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Telling ambassadors Sospeter Magita Machage and Wilfred Gisuka Machage apart was not easy unless one was very close to the identical twins from Migori County.
Dr Gisuka died yesterday in Nigeria where he had been serving as Kenya’s High Commissioner, leaving his twin brother Dr Magita bereft.
Gisuka,65, collapsed and died at his Abuja residence.
Yesterday Dr. Magita, who served as Kenya’s Ambassador to Russia for five years until his term ended in 2010, told The Standard on phone that Gisuka died after taking lunch.
Magita said his brother enjoyed relatively good health and died at the age of 65 leaving behind a widow and five children.
"It is a very sad moment that I have today lost my best friend and confidant since our days in the womb of our mother," said Magita.
He said that his brother died while in the company of his wife with whom he was living within Nigeria.
The two brothers were close when growing up. They both went to the same primary and secondary schools. They however joined different universities with Magita proceeding to Ukraine while Gisuka joined a local university to study medicine.
“We both went to Isebania Primary School, Taranganya High School and Chavakali High School, sharing the same classrooms and even dormitory cubicles where we shared everything including clothes. It was not easy for our friends to tell us apart,” said Magita in a recent interview with The Standard.
The two brothers used to play pranks on their teachers in primary school and whenever one of them made a mistake they would both deny responsibility making it difficult for their teachers to identify the culprit. Often, both would be punished.
Magita said they often played tricks on girls they dated while in High School and found it hilarious.
The twins practised medicine and specialized in surgery with Magita undertaking his studies at Kharkiv State University in the United Soviet Socialist Republic (USSR) in 1975 and later joined Crimea State Medical Institute where he studied General Surgery.
Gisuka on his part joined the University of Nairobi in 1975 where he studied medicine and later specialised in surgery.
After completing their studies, they both served as medical practitioners in the public sector before venturing in running their private hospitals.
“Despite being in Ukraine and my brother in Kenya, we both dated and married our wives in the same year in 1980. The only difference is that I married a lady from Ukraine while my brother married a Kamba Lady. The other difference is that I have two children while my brother has five children,” said Magita.
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The twin brothers tried their hands in politics with Magita seeking to be elected as the Kuria MP in the 1992 general election but did not succeed but in 1997 paved the way for his twin brother Gisuka who contested but did not succeed at the time only to be successful in 2002.
Gisuka was elected as Kuria Constituency MP in 2002 with President Mwai Kibaki appointing him to serve as an Assistant Minister in the office of the Vice President and later in Health and Roads Ministries.
He was later appointed as East African Affairs Minister, a position he held briefly before he was elected as the Migori Senator in the 2013 election. He served for one term before being appointed as a High Commissioner by President Uhuru Kenyatta in 2018.
The lowest point in Magita’s life is when his wife Dr Ludmilla Magita died in July 2017 something that forced him to close down his Trans Mara Medicare Hospital as it kept 'reminding' him of his late wife. Magita and Ludmilla served as resident Doctors at the private facility they owned.
Gisuka also established the Pastor Cornelius Machage Memorial Hospital in Migori County in remembrance of their father who passed away in 1974 as they prepared to join university to study medicine, a situation he terms the lowest in his life.
Magita said that as identical twins they suffered from similar medical conditions and could easily sense when something was wrong with his brother. Whenever he got that feeling he called and always found out that his instincts were correct.
The 65-year-old surgeon has partially lost his eyesight, is diabetic, suffers from hypertension and has suffered three strokes besides being bitten by a poisonous snake when he made a brief stopover to admire a landscape three years ago on his way from his Isebania home.
“I did not immediately realise that I had been bitten by a snake since I experienced an itch. By the time I reached my Kilgoris home I could not walk and felt dizzy, my granddaughter realised that something was wrong and immediately informed my daughter Olga,” said Magita.
The Machage’s come from a deeply religious family with their late father, Pastor Cornelius Machage being among those who took the Seventh Day Adventist Church to Kuria with their elder brother Chacha Machage a retired Inspector of Schools residing in Isebania area.
Magita who is the eldest of the twins said that the two brothers consider it an honour to serve as representatives of their country in foreign nations at different times and are grateful to Presidents Mwai Kibaki and Uhuru Kenyatta for having identified them among many other Kenyans.
“During my tenure as Kenya’s Ambassador to Russia, I lobbied for the purchase of more Kenya Tea and Flowers which improved trade ties between our two countries with former President Kibaki being proud for appointing me to serve in that country for five years,” said Magita.