Calendar icon
Monday 12 January, 2026
Weather icon
á Dakar
Close icon
Se connecter

Kenya: The rallying cry of dispossessed widows

Auteur: Ivoirematin

image

Kenya : Le cri de ralliement des veuves spoliées

In Kenya, mourning is often accompanied by a second tragedy: expropriation. Despite a protective Constitution, thousands of widows are brutally driven from their land by their in-laws, victims of ancestral traditions that still prevail over the law.

A legacy of threats

At 70 years old, Rebecca Anyango is waging an exhausting battle. Having lived on her land for 26 years, she has faced eviction threats from her in-laws since her husband's death sixteen years ago.

"This is where I buried my husband. His grave is here. Where do you want me to take his remains? Where do you want me to take my grandchildren?" she asks, helpless in the face of a trial she must confront without a lawyer.

The weight of forbidden traditions

In the west of the country, among the Luo, Luhya or Kisii communities, the refusal of ritual practices such as "sexual cleansing" or "inherited marriage" (the obligation to marry the brother of the deceased) often serves as a pretext for dispossession.

Anne Bonareri , 60, paid a heavy price. In 1997, the day after her husband's funeral, her brother-in-law demanded she marry him. Her refusal triggered a violent crackdown: armed men attacked her, and her in-laws seized everything, from her land to her clothes. Today, she has only one photograph of her husband.

Resistance is organizing: from legal aid to legislation

Faced with this systemic injustice, solidarity is being organized to break the cycle of poverty that affects these women and their children:

  1. The Amandla MEK Foundation: Created in 2019 by Emma Mong'ute (Anne's daughter), this organization offers legal advice and mobilizes volunteer lawyers to help widows assert their rights.
  2. A legislative precedent in Siaya: Last November, Siaya County made history by adopting a law criminalizing forced disinheritance and remarriage.

Towards a national change?

Siaya's initiative represents a glimmer of hope. For activists, the goal now is to replicate this legislative model in other counties across Kenya. By combining legal action on the ground with evolving laws, women like Rebecca and Anne hope to finally see their dignity and property respected.

Auteur: Ivoirematin
Publié le: Lundi 12 Janvier 2026

Commentaires (0)

Participer à la Discussion

Règles de la communauté :

  • Soyez courtois. Pas de messages agressifs ou insultants.
  • Pas de messages inutiles, répétitifs ou hors-sujet.
  • Pas d'attaques personnelles. Critiquez les idées, pas les personnes.
  • Contenu diffamatoire, vulgaire, violent ou sexuel interdit.
  • Pas de publicité ni de messages entièrement en MAJUSCULES.

💡 Astuce : Utilisez des emojis depuis votre téléphone ou le module emoji ci-dessous. Cliquez sur GIF pour ajouter un GIF animé. Collez un lien X/Twitter ou TikTok pour l'afficher automatiquement.