Raila Odinga, Kenya’s former prime minister, ODM party leader and veteran opposition leader, died on Wednesday, October 15, 2025, at the age of 80 in India, where he had been receiving treatment for an undisclosed illness.
He was born on January 7, 1945,
in Maseno in Kisumu County, and studied in East Germany,
acquiring a master's degree in mechanical engineering in 1970.
Raila was married to Mama Ida
Odinga and together they have four children - the late Fidel, Rosemary, Raila
Junior and Winnie.
He was one of Kenya's most
influential and enduring political figures despite five unsuccessful
presidential bids.
For years, the firebrand
politician emerged as a staunch campaigner and defender of multi-party
democracy - adored by near-fanatical supporters and vilified by a threatened
political elite.
Fondly known as
"Baba", Raila’s death not only marks the end of an era for a towering
pan-Africanist but also leaves a significant void in Kenya's opposition as the
country heads towards the 2027 elections.
In 2022, Odinga made his fifth
attempt at the presidency, having come closest to the top job in 2008 when he
was appointed prime minister in a coalition government.
In February, he lost the race
to lead the African Union Commission to Djibouti's foreign affairs minister.
Despite his political
misfortunes, Odinga remained a political force so influential that successive
Kenyan presidents struggled to govern easily without his support.
Last year, President William
Ruto reached out to Raila for a political deal that saw opposition leaders
appointed in the cabinet.
Four members of Odinga's ODM
party joined what is now known as a "broad-based" government.
The move was seen by many as
Ruto's attempt to solidify his hold on power amid increasing discontent with
his administration over its perceived failure to improve the lives of poor
people, while raising taxes heavily.
Raila faced heavy criticism,
especially from the young people behind last year's anti-government protests,
who accused him of betrayal. He insisted that he only "donated"
experts to help the president "save" the country.
Raila was an avid football fan
and supporter of English premier league club Arsenal.
He had a passionate following,
and his adoring fans has nicknames for him like "Agwambo" (Act of
God) and "Tinga" (Tractor) - drawn from his party symbol in the 1997
election.
His signature slow-motion
dance to reggae tunes at rallies - popularly known as "The Raila
Dance" - became widely imitated by many in social gatherings.
In the 2022 presidential
election, Raila chose former Justice Minister Martha Karua as his running mate.
This was widely welcomed, as it was the first time a presidential front-runner
had chosen a female deputy.
Raila was seen as the
political heir to his father, Jaramogi Odinga, who was Kenya's first
vice-president after independence, but walked out of the government in 1966
after falling out with then-leader Jomo Kenyatta, whose son, Uhuru, went on to
become president after the advent of multi-party democracy in the East African
nation.
Jaramogi Odinga favoured
closer ties with the Soviet Union and China, while Jomo Kenyatta preferred an
alliance with the US and other Western powers.
Their differences worsened,
with Jaramogi Odinga imprisoned for 18 months until he was released in 1971.
Raila Odinga was also a former
political prisoner and holds the record for being Kenya's longest-serving
detainee.
His struggle against one-party
dictatorship saw him detained twice (from 1982 to 1988 and 1989 to 1991) during
the rule of Jomo Kenyatta's successor, Daniel arap Moi.
He was initially imprisoned
for trying to stage a coup in 1982, which propelled him on to the national
stage.
After multi-party democracy
was introduced a decade later, Odinga repeatedly failed in his attempt to win
power, often saying he had been cheated of victory.
This led to one of the biggest
political crises in Kenya's history, when about 1,200 people died and thousands
fled their homes after Odinga was convinced that then-President Mwai Kibaki
stole the 2007 election.
After mediation talks led by
former UN chief Kofi Annan, Raila took the post of prime minister in a
coalition government, but his relationship with Kibaki was marred by what he
called "supremacy wars".
In the 2017 election, he lost
to Uhuru Kenyatta at the ballot box, but won in the Supreme Court, which
nullified the result because of the widespread irregularities he had
highlighted.
Raila, however, boycotted the
re-run, saying a level playing field had not been created.
This paved the way for the re-election
of Kenyatta, while Raila - reputed to be a master strategist and mass mobiliser
- declared himself "the people's president" at a huge rally in the
capital, Nairobi.
His supporters heeded his call
to boycott the large number of businesses owned by the Kenyatta family to show
their anger at the president's re-election.
The long-standing rivalry
between Raila and Kenyatta ended with a famous handshake in 2018. It culminated
with Kenyatta backing Raila's final bid for the presidency in 2022.
Raila was described as a
dedicated pan-Africanist who criticized what he called neo-colonialism. He
championed African unity, self-reliance and integration through the building of
infrastructure like roads, serving as the African Union High Representative for
Infrastructure Development from 2018 to 2023.
He was also appointed by the
African Union (AU) to mediate in the 2010-2011 political crisis that broke out
in Ivory Coast after then-President Laurent Gbagbo refused to give up power
after losing to Alassane Ouattara in elections.
However, his efforts failed to
resolve the stand-off, as Gbagbo rejected him as a mediator, accusing him of
being biased towards Ouattara.
He will probably be best remembered as one of the founding fathers of multi-party democracy in
Kenya, even if he felt that the electoral system was so flawed that it denied
him the opportunity to become president.