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Pre-University NYS Veterans Corner
Mpenzi
#121 Posted : Sunday, April 03, 2011 10:21:36 PM
Rank: Veteran

Joined: 10/17/2008
Posts: 1,234
story teller wrote:
When i hear pple constantly complain about Kibaki,i get the feeling that they don't know how far we have come from the Moi "error". The actions taken on that fateful day changed the lives of hundreds of very innocent university students for ever..and as usual, it was all hushed up like nothing happened, the greatest violation of human rights abuses ever visited on us.

@Kaigangio, please continue..


Some students were killed? Women raped?
story teller
#122 Posted : Monday, April 04, 2011 12:41:40 AM
Rank: Member

Joined: 6/25/2010
Posts: 415
Mpenzi wrote:
story teller wrote:
When i hear pple constantly complain about Kibaki,i get the feeling that they don't know how far we have come from the Moi "error". The actions taken on that fateful day changed the lives of hundreds of very innocent university students for ever..and as usual, it was all hushed up like nothing happened, the greatest violation of human rights abuses ever visited on us.

@Kaigangio, please continue..


Some students were killed? Women raped?


@Mpenzi, yes,very very many, hundreds actually especially the latter..more than the world knows or will probably ever know..the gals were absolutely innocent,clueless and had nowhere to run..pounced on by animals in the middle of the night while asleep. Someone told me later on that the screams inside the ladies' tents was like hell on earth. She told me she only survived by the grace of God by hiding under her bed.God, i don't even want to think about it.

@Kaigangio, endelea..
It's not hard to make decisions when you know what your values are.
vinii
#123 Posted : Monday, April 04, 2011 7:42:46 AM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 10/14/2009
Posts: 2,057
Kaigangio wrote:
sorry wazuas i am back...here we go...

....for those of us who were at the main gate, we already had an edge that never was as we had already captured three enemies...the prison/cells guards...they could not offer even the smallest level of information as they had no prior knowledge of what was happening...the main gate was securely locked and the guards did not have the keys except for the cells..the high fence was a sure containment measure. There was no way therefore one could leave the camp through the gate or over the fence...

elsewhere (on the extreme eastern and western side of the camp), the only other outlets from the camp were staff houses for the non-uniformed staff...these areas were a no go zone as they were heavily guarded by the enemy as they were the custodians...

on the north western side of the camp was KA, ammunition grounds...this was a fertile ground for one to have his or her head blown off first without a second thought, so nobody would risk...it would be less riskier dealing with the regulars and ncios than dealing with the mad army personnel near or around the ammunition battalion...

the north eastern side of the camp was a much bigger pass but required no heavy guarding...why? this was the playfield for the anti-stock theft unit squads and presented a very risky ground...

the combat soldiers from both sides knew these facts far too well, and as such we either fought to death or made peace...we chose the former...

A strategy had to be formulated very first as we did not know what the enemy at the sewage treatment pods were doing and where they would attack first... at the gate there was about 250 pre-uni. Colleagues singing the war cries and showing how brave we were...

a couple of them were dispatched to go and warn the other colleagues who were in the barracks at the time and instruct them either to join the combatants or get out of those barracks and run for their safety....a couple of them decided to join the combatants, but chose the areas near the drill grounds as their main operation base...

that accomplished, another bunch of guys were dispatched to go to the ladies barracks with instructions to get them out and have them go to the fenceline facing the ammunition grounds...this was safer for them than anywhere else in the camp...

This last action or command came a little too late for when we started advancing towards the drill ground to join our other colleagues for full combat, and just before the messengers to the ladies barracks disappeared into nearby thickets around a bushy path near the cells, that is when it happened....





d'oh! d'oh! d'oh! Sounds like a script from a RAMBO movie...@Kaigangio, give us the next 'episode'
If you are an eagle don't hang around with chickens; chickens don't fly....
Kaigangio
#124 Posted : Monday, April 04, 2011 8:39:50 AM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 2/27/2007
Posts: 2,768
The first scream was so loud and full of agony...it was the type of scream coming from a human under excruciating pain from something close or worse than torture...a scream that could only be from a human facing a real death not even a threat of it....the scream came from one of the female’s barracks...soon after, hundreds more screams and wailing filled the air in the entire camp...

