One
night in 2001, at around 3 am, I drove into an ambush laid out by thugs in a
Nairobi estate. They had laid out a makeshift “roadblock” of huge rocks and the
way they had set it up, you didn’t see it until you turned a corner and you
were almost driving over it.
Luckily,
my instincts took over and I was able to stop just before I was going to hit
the rocks and disable the car. I immediately started reversing furiously in a
bid to get out of the tight corner, and while I was doing that, I saw a bunch
of men armed with what looked to be some kind of crude weapons come out from
behind nearby vibandas.
Suddenly,
I heard a loud bang and the sound of breaking glass before something hit my
face and almost knocked me out. I was able to complete the reverse manoeuvre, and in the
process almost ran over one of the thugs.
I didn’t know what had
struck me because my face went completely numb, I suppose from all the
adrenaline that was coursing through my body at that time. But by the time I
got back on the main road, I knew I’d been seriously wounded. At first, I
thought I’d been shot, but I couldn’t be sure.
But what had actually
happened was that a huge rock had been thrown through the driver’s window and
hit me smack on the face in a bid to disable me and make me an easy target for
either a carjacking or murder.
I could feel the welling of blood in my mouth,
and I begun to spit it out all over the inside of the car. It turned out that I
was also spitting out pieces of broken teeth, glass and rock.
Then I knew shit had
gotten real.
I was bleeding badly and I
needed to get to a hospital before I went into shock from blood loss. I drove
fast and furiously (yes, pun intended) to The Aga Khan Hospital, Nairobi. Long
story short, I stayed at that hospital for three days, during which I underwent
maxillofacial surgery, also referred to in medical terms as “when surgeons try
to repair damage to your face so that women don’t look away in horror while
presumably trying hard to keep down the vomit that’s rising fast to their
throat”.
I had a torn lower lip,
broken teeth and a fractured lower jaw from which they had to remove pieces of
bone they couldn’t fix. I was lucky that not much else was damaged. I was luckier that I’d gotten away with my
life.
In later years, I would be
the victim of two carjacking incidents, the last of which took place this past
weekend.
That wasn’t my first brush
with violent crime. One day, when I was ten or eleven years old, I was leaving
school from holiday tuition when I was accosted by three chokoras, or parking boys (for those readers that aren’t Kenyan,
that’s homeless boys for you). They wanted my shiny new watch that I’d just
bought with some pocket money I’d saved.
Now, that watch was my
first real possession and I really, really liked it. So what did I do? Instead
of handing it over, I tried to explain to these kids why I wasn’t feeling their
vibe, so one of them removed a stained dagger – stained, presumably from all
the stabbings it had done - from his pocket and held the business end against
my stomach. Needless to say, I was unable to tell you the time that evening if
you’d asked me!
In 1997, I was thrown off
the railway bridge between K/South and Umoja estates by four thugs, who then
proceeded to follow me down there and violently robbed me of money, a leather
jacket and brand new shoes. At the end of the ordeal, I had a deep wound in the
head for which I had to get a number of stitches in hospital.
The following year, at my
younger sister’s graduation party, someone fired a gun in a botched robbery at
a nearby eatery. The bullet hit a wall, ricocheted and grazed one of our guests
on the head!
A month or so after that
incident, one of my neighbours drove into the common parking area in the estate
I lived in. The time was 7.30 pm. Two men, one armed with an AK-47 assault
rifle and the other a pistol, approached the car and ordered the occupants out.
The driver complied, but his wife, for reasons no one was able to explain
afterwards, was unable to exit the car.
I could see her husband,
who had been made to lie on the ground pleading with her to get out and let
them have the car. In my mind, this appeared to play on for a long time, though
in reality it was just a couple of minutes. One of the gunmen, the one with the
pistol got into the car and attempted to start the engine. Because it had a cut
out switch, it wouldn’t start. And presumably out of rage, or just pure
douchbaggery, he put the gun to the woman’s head and
Holy
Mother of God
Pulled. The. Trigger!
Just shot her at point
blank range in front of all of us, her neighbours. And then they walked away
like it was just a bad day at the office where someone had forgotten to load
the printer with fresh paper and now everyone was pissed!
I was the first person to
reach her. Her head was lying against the seat’s head rest and I could see the
exit wound on her head. There was blood and white stuff which I assume must
have been fragments of her skull and brain matter. I undid her safety belt, and
together with other people removed her from the car and put her in another. We
then drove as fast as we could to The Aga Khan Hospital (yeah, that hospital
seems to receive its fair share of victims of violent crime).
We knew she was dying; no
one could survive a horrific injury like that, but what the hell were we going
to do? Leave her to die in that car without trying to... I don’t know, do
something?
She was pronounced dead on
arrival.
This was the first violent
killing of another human being that I had ever witnessed, and it shook me to
the core! I could not believe what I
had seen. It just didn’t seem possible that someone could be that merciless.
Oh, and did I mention that
her young twin sons, who were about five years old were watching from a window
in their house? And her daughter, who was just a few months old, was waiting
for her mother so that she could suckle?
Just two weeks ago, I was
woken up at 4 am by the sound of gunshots. They sounded like they were coming
from right outside my gate. My neighbour called me to say that she was scared
and her husband wasn’t home. I told her to gather her kids inside her bedroom, lock
the door and holy shit do not peep outside
your window. You know, just to avoid catching a really bad case of bullet-in-your-face
syndrome. I hear it can really spoil your day!
The fierce exchange of gunfire
went on for an hour and a half (remember this is happening right outside my
gate, really interfering with my ability to go back to sleep!) before it
stopped. Then we all came out of our houses to do a body count, only to
discover to our utter disappointment that only two thugs had been shot.
Apparently, they had
stolen a car elsewhere and had been chased by cops right into our estate, and
because they were not familiar with the area, found themselves completely
blocked and surrounded.
The estate I live in is
not a joke. Everyone there is some kind of security agent, retired, or they
just carry a gun for shits and giggles! Either way, you just don’t f@#&*%g commit crime! It’s kind of
frowned upon.
Anyway, we found one of
the thugs already dead. But the second one, man! This was a stubborn one. He just
wouldn’t go quickly despite having been shot numerous times. He just kept
rolling on the ground, bleeding all over our clean cabro and just simply... not
dying!
We decided to smoke cigarettes
(I don’t smoke) and talk about the Kethi Kilonzo saga while we waited for him
give up. He asked for water, because apparently getting shot all over will make
you really thirsty. One of my neighbours obliged him, but the water came out of
what used to be his stomach and didn’t do him a whole lot of good. Eventually,
he died.
In a rather hilarious
incident, one of my friends found himself riding in the boot of his car twice
in one week! Apparently, the idiots who carjacked him the second time didn’t
get the memo that the deed had already been done to him.
There’s a law against
being taken twice within a span of a few days. There is such a law, right? Right?
***************************************************************************
I really tried to get
appropriate photos for this post, but I just couldn’t find any. The ones I
found were, well... vomit inducing?
Man, you have a hard life bro.......
ReplyDeletereading this, am picturing the whole scenario. Like a movie!!! heee, am kinda shaking man! but good read though
ReplyDelete