Your sins have

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Your sins have

Your sins have

@Poly_Jam_orous

Deep End floating Bergabung Ağustos 2014
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K.T£E🎩🔱
K.T£E🎩🔱@Richiemash_·
Discovering artists wakiwa undeground then wahit huwa a beautiful feeling ngl>>>
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J.
J.@Jahmu__·
State House has nothing to offer the music industry. Nothing constructive will come from a few musicians meeting Ruto. Yeye anataka tu picha for optics
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Your sins have
Your sins have@Poly_Jam_orous·
This is how you talk about the deceased. Highlight everything. May Emma's soul rest in peace.🙏🏾
Kingpin of Kenya@ClintonObonyo

He hit her on the head. Then he raped her. Strangled her. And when that wasn’t enough… he took a panga and hacked her body into pieces. Legs chopped off. Arms severed. Parts hidden—some on the rooftop of her own home, some scattered in the napier grass and animal shed next door. Emma Wanyota was twenty-one years old. A final-year student at Vera Beauty College in Eldoret. She shaped nails and styled hair with steady, creative hands, turning small moments into something brighter for those around her. She laughed easily and carried dreams that were just beginning to take shape. On the evening of 30 September 2019, she returned to her parents’ home in Major Village, Moi’s Bridge, Uasin Gishu County. Her ex-boyfriend, Mustafa Idd — a forty-year-old carpenter from the same area who had done odd jobs for the family and was once trusted — came looking for her. They had broken up weeks earlier. She had moved on. He had not. He entered the house and the violence began. He struck her on the head. He raped her. He strangled her until life left her body. Then, in a fury that went beyond death, he took a panga and dismembered her — cutting off her legs, severing her arms, hacking her into pieces as if to erase every trace of the young woman who had said no. Some of her remains he hid on the rooftop of the very house where she had grown up. Others he scattered in the napier grass and the animal shed right next door — places she had walked through as a child, played in, and called home. The next morning, her mother, Beatrice Naliaka, returned and found streams of blood on the mat. A search began. What was left of Emma was discovered in and around the compound — mutilated, incomplete, discarded where she should have been safest. DNA evidence later linked Mustafa Idd to the scene: blood on his jumper, trousers, and underwear matched Emma’s. The post-mortem confirmed the brutal sequence — blunt force, sexual assault, strangulation, and dismemberment. Four years later, in November 2023, the High Court in Eldoret found him guilty of murder. Justice Reuben Nyakundi described the evidence as overwhelming and sentenced him to forty-five years in prison. Emma’s mother stood in court and told the judge: “If you release him… I will kill him and eat him.” This was not a crime of passion. This was not love gone wrong. This was a man who had once claimed affection, then turned rejection into unimaginable savagery — raping, killing, and butchering a young woman inside her own home. Emma Wanyota. Twenty-one. A daughter. A twin. A student with beauty in her hands and years still ahead. Her name is written now in paint that will not wash away. We say it slowly so the grave can hear: Emma… Wanyota. And we keep painting. Because the tears from the grave are still falling, and the canvas is not yet full. Rest in peace, Emma. Emma Wanyota — 21 years old. Murdered 30 September 2019 at her parents’ home in Moi’s Bridge by ex-boyfriend Mustafa Idd. Convicted of murder and sentenced to 45 years imprisonment in November 2023.

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