Dead Tycoon Mburu Kinani’s Sh350 Million Estate Ignites Succession Feud Involving Kiambu Deputy Governor’s Family

The sprawling farm in Gilgil, once a symbol of prosperity for the late businessman Mburu Kinani, has become the epicenter of a bitter family war over his Sh350 million estate and final resting place. Kinani, a 92-year-old tycoon whose wealth from real estate and agricultural ventures spanned generations, passed away on November 20, 2024. Nearly a year later, his death has fractured his two families, drawing in his daughter, Kiambu County Deputy Governor Rosemary Njeri Kirika, and pitting customary traditions against modern legal rulings in a high-stakes succession battle.

Kinani's life was marked by ambition and complexity. Born in Gatanga, Murang'a County, he built a formidable empire through shrewd investments in land and farming, amassing properties worth an estimated Sh350 million across Kiambu, Nakuru, and Murang'a. His first marriage to Phelis Wanjiru produced several children, including Ides Wairimu, Joyce Muthoni, and Hannah Wanjiku, who viewed Gatanga as the ancestral heartland. Decades later, Kinani entered a second union with Magdalene Waithera, a statutory marriage that solidified his relocation to a vast farm in Gilgil. This second family included Kirika, Geoffrey Ng'ang'a Mburu, Alice Wambui, and Regina Muthoni, who considered the Nakuru property their true home. Magdalene's death years earlier left her buried on the Gilgil land, a detail that would later fuel the fire of discord.

The immediate trigger for the feud was Kinani's burial, but underlying tensions over his vast estate quickly surfaced. Kinani's body lay unburied in the AIC Kijabe Mission Hospital mortuary for 10 months as legal wrangling intensified. The first family, invoking Kikuyu customary law, demanded interment at the ancestral home in Gatanga, arguing it honored their mother's grave and clan protocols that require all children to participate in a dignified ceremony. They accused the second family of sidelining them and disregarding Kinani's roots.

In contrast, the second family, led by Kirika, insisted on Gilgil as the rightful site. They claimed Kinani had explicitly expressed his wish to rest beside Magdalene on his farm, a preference backed by a December 2024 clan meeting, though not all members attended. Court documents reveal Kinani spent over four decades building his life in Gilgil, transforming it into a bustling hub of family and business. For them, burying him elsewhere would betray his final wishes and the statutory bonds of his second marriage.

The courts became the battleground. On June 12, 2025, Magistrate Gerald Gitonga initially halted the Gilgil burial, siding with the first family's push for Gatanga. But on September 16, 2025, High Court Judge Helene Namisi overturned that decision in a ruling that emphasized evolving family dynamics. She declared the Gilgil farm as Kinani's primary home, noting his long-term choice to formalize his second union there. The order specified: The resting place of the late Mburu Kinani shall be at his farm in Gilgil, Nakuru County, next to the grave of his late wife, Magdalene Waithera.

Emboldened by the verdict, the second family acted swiftly the next day. On September 17, 2025, they retrieved the body from Kijabe Hospital and proceeded to Gilgil. What followed was a hushed, nighttime ceremony at 6:45 pm, attended by only a handful of mourners. Videos circulating online captured the coffin being lowered into a shallow grave under dim lights, sparking outrage and accusations of secrecy. The first family decried it as a rushed, undignified affair that violated both the spirit of the court order, which called for joint involvement, and customary rites demanding a full communal farewell for a man of Kinani's stature.

Joyce Muthoni Mburu, speaking on behalf of her siblings, described the event as a profound betrayal. The burial, she said, inflicted irreparable grief by excluding biological children and turning a solemn moment into a clandestine operation. Lawyer Danstan Omari, representing the first family, warned of immediate action, filing an urgent application at the Court of Appeal to set aside Justice Namisi's ruling. They seek orders for exhumation and reburial in Gatanga, arguing the lower court lacked jurisdiction over a dispute rooted in Murang'a traditions. A clan elder, Patrick Karanja, and witness Gabriel Mwaniki were cited in filings, with the latter admitting the clan's December resolution was not unanimous.

The second family fired back forcefully. Kirika, flanked by lawyer Prof. Tom Ojienda, dismissed the exhumation push as malicious and an insult to Kinani's memory. They defended the Gilgil interment as lawful, transparent, and aligned with his documented desires, pointing to affidavits and property deeds that underscored his deep ties to the Nakuru land. Ojienda emphasized that the hurried timing stemmed from logistical pressures after the long mortuary wait, not malice, and urged the courts to respect the High Court's wisdom in prioritizing personal choice over rigid customs.

Beyond the grave, the Sh350 million estate looms large. Succession filings reveal a portfolio of farms, rental properties, and cash holdings that could reshape family fortunes. The first family alleges the second has already moved to consolidate control, including over Gilgil assets, prompting counter-claims of sabotage. Legal experts note this case highlights Kenya's shifting succession landscape, where judges increasingly weigh individual wills against communal norms, especially in blended families with public figures like Kirika.

As the Court of Appeal weighs the exhumation plea, expected in coming weeks, Kinani's legacy hangs in the balance. In Gilgil, the shallow grave remains a stark reminder of unresolved pain, while in Gatanga, elders whisper of ancestral calls unheeded. For a tycoon who bridged worlds, his families now stand divided, their fight a poignant tale of love, land, and the enduring pull of home. The resolution could set precedents for countless Kenyan families navigating similar shadows.