Carolyne Odour has told the BBC she desperately fears for the fate of her two young sons who went missing two months ago with their father - a follower of the teachings of a notorious starvation cult leader.

Ms Odour says that amid an ongoing investigation into more deaths linked to the cult, she has identified her husband's body at a mortuary in the coastal town of Malindi.

His corpse was found in July in the village of Kwa Binzaro, inland from Malindi and near the remote Shakahola Forest, where more than 400 bodies were found in 2023 in one of the worst ever cases of cult-related mass deaths.

Ms Odour is now awaiting the results of DNA tests being carried out on more than 30 recently unearthed bodies.

I felt pain. I barely recognized him. His body was badly decomposing, Ms Odour, 40, said about her husband Samuel Owino Owoyo.

She believes her sons, 12-year-old Daniel and nine-year-old Elijah, traveled with their 45-year-old father to Kwa Binzaro at the end of June.

Self-proclaimed pastor Paul Mackenzie is currently on trial over the so-called Shakahola Forest Massacre - and has pleaded not guilty to manslaughter.

He is alleged to have told his followers they would get to heaven more quickly if they stopped eating - and there have been concerns he has been in touch with his followers from jail.

Ms Odour says her husband started listening to the teachings of Mr Mackenzie four or five years ago.

He changed and he didn’t want the kids to go to school, she said. When the kids would fall ill he’d say that God would heal them. He really believed those teachings.

Two months ago on 28 June, the situation took a turn for the worse when her husband went off with their two youngest sons.

He told me he was going to his home village [of birth], Ms Odour said. The last phone call we had he told me, 'We have gone, God be with you.' And I told him, 'Have a safe trip.'

But Ms Odour started to get suspicious when he did not contact her again.

Retracing his steps, she discovered that he had taken a bus from their home in Busia county and traveled with the boys more than 900km east to Kwa Binzaro in Kenya's Kilifi county.

A few weeks ago she got a call saying someone who matched her husband's description was in the Malindi mortuary.

Ms Odour traveled to the coastal area on 19 August to confirm her husband's death for herself.

She was told his body had been found in Kwa Binzaro on 19 July during a police raid organized because of reports of suspicious disappearances.

Following an investigation, 11 people were arrested in connection with the case, including three who were followers of Mr Mackenzie.

For Ms Odour, it has been a horrifying process to witness the exhumations.

You see bodies being exhumed, and you don’t even know the condition of your own children, she said. It’s very painful.

Dr Raymond Omollo, a senior civil servant in the Ministry of Interior, reported that the government is working on tougher laws to tackle religious extremism and radicalisation in Kenya.

As investigations continue, Ms Odour waits anxiously for news regarding the fate of her children, holding onto the hope of seeing them return home.