Bodies of the victims have been returned to a military base. / Photo: William Ruto/X

Kenya began three days of mourning on Friday after its defence chief and nine other senior military officers died in a helicopter crash on Thursday evening.

General Francis Omondi Ogolla, the Chief of the Kenya Defence Forces (CDF), was in the helicopter that went down shortly after takeoff in a remote area of northwestern Kenya.

"A distinguished four-star general has fallen in the course of duty and service of the country," President William Ruto said as he announced the deaths that evening.

He said the nation would observe three days of mourning starting on Friday, with the national flag flying at half mast across the country and at Kenyan missions abroad.

Tributes

"Final salute" was the front-page headline in the leading Daily Nation newspaper.

The bodies of the victims, draped in Kenyan flags, were returned to a military base in Nairobi on an air force plane late Thursday.

Ogolla, who was born in 1962, had been appointed to the post by Ruto just a year ago and was about to mark 40 years of military service.

His daughter, Lorna Ogolla, said in a poignant post on LinkedIn that her father died "doing what he did best for the better part of the last 40 years—trying to keep Kenya safe."

Messages of condolence were sent from across the region and from foreign diplomatic missions in Kenya.

Last flight

Ogolla had been visiting troops deployed in Operation Maliza Uhalifu (Operation End Crime in Swahili) in the North Rift region, where insecurity caused by armed bandits and cattle rustlers is rife.

Ruto said the Air Force had dispatched an investigation team to establish the cause of the crash.

Kenyan media reports said it was the fifth armed forces chopper crash in 12 months.

In June 2021, at least 10 soldiers were killed when their helicopter crashed during a training exercise south of Nairobi.

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AFP