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Soldier missing in action for seven years

Updated Wednesday, May 9th 2012 at 00:00 GMT +3

By Vitalis Kimutai


When Kenya Army Senior Sergeant Alfred Cheruiyot Ngetich bid farewell to his family after burying his mother seven years ago, all looked fine for him.


However, weeks later, they realised that there was a strange twist to their farewell. It was the last time they were to see him in many years to come.


It was in June 2005 when Ngetich travelled to Gilgil barracks where he was based before proceeding to Kapenguria to join his colleagues who were on assignment.But despite having been seen off by two soldiers in Nakuru as he boarded a bus to the North Rift region, it is claimed that he did not report on duty as expected. Besides, his colleagues say he has never been to any military camp since then and has not communicated with fellow millitary officers or his seniors.


“We escorted him to the Nakuru bus stage and he boarded an Eldoret Express bus destined for Kapenguria where his colleagues in the second brigade (5KA) unit under the Western Command had camped,” an officer who escorted him revealed.

High spirits


He said the missing soldier was in good spirits on the day of departure and that they were shocked to later learn that he did not re-join his colleagues.Ngetich, who was attached to the Gilgil Regional Hospital, a military facility, is said to have been due to be garlanded as a Warrant Officer II, a promotion he had clinched a few days earlier.
Ngetich was employed in 2000 and was married to Agnes Jepkorir Koskey from Kambi ya Moto, Baringo County with whom he had two daughters.


Ngetich attended Tenwek Primary School where he sat his Kenya Certificate of Primary Education (KCPE) in 1987 before joining Tenwek High School for his Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education (KCSE) in 1991.After high school he enrolled at School of Nursing at Tenwek Mission Hospital in 1994 where he obtained a Diploma (Kenya Registered Community Health Nurse). He served at the hospital for some time before being enlisted in the military as a specialist.


Ngetich, said to be a man of very few words, is the eighth born child of Mzee Taita Mitei and the late Ruth Mitei of Chebunge village, Bomet Central Division, Bomet County.


“Despite numerous inquiries, no information has been forthcoming from the military. We have searched for him in various parts of the country where he was said to have been seen, but all in vain,” Mitei says.

Distress call


Mitei says he learnt of his son’s mysterious disappearance from Ngetich’s wife who sought to know whether he had communicated with the other family members.

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