Five more people have drowned in separate incidents across the country as floods caused by the ongoing El Nino rains continued to wreak havoc.
Thousands have also been displaced from their homes as villages remained marooned.
The deaths were reported in Thika, Sultan Hamud, Emali, Kibwezi and Kathiani, even as the government urged families living in flood-prone areas to move to higher grounds.
In Thika, the body of 38-year-old Paul Muinde was retrieved from River Chania in Makongeni after he drowned in flash floods.
Police said he had been reported missing for two days.
In Sultan Hamud, Makueni county the body of 75-year-old Daniel Mwina who had been reported missing in Kisaulo village was found floating in a water pond.
Mwina had been swept to the water pond by flash floods, police said.
In Emali, Simon Kisiu, 72, was found dead and his body retrieved from Muuoi River after drowning.
He was swept to the banks of the river after heavy rains.
In Kibwezi, the body of an unknown man was found in River Athi while a one-year-old girl drowned in a compost pit that was full of rainwater in Kathiani.
The child was playing with her friends when the incident happened on Wednesday, the family and police said.
The deaths mean Kenyans who have lost their lives in flash-floods have risen to close to 70.
On Monday while leading a tree-planting session in Garissa, Interior CS Kithure Kindiki said 46 people had died as a result of floods.
That was before nine more deaths were reported in Migori on Monday and another three in Nairobi.
“I want to appeal to Kenyans not to take chances when it comes to flood waters. Take great caution. When our officers tell you to vacate flood areas, please comply, and if you don’t, we will force you so that we can save lives,” Kindiki said.
Action Against Hunger on Thursday called on donors to step up and support families hit by floods, especially in the Northeastern region.
The organisation, which has been at the forefront of emergency response in Isiolo and Mandera, said floods have led to the destruction of water sources and toilets.
Its said this has led to an outbreak of diarrhoea among children below five years because residents have turned to contaminated water to survive.
According to the organisation, 34,845 families have been affected by floods in Mandera after Dawabroke River broke its banks.
“So far, seven people have died from floods in Mandera, and there have been reports of gender-based violence among those displaced,” it said in a statement.
In Makueni, 73 families have been affected by floods and mudslides in different parts of the county with fears of increased numbers as rains persist.
At St Patrick Primary School Kawese in Kasikeu Ward, one of the rescue centres, there was congestion as more families were seeking shelter, and others lacked food and appropriate bedding.
"Fifty families from Kawese Kasikeu ward were affected after River Kawese flooded, 12 families from Ilima Ward and 11 families from Syume village in Malindu were affected by mudslides," Makueni acting county commissioner Moses Gicharu said.