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Relatives pay their respects to Ugandan athlete who died after her partner set her on fire

Relatives pay their respects to Ugandan athlete who died after her partner set her on fire

Dozens of mourners in Uganda paid their respects to Rebecca Cheptegei, the Olympic athlete who died in Kenya last week after her partner set her on fire.

On Saturday, local leaders and others gathered at the local government hall ahead of her burial at her family home in a village near the Kenyan border.

Cheptegei died after her body was burned to 80% in an attack by Dickson Ndiema, who doused her with petrol at her home in Trans-Nzoia County in western Kenya on September 3. Ndiema suffered 30% burns and died later.

According to a report from the local leader, they got into a fight over a piece of land the athlete had bought in Kenya.

The horrific petrol attack shocked many and reinforced calls for protection of female runners who face exploitation and abuse in the East African country.

Attendees and family members pay respects at the funeral of 33-year-old Ugandan marathon runner Rebecca Cheptegei at the community hall in Bukwo village, Uganda, on September 14, 2024.

Attendees and family members pay respects at the funeral of 33-year-old Ugandan marathon runner Rebecca Cheptegei at the community hall in Bukwo village, Uganda, on September 14, 2024.

Cheptegei’s body was brought back to Uganda in a somber procession on Friday after dozens of activists marched in the western Kenyan city of Eldoret, demanding an end to physical violence against female athletes.

Cheptegei, who was 33, is the fourth female athlete to be murdered by her partner in Kenya in a pattern of gender-based violence in recent years. The high rate of violence against women in Kenya has led to several marches this year.

Ugandan officials have condemned the attack and are calling for justice for Cheptegei. Janet Museveni, who serves as Uganda’s Minister of Education and Sports, described the attack as “deeply disturbing.”

Don Rukare, chairman of the Uganda National Sports Council, said in a statement on X that the attack was “a cowardly and senseless act that has resulted in the loss of a great athlete.”

The 2022 Kenya Demographic and Health Survey found that four in 10 Kenyan women who are in a relationship or married have experienced physical or sexual violence by their current or most recent partner.

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 centre in western Kenya.

Cheptegei competed in the women’s marathon at the Paris Olympics, finishing 44th, less than a month before the attack. She represented Uganda in other events.