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Body of Kenyan woman who died in Iraq four months ago yet to be airlifted

Ruth Omugala, the deceased Kenyan whose body still lies in Iraq. [Photo courtesy]

The family of a deceased Kenyan woman in Iraq’s capital Baghdad wants the government to help them get her body back to Kenya four months after her death.

The deceased, Ruth Omungala, 47, died on December 26, 2019, but her body still lies in Baghdad.

Reports indicate she died of malnutrition as her employer ill-treated her and also subjected her to physical abuse.

Omgungala who hails from Mumias West constituency in Kakamega first worked in Nairobi as a house help before flying to Baghdad in late 2019 only to find a different world.

After falling sick, her agent in Iraq did not take her to the hospital. She had complained of vomiting and diarrhoea before her death.

One of her Kenyan workmates, Grace Makokha, said Omungala complained of vomiting and diarrhoea and died after her agent refused to take her to hospital.

“She requested her agent in Iraq for medical care which was poorly served and her condition continued to deteriorate each day,” Grace Makokha, one of her workmates in Iraq said according to Nairobi News.

Her family says they were not aware of her leaving Kenya for Iraq.

“My sister lived in Nairobi and worked as a nanny. She also did other odd jobs. We were shocked when we learned she had travelled to Baghdad and died after falling sick,” Joash Okulia, the deceased’s brother said.

Back in Baghdad, her employer had asked the family to be allowed to bury the body there to save them costs of airlifting the body but they declined.

Her agent only identified as Ali told the family that the body would be airlifted after Christmas but this is yet to happen four months later.

The family sought the intervention of the Foreign Affairs Ministry through a lawyer who they paid Sh60,000 but nothing is yet to happen since January.

“They are asking us to pay money. We paid Sh60,000 to a lawyer who promised to contact the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to help facilitate the transportation of my sister’s body for burial but since January, he no longer picks my calls,” Okulia remarked.

The family now wants the government to step in and help them.

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