The enemy had started its attacks from the lady’s barracks...but wait, why would they start there yet the actual combatants and the real threats were the men and their residences were far apart? There was no time to answer this question and the only thing to urgently address was to find the actual location of the regulars and the ncios... we therefore abandoned the idea of all of us from the cells ground going to the drill ground and instead some of us go to the ladies barracks to counter the offensive...

About half of the colleagues separated and headed to the southern side of the camp...where the female barracks were located...and their immediate mission was to rescue the ladies, subdue the afandes and deliver the ladies to the POS (point of safety, along the fence line facing the KA ammunition)... for the rest of us that remained we headed for the drill ground....

as we were doing all this since the great capture of the cells and as we matched to the drill grounds we had forgotten one small detail which nobody under the circumstances gave thought to...that our hands were empty with no weapon...it was very interesting to note that we had prepared for war without really knowing what we would fight with and there was no time to figure out where they would come from...we held on to our match along the tarmacked road and hoped that we would make it to the drill ground before any attack, after all we needed to fight...that was wishful thinking...

A couple of steps ahead and we could see the edges of the drill ground and the podium (jukwaa) where the big boys used to sit during the passing out parades...the staff canteen was to the left and was surrounded with overgrown bourganvillea plant, but the villae along the road leading to it was very well trimmed....right behind the canteen were the staff houses for the commadant Solomon, his deputy Ngumi and Assistant Osole...next to the staff canteen was the administration block, but this block was fairly close to the road...on the right hand side of the road were other blocks which were used as barracks by the regular officers who did not participate in the training of the kurutus...in between these blocks was a dark patch extending about 80 metres as the place was not very well lit...

The screams in the female’s barracks were intensifying and seemed like they were drifting towards the nearby bushes and along the road towards the drill ground...it was not hard to note that the screams were made by ladies who were terribly scared, thoroughly scared and running for their dear lives...how tormenting it was for the matching soldiers!!!!

Just then.....there was a pandemonium at the back of the lot followed by guys shouting...”comrades watch out!”...two colleagues had been downed...the afandes had struck!!! The attacking party was composed of about 10 afandes...but again why would they send only ten afandes to about a hundred charged comrades??...no immediate answer to the question as we had an object and we were not really far from accomplishing it...

as all the attention was directed towards the direction of the commotion and with 3 colleagues and the 10 afandes down nobody noticed as a contingent of about 100 afandes approached from different directions of the dark alleys and stood just a couple of metres from our group, as if waiting for an instruction or a command...what followed was a full scale conflict and bloodletting, never seen before in NYS institutions, that was going to last the rest of the night and remain fresh in our memories for the rest of our lives....
...besides, the presence of a safe alone does not signify that there is money inside...
Jacy26
#125 Posted : Monday, April 04, 2011 9:10:44 AM
Rank: Member

Joined: 6/26/2008
Posts: 365
Kaigangio wrote:
The first scream was so loud and full of agony...it was the type of scream coming from a human under excruciating pain from something close or worse than torture...a scream that could only be from a human facing a real death not even a threat of it....the scream came from one of the female’s barracks...soon after, hundreds more screams and wailing filled the air in the entire camp...

The enemy had started its attacks from the lady’s barracks...but wait, why would they start there yet the actual combatants and the real threats were the men and their residences were far apart? There was no time to answer this question and the only thing to urgently address was to find the actual location of the regulars and the ncios... we therefore abandoned the idea of all of us from the cells ground going to the drill ground and instead some of us go to the ladies barracks to counter the offensive...

