Nairobi, 18 October, 2025 / 12:02 PM
Members of the Kenya Conference of Catholic Bishops (KCCB) have eulogized the former Prime Minister, Hon. Raila Amolo Odinga, as a leader who championed democratic processes and human rights in the East African nation.
In their condolence statement addressed to President William Samoei Ruto and the late Odinga’s family, KCCB members also remember Hon. Odinga, who passed on the morning of Wednesday, October 15 in India aged 80, for his statesmanship.
“We join all Kenyans in mourning the loss of a distinguished statesman who devoted his life to the service of our nation,” KCCB members say in the one-page statement that their Chairman, Archbishop Maurice Muhatia Makumba of the country’s Kisumu Archdiocese, signed.
For them, the late Hon. Odinga “will be remembered as a courageous and dedicated leader who tirelessly championed democracy, human rights, and the rule of law often at great personal risk.”
“His selfless sacrifice, resilience, and unwavering vision of a just and united Kenya will remain an enduring legacy for generations to come,” KCCB members say in their Thursday, October 16 statement.
They continue, “As we commend his soul to the mercy of God, we pray that the Lord, who is full of compassion, may grant him eternal rest and reward him for his labour in the vineyard of justice and peace.”
“We also pray that the Lord may comfort his family and all who mourn him, and that this moment of national sorrow may unite all Kenyans in the spirit of reconciliation, solidarity, and hope,” the Catholic Bishops in Kenya say, and implore, “Eternal rest grant unto him, O Lord! And let perpetual light shine upon him. May he rest in peace. Amen.”
The veteran Kenyan politician reportedly passed on in the southern Indian city of Kochi, where he had been undergoing treatment for an undisclosed condition.
Indian newspaper Mathrubhumi reported on October 15 that Hon. Odinga suffered a cardiac arrest “during a morning walk” and was rushed to Devamatha Hospital in Koothattukulam, where he was pronounced dead at around 9:52 a.m. local time.
Hon. Odinga was a prominent politician who served as Kenya’s Prime Minister from 2008 to 2013. He unsuccessfully ran for presidency five times – in 1997, 2007, 2013, 2017 and 2022.
Two of the total number of times he lost led to chaos and massive killings, and displacements.
He led the protests after the disputed 2007 election that plunged the country into its worst civil strife, in which about 1,300 people were killed.
The late Kenyan politician was born on January 7, 1945, at the Anglican Church Missionary Society (CMS) Hospital in Maseno, Kisumu District (then part of Nyanza Province), to Mary Juma Odinga and Jaramogi Oginga Odinga, Kenya’s first Vice President.
As leader of the Orange Democratic Movement (ODM), Hon. Odinga joined President Ruto’s government in mid-2024 following the Gen Z-led protests that had demanded the President’s resignation under the hashtag #RutoMustGo. The protests, which began on 18 June 2024, saw thousands of young people and human rights activists take to the streets across Kenya to oppose the controversial Finance Bill 2024.
Hon. Odinga later declared his intention to vie for the Chairperson of the African Union Commission (AUC), presenting himself as a pan-African statesman devoted to continental unity, peace, and economic transformation.
Though his bid was ultimately unsuccessful, it drew widespread backing from the East African Community (EAC) and other regional blocs, marking what many viewed as the culmination of his lifelong commitment to public service and advocacy for democracy and good governance in Africa.
The late Hon. Odinga will be remembered as one of Kenya’s most influential and enduring political figures, whose career spanned over four decades of struggle for democracy, constitutional reform, and social justice.
A symbol of resilience and an icon of opposition politics, Hon. Odinga played a central role in shaping Kenya’s multiparty democracy, enduring detention, political persecution, and multiple electoral defeats with steadfast determination. For his relentless struggle against Kenya’s former one-party regime, he was imprisoned twice – first from 1982 to 1988 and again from 1989 to 1991 – during the rule of President Daniel arap Moi. The late Hon. Odinga thus holds the record as Kenya’s longest-serving political detainee.
Across Africa, the late Kenyan statesman will be remembered as a visionary champion of democracy and regional integration, a voice for the marginalized, and a leader who never lost faith in the belief that Kenya—and the continent at large—could attain freedom, unity, and prosperity through accountable leadership and the power of the people.
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