The stench reached them first. Then the truth.

Three young gravediggers—street boys hired for Sh1,000 each—had spent the night of March 19 burying 32 bodies at Makaburini Cemetery in Kericho. Most were children. There were no families, no priests, no mourners. Just masks, a
Daily Nation

The stench reached them first. Then the truth. Three young gravediggers—street boys hired for Sh1,000 each—had spent the night of March 19 burying 32 bodies at Makaburini Cemetery in Kericho. Most were children. There were no families, no priests, no mourners. Just masks, a

The stench reached them first. Then the truth. Three young gravediggers—street boys hired for Sh1,000 each—had spent the night of March 19 burying 32 bodies at Makaburini Cemetery in Kericho. Most were children. There were no families, no priests, no mourners. Just masks, a

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