It was love at first sight. The sight of a lanky, rungu-wielding
warrior draped on a red shuka and sporting neatly braided hair must have
left her gasping with excitement.
She had heard fairy tales about African warriors and could not let go of this one.
But Miriam Elisabeth Winkel now regrets the decision she made that evening in 2008, a year after she arrived in Kenya from her home in Netherlands.
Winkel, 46, had moved to Kenya in 2007 on a mission to improve education standards and development in Samburu.
Through the Samburu
Empowerment through Education and Development (SEED), a community-based
organisation which she helped to register in May 2007, she hoped to
transform the lives of local pastoralists.
Within a year she fell in love with a young Samburu man who was then working as a night guard at a hotel in Maralal, where she was residing.
The relationship blossomed and culminated in a marriage consumated on July 31, 2008. Ms Winkel got married to John Lepil Lolkile, 24, at a colourful ceremony at Maralal district commissioner headquarters.
She
acquired several plots in Maralal, which were all registered in
Lepilâs name. The marriage has now hit the rocks and the two are
embroiled in a divorce suit.
Lepil, currently a member of the Samburu County Assembly, last year married another wife through Samburu customary marriage a decision which rocked their four-year-old marriage.
Ms
Winkel first approached the court at the beginning of this year after
Lepil allegedly forced her out of their matrimonial home and threatened
her with violence.
In the divorce papers, Ms Winkel has asked the High Court to dissolve their marriage citing cruelty from her husband.
She cited suffering she has allegedly endured at the hands of her husband after he married a Samburu lady in customary marriage.
She
wants the court to distribute the nine plots in Maralal town,
livestock, two motor vehicles and other properties owned by the family.
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