Autopsy confirms Boni Khalwale’s worker was killed by bull, burial set for next week
The burial of Kakamega Senator Boni
Khalwale’s fighter bull caretaker and trainer Kizito Moi Amukune is now set to
take place on Monday after a post-mortem exercise revealed that he died of
injuries resulting from an attack by the animal.
Government
Pathologist Dr. Johansen Oduor who conducted the autopsy allayed fears
surrounding Kizito’s death, confirming Khalwale’s version of events.
Addressing
the media on Saturday, Dr. Oduor ruled out murder allegations which had been
circulating on social media following the incident last week.
“The
late Kizito had injuries on the side of the forehead, on the interior neck and
on the inner thigh of the left leg. The injuries were penetrative and had
features including some bruising around them…they look like injuries caused by
something penetrative but which was blunt, and is in keeping with a horn of an
animal,” he explained.
“We
can conclude that indeed the initial autopsy was correct and it was caused
by an animal rather than what was alleged that it was a knife or something like
that.”
Senator
Khalwale as well as the deceased’s family confirmed the autopsy results,
lamenting over unnecessary time wasted since the incident thereby delaying the
burial.
“I
am glad that Dr. Oduor has now announced a closure. With this, as I pass my
condolences to the family, my community and the bullfighting fraternity, we
will move the remains of Moi tomorrow in the usual manner and we will bury him
on Monday at Malinya,” Khalwale said.
The
revelation comes as a sigh of relief for the family which said they had been
subjected to untold agony.
“I
thank the government for giving us direction so that now we can bury our kin. I’m
appealing to the government to help us with the expenses since we have spent a
lot of time and money and the burial programme is long overdue,” a brother to
the deceased said.
The
47-year-old Kizito was reportedly gored and killed
by Khalwale's decorated fighter bull renowned across Western
Kenya as 'Inasio' at his residence in Shikhuyu village, Kakamega County.
According
to Khalwale, the body was found in the cowshed by another employee while he
went around doing his duties.
Speaking
after the incident, the Senator said the deceased staff had been the caretaker
of all his fighter bulls over the last 20 years.
In
keeping with Luhya traditions, Khalwale then speared and slaughtered the killer
bull.
Following
the death of the caretaker, a popular Kakamega businessman refuted the former
Ikolomani MP’s version of events prompting the lawmaker to postpone the
burial of Moi to allow a probe into the incident.
"Following
wild, baseless, and false claims by some pseudo politicians in Kakamega, I've
today been forced to indefinitely postpone the burial of my trusted fighter
bull caretaker," he wrote on X early this week.
"Meanwhile,
today, I hosted a team of DCI detectives at my Malinya Home for a thorough
fact-finding mission over the unfortunate demise of the late Kizito Moi
Amukune."
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