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As police probe the sudden death of veteran broadcaster Festus Amimo, his wife Rose opens up about a union forged before high school and the silent burdens he carried to the grave.

In a eulogy that oscillated between cherished nostalgia and haunting foreshadowing, Rose Amimo, the widow of celebrated Mayienga FM Head Festus Amimo, has pulled back the curtain on the private life of a man known publicly as the voice of the Luo nation.
Speaking to mourners gathered at their village home in Kisumu County, Rose offered a raw, unvarnished glimpse into a marriage that began when she was just a teenager—before she had even received her Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education (KCSE) results.
"I was young," she recounted, her voice trembling. "We started this journey when I was just a girl, before I even knew what the world held for me."
While the public knew Amimo as "Wuod Awasi"—the commanding baritone behind the popular morning show Gari Mokinyi—Rose described a man who felt an immense, almost crushing responsibility to be the "light of the family."
She revealed that Amimo, who died suddenly on December 7, took it upon himself to care for everyone, often shielding his family from the gritty details of his business dealings. This protective instinct, however, became a source of friction in their home.
"I did not like to meddle in his business," Rose admitted. "But we fought a lot about his phone. I would tell him that the world had changed. I asked him, 'If something were to happen to you today, what would happen to us? We know nothing.'"
The revelations come as the media fraternity struggles to come to terms with the loss of a man described by KBC Managing Director Agnes Kalekye as a "servant leader." Amimo was not just a broadcaster; he was the Chairman of the Luo Journalists Association (Jofwambo) and a mentor to countless young scribes.
Yet, as the eulogies pour in from high-ranking officials—including Interior PS Raymond Omollo and Siaya Governor James Orengo—the questions surrounding his final moments remain. Police have launched an investigation into the cause of his sudden collapse, with autopsy results eagerly awaited by a family now grappling with the very uncertainty Rose had warned against.
"He loved us," Rose concluded, wiping away tears. "He was a great husband who wanted to carry the world for us. But now, we must learn to walk in a world without him."
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