The couple & kids PHOTO CREDIT | ERIC WAINAINA |
A couple from Nairobi, Kenya is living in agony after its three
children, two sons and a daughter, went missing on Sunday evening.
The children, Peter Kagetha, Samuel Kagunya and Beatrice Wanjiku, aged
11, four and one-and-a-half, are reported to have left their home at
Ngomongo area at around 7pm and efforts by their parents to trace them
have been futile.
Their parents, Ms Beth Wanjiku and Mr Paul Mbugua, said they had left
the children at home in the morning, but when they returned at around
8pm, they did not find them in the house which was very
unusual.
After inquiring from the neighbours, Ms Wanjiku, said they were informed
that the minors were spotted leaving the compound together, but no one
cared to ask where they were going.
According to Ms Wanjiku, there was nothing out of the ordinary that
could have triggered suspicion among their neighbours since there were
many children playing outside, adding that some of them thought that
they were heading to a nearby shop.
DEVASTATED
The neighbours, she said, told her that Kagetha was carrying the youngest while Kagunya was walking behind them.
“It’s normal for children to play, walk around and go to a nearby shop
at that hour, and therefore there was nothing that could have aroused
the neighbours’ suspicious,” a devastated Ms Wanjiku said.
By then, Ms Wanjiku and her husband were hoping that their children
would return home, but their hopes dwindled after it emerged that
Kagetha may have taken off out of anger after he was scolded by their
neighbours for locking the youngest of them inside the house for hours.
“I was informed that after we left for work in the morning, he locked
his one and a half-year old sibling from 9am to 4pm. The neighbours
overheard her crying inside the house and that they confronted him but
he was unhappy,” he said.
The couple embarked on frantic efforts to trace the children, including
contacting their relatives and friends to inquire whether they have gone
to any of them but all their efforts have been in vain.
REPORTED TO POLICE
The following day, they were informed that the previous night someone
had spotted three children who had a similar description to theirs
walking kilometers away.
According to Ms Wanjiku, it’s not the first time the Kagetha is taking
off from home after being lectured for misbehaving, saying sometimes he
disappears for a week but her biggest worry is that this time he took
his siblings along.
“He doesn’t like being asked to do anything including the household
chores and every time he is scolded he takes off and only returns after a
few days or every a week. I am afraid that the other children, who I
was told left without sweaters and shoes, might run into danger,” she
said.
“He sleeps in the streets, and only returns home if he runs short of
food. My fear is that with the other siblings with him, they might fall
in the hands of Good Samaritans, and he may never have any reason to
come back home because that has always been his wish.
Source- NairobiNews