About half of the colleagues separated and headed to the southern side of the camp...where the female barracks were located...and their immediate mission was to rescue the ladies, subdue the afandes and deliver the ladies to the POS (point of safety, along the fence line facing the KA ammunition)... for the rest of us that remained we headed for the drill ground....

as we were doing all this since the great capture of the cells and as we matched to the drill grounds we had forgotten one small detail which nobody under the circumstances gave thought to...that our hands were empty with no weapon...it was very interesting to note that we had prepared for war without really knowing what we would fight with and there was no time to figure out where they would come from...we held on to our match along the tarmacked road and hoped that we would make it to the drill ground before any attack, after all we needed to fight...that was wishful thinking...

A couple of steps ahead and we could see the edges of the drill ground and the podium (jukwaa) where the big boys used to sit during the passing out parades...the staff canteen was to the left and was surrounded with overgrown bourganvillea plant, but the villae along the road leading to it was very well trimmed....right behind the canteen were the staff houses for the commadant Solomon, his deputy Ngumi and Assistant Osole...next to the staff canteen was the administration block, but this block was fairly close to the road...on the right hand side of the road were other blocks which were used as barracks by the regular officers who did not participate in the training of the kurutus...in between these blocks was a dark patch extending about 80 metres as the place was not very well lit...

The screams in the female’s barracks were intensifying and seemed like they were drifting towards the nearby bushes and along the road towards the drill ground...it was not hard to note that the screams were made by ladies who were terribly scared, thoroughly scared and running for their dear lives...how tormenting it was for the matching soldiers!!!!

Just then.....there was a pandemonium at the back of the lot followed by guys shouting...”comrades watch out!”...two colleagues had been downed...the afandes had struck!!! The attacking party was composed of about 10 afandes...but again why would they send only ten afandes to about a hundred charged comrades??...no immediate answer to the question as we had an object and we were not really far from accomplishing it...

as all the attention was directed towards the direction of the commotion and with 3 colleagues and the 10 afandes down nobody noticed as a contingent of about 100 afandes approached from different directions of the dark alleys and stood just a couple of metres from our group, as if waiting for an instruction or a command...what followed was a full scale conflict and bloodletting, never seen before in NYS institutions, that was going to last the rest of the night and remain fresh in our memories for the rest of our lives....

Oh Gosh..how horrifying, my eyes are wet right now. We need an investigative journalist to unearth this well guarded secret.
If you have only one smile in you, give it to the people you love - Maya Angelou
Baratang
#126 Posted : Monday, April 04, 2011 9:36:12 AM
Rank: Member

Joined: 10/6/2009
Posts: 587
Hello Wazuans,

The story so far is depicting similar activities that i watched in the movie by name "Escape from Sobibor", where the jews were taken to the concentration camps voluntarily by the Nazi.

Did his Excellency the President Daniel arap Moi invite these young, innocent pre-university youths to the NYS to annihilate and kill them?

I really pity these youths for what they were subjected to.

Kaigangio continue please.
Senior
#127 Posted : Monday, April 04, 2011 9:56:09 AM
Rank: New-farer

Joined: 12/8/2009
Posts: 5
Location: Nairobi

Kaigangio you got it!!!, you remind me of that night where we lost everything including our diginity. So many became disabled, were raped......truly are sad memories.. You have Gilgil massacre into detail.... pls continue....
Lolest!
#128 Posted : Monday, April 04, 2011 9:56:16 AM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 3/18/2011
Posts: 12,069
Location: Kianjokoma
I wish I was a journalist...
Laughing out loudly smile Applause d'oh! Sad Drool Liar Shame on you Pray
For Sport
#129 Posted : Monday, April 04, 2011 10:24:40 AM
Rank: Veteran

Joined: 12/23/2010
Posts: 1,229
This is chilling.
mukiha
#130 Posted : Monday, April 04, 2011 11:40:08 AM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 6/27/2008
Posts: 4,114
Wakanyugi wrote:
....

By the way I never figured out why we were sent to NYS, it seemed like such a waste. If anybody ever does let me know.


See my earlier post...
Nothing is real unless it can be named; nothing has value unless it can be sold; money is worthless unless you spend it.
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