News
Families in desperate search for loved ones
Top from left: Jacquline Atieno (shopper), Violet Adego (staff), Ezekiel Macharia (staff) and Rebecca Mukolwe (shopper). Bottom from left: Peter Serry (shopper), Nicholas Mwema (staff) and Terry Gacheri.
Posted Thursday, January 29 2009 at 20:59
Forty people were on Thursday reported missing by their families following the tragic fire at a supermarket in downtown Nairobi, according to rescue services. At Kenyatta National Hospital, an employee died of spinal injuries suffered when he jumped from the first floor of the burning shop.
The Kenya Red Cross emergency team received reports of missing persons, including a two-year-old, and counselled distraught relatives at a trauma centre set up outside Nakumatt Downtown at the junction of Kimathi Street and Kenyatta Avenue that was gutted by a 3pm inferno on Wednesday.
Red Cross secretary-general Abbas Gullet they had registered names of 40 people who are still missing. He said of the missing people, five are staff of the supermarket that exploded into a ball of fire.
“We have registered 40 cases of missing people. Their relatives have been to our tent at the Stanley Hotel and we are continuing to counsel them,” Mr Gullet told the Nation at the scene of the fire accident.
He said a team of rescuers from the police, the military and other agencies would enter the building and recover the bodies throughout the night. The site was fenced off in the evening with iron sheets in preparation for recovery mission. Nakumatt management issued a statement on Wednesday evening claiming all its customers and staff were safe.
By the time of going to press, rescuers had still not entered the building due to safety concerns. Many survivors reported having seen people trapped inside. The operation to put out the fire was still going on 24 hours after it broke out.
Experts from Kenya Army, National Disaster Management, Police Scenes of Crime, Ministry of Public Works and Nairobi Fire brigade and Knight Support were on site on Thursday. Many relatives said those missing made desperate calls, saying they were trapped in the building. They waited outside the store, sometimes breaking down, but still hoping that their loved ones were alive and well.
The Red Cross team said a man, who was not immediately identified but who had escaped by jumping out of the building, had died of his injuries. He was among several survivors who escaped by crawling through the ceiling on to the roof.
Mr Thiagarajan Ramamurthy, the Nakumatt director of operations who on Wednesday issued the premature all-safe statement, yesterday said five of his staff were unaccounted for.
“By Wednesday evening I had information that all people had been rescued, but according to information from the Kenya Red Cross team, several people are missing. We are saddened by this incident and grieve with the families. We are not able to see anything now to confirm, but we hope that the fire will be put out soon,” he said during a visit to the site.
On Thursday evening, the government gave the go-ahead for the debris to be cleared, paving the way for a recovery. A man desperately looking for his wife has been camping at the scene since Wednesday afternoon. He appealed to the shop boss to hasten the rescue operation.
“Please don’t prolong our suffering. We want to know if our relatives were there or not, even if they are dead,” he said.
Been shopping
The Red Cross Disaster Preparedness Operations manager Davis Ogogo said that 26 people who were reported to have either been shopping or working in the supermarket had been reported missing. He said 30 trauma workers were on hand to offer counselling and first aid to those in need.
Among those who reported a missing relative was University of Nairobi staffer Simeon Odera, who said his sister Janet Odera, 40, was in the burning building.
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Submitted by naisy00Posted January 31, 2009 10:12 AM
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Submitted by kasarani
Kenya has become a place where tragedy has to happen before Govt Officials stop counting there huge allowances and greed to address the safety and well being of the people it's supposed to protect.The truth of the matter is money must have changed hands with the directors of Nakumatt,however l hope our corrupt Govt will be in a position to compensate the bereaved families for sleeping on the job!
Posted January 31, 2009 09:21 AM -
Submitted by agutunation
I'm just wondering that during street riots/protests, water engines are rushed very fast to the streets. Where are the fire/water engines during disasters? During tragedies, we learn lessons. What is the department of Physical planning doing to ensure that physical structures in the city have the required safety standards? Physical structures are erected in a manner that during any tragedy, there is hardly space for escape. Spaces meant for resting have been grubbed due to greed. Now Kenyans are losing lives. It is really sad.
Posted January 31, 2009 05:41 AM -
Submitted by Anonymous author
some foreigners that I know laugh at Africans and say that we are stupid. I tried to defend myself as much as possible but when my brother Africans do stupid things like locking people in burning buildings to save a few shillings then I get epiphany and suddenly understand why foreigners think that we are idiots. I mean if Nakumat employees took a second to think what's more important money or life, more lives would have been saved. As it is the goods are insured and the lives will never come back again.
Posted January 31, 2009 05:06 AM -
Submitted by nzaku
Does anyone see the high cost of insecurity in Kenya? If it wasn't due to insecurity, the emergency exits wouldn't have been blocked with walls and grills. The main doors wouldn't have closed. We may curse Nakumatt but!
Posted January 31, 2009 02:52 AM




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my heart goes out to the families who lost their loved ones and the ones. i am calling on all Kenyans to pray for them so that the missing people will be found. God will always provide a way despite darkness all around!!!