Distinguished Kenyan journalist Chege Mbitiru dies at 77

By Tom Odula, The Associated Press

NAIROBI, Kenya — Distinguished Kenyan journalist Chege Mbitiru, whose career included work in North America and Kenya, has died at 77 of cardiac arrest.

Mbitiru was influential in Kenya as many people read his weekly column in Kenya’s largest circulation newspaper, The Sunday Nation.

He worked at The Associated Press as an East Africa correspondent from 1985 until 2001. At AP he helped cover the spread of extremist violence in Somalia, the Rwandan genocide and its aftermath, and the 1998 bombings of the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.

Mbitiru was born in Kijabe on the edge of the Great Rift Valley, about 30 miles northwest of Nairobi, that had been founded in 1903 by American missionaries of the Africa Inland Mission.

When Mbitiru finished high school he went to the U.S. to attend the World Youth Forum. He studied in the U.S. and after graduating from Ohio University he worked for the Sandusky Register in Ohio and the Saginaw News in Michigan.

Returning to Kenya he worked for the Kenya News Agency and later for the Daily Nation newspaper as foreign editor and then managing editor before joining the AP.

During his time at AP he is remembered for his humour and friendly way of sharing his deep knowledge of East Africa and the continent.

“Chege was a good friend and colleague who, with a wry sense of humour, taught the rest of us about Africa. We worked closely together during the intervention in Somalia and the genocide in Rwanda. His calm demeanour and charm was always an anchor in trying times,” said Terry Leonard, who was an AP correspondent in Nairobi from 1994 to 1996.

“He would always mix his smart, many times sarcastic, comments about the news with a chat that would connect the extraordinary events that raged across Africa in the mid-90s with conflicts in Latin America,” said Ricardo Mazalan, the East Africa chief photographer in the mid-1990s. “Some of the best books on my Africa bookshelf were recommended by him.”

Mbitiru was an invaluable member of AP’s Nairobi team, said Reid G. Miller, former East African bureau chief. “He was the go-to guy for background information about Kenya, its politics, history, customs and more,” said Miller. “More than that, he was one of the sweetest, most tolerant men I have ever known.”

Andrew Selsky, who had worked on AP’s international desk and later was Africa Editor, said that Mbitiru had kindly sent him a Swahili-English dictionary. “That gesture showed what a truly nice man he was,” said Selsky.

Mbitiru leaves behind a widow, Wanja and two sons, Njihia and Nyaga.

Tom Odula, The Associated Press

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