Refrain from theft, or be killed like my son, Nairobi w***n warns her lynched child’s friends

By , K24 Digital
On Wed, 13 May, 2020 15:42 | 3 mins read
Susan Wangui narrated to K24 Digital that her son, Derrick Ndung’u, 19, had developed a persistent habit of snatching people’s phones. [PHOTO | K24 DIGITAL]
Susan Wangui narrated to K24 Digital that her son, Derrick Ndung’u, 19, had developed a persistent habit of snatching people’s phones. [PHOTO | K24 DIGITAL]
Susan Wangui narrated to K24 Digital that her son, Derrick Ndung’u, 19, had developed a persistent habit of snatching people’s phones. [PHOTO | K24 DIGITAL]

The mother of a 19-year-old boy, who was lynched on Tuesday night in Komarock area in Nairobi, now says her son was a serial thief, whom she had warned of death as his fate if he continued mugging people.

Susan Wangui, a residential property owner in Eastlands, Nairobi, narrated to K24 Digital that her son, Derrick Ndung’u, who sat his KCSE exams in 2018, had developed a persistent habit of snatching people’s phones, which he would sell to persons she termed as “brokers”.

And, on Tuesday, May 12, Ndung’u was stoned to death at T-Mall Gate in Komarock after snatching a phone from a female hawker.

Wangui said before her son met his death, they were together in the house during curfew hours when he received a phone call, allegedly from his girlfriend identified only as Msoo.

Below is Susan Wangui’s narration of the troubles she had gone through attempting to reroute her son to “moral” ways:

“My name is Susan Wangui. Derrick Ndung’u, the boy who has been lynched in Komarock, is my son.

“I educated this child of mine -- all the way from primary to secondary. He sat his KCSE exams two years ago.

“After completing his secondary education, I enrolled him for a driving course. When he was done with the course, I asked if he would want I put up for him a retail shop, he refused. I asked him whether he would want I put up an electronics shop business for him, he refused. I asked him to join his aunt in the charcoal business, in which he and the aunt would go fetch charcoal in Busia and drive back to Nairobi, where they would sell the wood coal at a profit, he refused.

“I asked him to be a construction worker because, being a landlady, I give jobs to many construction workers, he refused, saying he cannot do work that requires a lot of physical energy.

“There was a time he was presented to me after stealing a phone from someone. I, personally, called the police on him. He spent three months behind bars. His aunts, uncle and grandmother begged me to secure his release. I paid Ksh500, 000 police bond to secure his freedom.

“When he reintegrated into the community, I told him: ‘let me put up a business for you, which you will be running on a daily basis’, he refused. He finds satisfaction in stealing. I know, for sure, that he is a thief.

“I cannot defend him. This is not the first time he is stealing from somebody. So many people have reported to me that he stole their mobile phones. He is a serial phone snatcher. He and his colleagues operated from Maili Saba area.

“I told him: ‘my son, if you cannot listen to me, your mother, you will be killed one day’. I urge other young men who steal from people, just like my son, to refrain from theft. Should they refuse to heed this advice, they too, will be killed the same way my son was killed.

“I tried in vain to advise my son. I am now telling his friends, who stole people’s phones with him, that their days too are numbered.”

“While at school, my son was not stealing from his schoolmates. He began engaging in petty theft one year after he completed secondary education. I think he was negatively influenced by his wayward friends, who smoked bhang.

“When he was being beaten up today (Tuesday, May 12), I was told that he had snatched an egg vendor’s mobile phone.

“He did not stay in the same house with me. He had rented his own house at a different location. He could not live with me because he knew I was against his thievery habits.”