Kericho man with bullets lodged in him appeals for help

For 17 years, Kiprono has been living with two bullets lodged in his chest cavity

In Summary
  • Doctors in Kericho confirmed that any operation to extract the bullets would result in his death.
  • Collins Koprono was hit by stray bullets in Kericho town as police were dispersing demonstrators during the 2007-08 post-election violence.
Collins Kiprono, a man living with two bullets lodged inside his chest region, shows his back where the bullets ripped into him before getting embedded inside his chest cavity
Collins Kiprono, a man living with two bullets lodged inside his chest region, shows his back where the bullets ripped into him before getting embedded inside his chest cavity
Image: KNA

Life for 40-year-old Collins Kiprono, a resident of Telanet village, has never been the same since December 26, 2007.

In 2019, we carried the story of Kiprono, but it seems he has never received tangible help, hence a second appeal to well wishers to come to his aid.

For the last 17 years, Kiprono, a resident of Telanet village within Ainamoi sub-county in Kericho, has been living with two bullets lodged in his chest cavity after he was hit by stray bullets in Kericho town as police were dispersing demonstrators during the 2007-08 post-election violence.

With each passing day, he has to reconcile with the fact that the bullets could not be removed, as doctors at Kericho County Referral Hospital, where he was rushed to and admitted shortly after being shot, confirmed that any operation to extract the bullets would result in his death.

In an interview with KNA at his home, the father of three said his health has been deteriorating over the years, and any attempt to perform heavy duties to provide for his family takes a heavy toll on him.

Collins Kiprono outside his wooden house at Telanet village within Kericho County
Collins Kiprono outside his wooden house at Telanet village within Kericho County
Image: KNA

Kiprono, 40, is now seeking help from well-wishers and the government to raise school fees for his young children as well as meet his medical needs.

“My breathing is laboured, and now for the last four years, when I engage in heavy tasks like digging my small shamba or carrying heavy loads, I always cough blood. I cannot stand up straight immediately I wake up in the morning," Kiprono said.

"When the weather is cold, I have to wait for some time for my back muscles to relax on their own before I can stand up and walk. I cannot sell my small parcel of land because this is the only place I have to live, and it is a gift from my late grandfather to my mother, who raised us alone before she passed away in 2003 from cancer."

Before the unfortunate event, Kiprono was a farmer and supplied maize and beans to major outlets in Kericho to earn a living, but his ill health forced him to discontinue the venture.

He ventured into maize roasting at Kapsoit Trading Centre, which he does with his wife. It is now their main source of income.

A distraught Kiprono adds that his earnings from maize roasting have been insufficient to run his family and meet other needs, and as a result, he has defaulted on his National Hospital Insurance Fund (NHIF) contributions, increasing his challenges in meeting his medical expenses.

“From July 2013, I defaulted on my monthly NHIF contributions. I used to do casual work on villagers’ farms, and the wages I would get paid would all go to feeding my young family of three. My first-born daughter is in Form One, my second daughter is in Grade Six, while my son is in PPI Class. I have school fee arrears amounting to Sh30,000, and I have no idea how I will offset these school fee balances,” he added.

Worried about his life, Kiprono hopes wellwishers will help him raise enough funds to see his children through their education and meet his medical expenses.

“Being a Standard Eight dropout, I have dreams of my children growing up to a better future,” Kiprono said.  

How he got shot

Kiprono, the firstborn in a family of three, narrates the events that led to him living with two bullets in his body so clearly like it happened yesterday. He says he had paid a visit to his grandmother’s home at Kipchimchim village in the outskirts of Kericho town and decided to walk to Kericho town while heading back to his home.

On reaching Kericho town, he met a crowd of people along the Kericho-Kisumu highway near a fuel station and was unsure of what was going on, but the sight of armed police officers made him realise that all was not well, and he immediately started running away, though unsure of where he was going.

Kiprono continues to narrate that he suddenly started sweating profusely with unusual body weakness, like having cold water poured on him without warning.

He could see blood on his shirt, which was now torn, a sight that made him cry for help from where he was lying on the pavement near the fuel station.

Good Samaritans rushed him to the Kericho County Referral Hospital Mortuary using the mortuary entrance. He was immediately taken for an operation and later admitted to a ward at the facility.

He was admitted for three days before being discharged but with the bullets still lodged in his chest as doctors maintained that any operation would result in his death.

“I came to know that I was shot and two bullets were lodged in my chest from the doctors attending to me while I was admitted at the hospital, and I still could not believe that they could not remove them,” Kiprono said.

Kiprono further narrated that he opted to seek a second opinion at Tenwek Mission Hospital in Bomet County, where an x-ray conducted confirmed his worst fears that any operation to remove the bullets would be very risky.

A medical discharge summary dated January 17, 2008 from the medical facility confirmed that he has bullets lodged in his chest. It states, ‘that a gunshot wound to the right chest retained the bullet.’

The doctors advised him to attend medical checkups on a regular basis, an obligation that Kiprono admits he has not been committed to due to his low income.

His 32-year-old wife, Caroline Chepkoech, revealed that she met Kiprono in 2010 and is worried about his mental and physical health.

“My husband is the family’s breadwinner and he has given up all hope and these days he prefers to remain silent for long periods during the day and I am not used to his changed behaviour but it is my prayer that help will come our way,” Chepkoech said

For any assistance, the family can be reached on 0711 868834 or 0723 401633 

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