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Kenya police hunt for 'serial-killer cult leader'

BBC Published Jun 10, 2010 Reviewed Jul 1, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
Philip Onyancha confessed to killing 17 people, mainly women.
17 people · women
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Philip Onyancha stated his target was to kill 100 women and he had completed 17, leaving 83 remaining.
target 100 women · women17 women · womenremaining 83 women · women
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Philip Onyancha led police on a three-day tour of the country.
3 days ·
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Four bodies have been found as a result of Philip Onyancha's admissions.
4 bodies ·
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Philip Onyancha worked at a private home three years ago as a security guard.
3 years ·
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Kenyan police are hunting for an alleged cult leader who is said to have instructed a self-confessed serial killer to take up his killing spree.

Philip Onyancha, 32, was arrested on Sunday after confessing to killing 17 people, mainly women.

He said he was recruited into a cult while at school by a teacher, who told him to kill 100 people and drink their blood for good fortune.

The teacher, who recently moved schools, was not at work on Thursday.

The BBC's Ruth Nesoba in Kenya's Central Province says police have been questioning the school authorities about her possible whereabouts.

For the last three days, Mr Onyancha has been leading the police on a gruesome tour of the country.

With the media in tow, he has been showing them the places in Nairobi, Central Province and Rift Valley where he says he murdered his victims.

"My target was to kill 100 women. I managed 17 and there were 83 to go," he told Kenya's Daily Nation newspaper.

On Wednesday, he took them to a private home where he had worked three years ago as a security guard.

There the remains of a woman were recovered from a sewer.

Mr Onyancha also led the police to cheap lodges where he admitted killing several prostitutes. He has also admitted kidnapping several children.

So far, four bodies have been found and he had led police to the sites of several unresolved murders.

The BBC's East Africa correspondent Will Ross says that for the police, these admissions conveniently close the cases.

For that reason some Kenyans are left feeling a little suspicious as to whether Mr Onyancha's version of events is entirely true, he adds.

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