to come to terms with the tragedy
that befell him on a day he was supposed to be celebrating.
The driver of the tractor, the OCPD said, did not put any sign on the road to warn other
motorists of a stalled vehicle ahead.
Matano also said the two matatus involved in the accident could have been over speeding judging from
the mangled wreckage of the vehicles.
He said five men and eight women died on the spot. Two other victims, a man and a woman, died as doctors
at the Webuye hospital attended to them.
With tears filling his eyes, Sugut painfully says he is yet to come to terms with the tragedy that
befell him on a day he was supposed to be celebrating.
"I have lost my mother who was the sole bread winner of the family. My brother and
his wife who perished have also left orphans," he said.
Fresh grave
Sugut also said that following the tragedy; his fiancÈe went into shock and was
rushed to Lugulu Mission Hospital in Bungoma.
"It has been a trying time for me, making arrangements to bury those who perished
and at the same time taking care of those in hospital," he says.
The family, however, is grateful for the assistance by Mosop MP David Koech and Nandi North
DC Fredrick Ndambuki, who came to their aid.
"The two organised a harambee that raised Sh400,000 and provided us with transport
and food for the mourners," Sugut says.
Staring at his mother’s fresh grave, he adds: "Without their support, we would
not have been able to foot the funeral expenses."