Thousands of mourners in Uganda on Saturday paid their respects to Rebecca Cheptegei, the Olympic athlete who died last week in Kenya after her partner set her on fire.
The military funeral took place in a remote town near the Kenyan border.
Military officers played a prominent role in the funeral, because Cheptegei held the rank of sergeant in Uganda’s army, Ugandan military spokesman Brigadier Felix Kulayigye said, adding that she deserved a “gun salute that befits her rank.”
Photo: AFP
Athletes, family members and others delivered their eulogies before thousands in a sports field in the district of Bukwo. Many condemned domestic violence.
Cheptegei, who was 33, was buried at her father’s homestead.
She died after 80 percent of her body had burns in the attack by Dickson Ndiema, who doused her in gasoline at her home in western Kenya’s Trans-Nzoia County on Sept. 3. Ndiema sustained 30 percent burns on his body and later succumbed to his injuries.
They quarreled over a piece of land the athlete bought in Kenya, a report filed by the local chief said.
The gasoline attack strengthened calls for the protection of female runners facing exploitation and abuse in the East African country.
Cheptegei’s body was returned to Uganda on Friday in a somber procession following a street march by dozens of activists in the western Kenyan town of Eldoret who demanded an end to violence against female athletes.
Cheptegei is the fourth female athlete to have been killed by her partner in Kenya in a worrying pattern of gender-based violence over the past few years. Kenya’s high rates of violence against women have prompted several marches this year.
Ugandan officials have condemned the attack, demanding justice for Cheptegei. Ugandan First Lady Janet Museveni, who also serves as the country’s minister of education and sports, described the attack as “deeply disturbing.”
Ugandan National Council of Sports Chairman Don Rukare in a statement on X said that the attack was “a cowardly and senseless act that has led to the loss of a great athlete.”
Four in 10 women, or an estimated 41 percent of dating or married Kenyan women, have experienced physical or sexual violence perpetrated by their current or most recent partner, the Kenya Demographic and Health Survey in 2022 showed.
Many Ugandan athletes train across the border in Kenya, an athletics powerhouse with better facilities. Some of the region’s best runners train together at a high-altitude center in Kenya’s west.
Cheptegei competed in the women’s marathon at the Paris Olympics, finishing in 44th place, less than a month before the attack. She had represented Uganda at other competitions.
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