Category Archives: Tradition

Kenya: Suba Elders declared their unswerving for Raila Odinga’s presidential bid in 2012

Reports Leo Odera Omolo In Mbita Town

The recent launch of Suba Council of Elders brings glad tidings to the Prime Minister Raila Amollo Odinga.

Suba elders who have been largely under shadow of Luo Council of Elders as a sub-set recently coroneted their own “ker” Mzee Apollo Okeyo Omuga of Rusinga Island.

In a colourful ceremony that was attended by thousands of Suba People including Elders from Meru, Maasai, Luyia, Kikuyu, and Luos among others, the Suba elders resolved to continue their unwavering support of Raila Odinga and encouraged other communities of Kenya, some of whom were present at the function to support Raila.

The coronation was done by Hon. Peter Nyakiamo on the heartland of the Suba Community, Mfangano Island, at a Abasuba Peace Museum on August 12th, 2011.

The Suba community are Bantus, with an estimated population of about 500,000 spread across Nyanza and western Region. In Nyanza, you find the Subas in Mbita and Gwassi constituencies where they form over 90% of the population in the two constituencies.

They are also found in Nyatike and Migori constituencies where they form over 40% of combined population.

Unknown to many, prominent sons of Suba include the late freedom Fighter, and independence hero Tom Mboya, the late Senator Mbeo Onyango, Hon. Osingo Migure, Hon. Peter Nyakiamo, Hon. Zadock Syongo, renown educationist, Mrs. Roseline Onyuka, Hon. Millie Odhiambo, Hon. Josephine Sinyo, prolific writer, Philip Ochieng, Prof. Edward Oyugi Akong’o, Prof. Fredrick Onyango former VC of Maseno university, and many other emerging leaders such as Caroli Omondi, Sam Wakiaga and a Microsoft Executive Dr. Mark Matunga and this reporter {Leo Odera Omolo},Prof Okello Ayot of Kenyatta University, Prof.Walgio Ogweno Orwa of Bondo UniversityDr Obiero Ong’ang’a the executive Directr of OSENALA,Prof Erick Otieno of Maseno University and many others.

Even though the launch of suba council of elders event was purely cultural, it quickly generated political content where many viewed it as a huge part of Luo community edging away.

The fear was that this critical block of Subas would weaken Raila bedrock support from Nyanza. The leader in the middle of this is Dr. Mark

When asked why he was allowing the Suba elders to come out of the luo shadows, Matunga noted “ Subas are Bantus, and Luos are Nilotes, and it was important for the Suba to appreciate and enjoy their full identity even though they have fully and amicably integrated with the Luos” Matunga’s aide said, adding that “ there has not been any conflict between the Subas and Luos and I do not foresee any manner of conflict”.

The extent of Suba Luo integration and intermarriage is so deed and now for so long that the sense of cohesion is very, very strong. This is to an extent that the new generation of Suba do not even know that they are Subas let alone speak the language” he noted. “it would be unthinkable that that scoping Suba identity would in this new Constitutional dispensation would create any sort of conflict” asserted Matunga…

Matunga went farther on to say, “those who view the Launch of Suba Elders as minus to Raila are dangerous peddlers of lies, and should not be allowed to cheat Kenyans… if anything, inauguration of Suba Elders depicts Raila not as a leader of Luos only but a national leader who has achieved exemplary cohesion and integration among the Luos and Subas, and is indeed a leader to be trusted to bring Kenyans of many tribes together to peacefully co-exist” he added “ as a matter of fact, recent history indicate that Raila’ solid support even by voting record is from Suba region, and that will not change in life or in death” asserted Matunga.

The notion that Subas are running away from Raila now emerges to be lies being propagated but competitors of Matunga for the County Governorship. This is because the Subas have resolved to rally support behind Dr.

Mark Matunga for top county seat. And the launch of Suba Council of Elders was simply being viewed as to seal support of the Matunga, a phenomena that would spell doom for many aspirants.

It turns out that only Matunga from among the pack has generated bedrock support from his backyard who are the Subas for that matter. Many Subas especially the elders view Dr. Mark Matunga as their new TJ. Mboya. In a very short span of time, Matunga has initiated several development projects in the area only compared to what Mboya could do.

During his speech at the inauguration for Suba Council of Elders, Dr. Matunga struck an emotionally captivate code saying that “ Tom Mboya died at the age of 39 with many unfinished business… if elected as governor of Homabay County, I will be 39 years old, and my job will be to pick up from Mboya left finish the development work that he left unfinished” noted Matunga.

When you listen to Matunga speak, it helps understand why not only the Suba people would support him, but many across Homabay County.

The Elders feel that for a very long time, they have finally found a leader who will bring about development.

A point of unity that came out very strongly during the Launch of Suba council of elders was the focus on Raila for presidency and Matunga for Governor.

The elders feel that dealing with county and national aspects on the political front will enable them emerge more united than if they allowed themselves to deal with parliamentary and local politics. Apparently the same is the posture that young professionals from Suba have adopted, but went further to add Obama to win second term bid.

The newly installed Suba elder Mr. Apollo Okeyo, encourage many members to register to the council and help promote peace co-existent among the Subas and other communities. Mr. Okeyo vowed to woo other communities to to support Raila, and he noted that in addition to core activities of Suba Council of Elders in Suba, the group will travel to other parts of the country to visit other communities to drum up support for Raila. He said that the Elders would support their sons and daughters to go for County

ends

KENYA: KIKUYU ELDER, KING OF THE AGIKUYU SAYS IT ALL WITHOUT MINCING WORDS

In Muranga addressing the whole wide world he said among others the following:

”We will not allow ourselves to be killed just because we do not follow our leaders. Those who fail to do this, we will follow them to their homes and expose them as the ones who are betraying us. We will say ”See, this is the one who is failing to work with us.”

These is an obvious veiled threat directed at not only GEMA presidental aspirants but also non-GEMA- the NYAMU citizens in keeping with Jomo Kenyatta classification, a .classification which effectively divided the country into GEMA and the rest. For Uhuru Kenyatta to be elected our president he must embrace non-GEMA communities whom he needs more than they need him.

Kenyans need a president who will reconcile all communities and not a GEMA chauvinist the likes of the newly enthroned ”Elder cum King!”.

Those who have been warned are ndeed forwarned. The buck will stop at the king’s door just in case anything untoward happens to them.

Ocampo and Ban Ki Moon should take note as the king’s warning points to violence come the 2012 elections. The presidential front runner wants votes from communities he hates. His only contribution to this nation is hatred for ”kamundu Raila Amolo Odinga. Period!

God save Kenyans.

DR ODIDA OKUTHE.
http://www.odidaokuthe.com

Kenya & Libya: Traditional Elders Condemn Libya Bombing

Folks,

These are good-for-nothing stomach elders bull heads who are busy bodies at party enjoy the feast tabled by looters while their communities are invaded, raped and killed with their resources stolen from them in the name of dunderheads ati elders ……. kwenda uko !

They have no business calling themselves elders, they are elders of doom no one want to associate themselves with. They are a complete sell-out and all communities of Kenya and the world must condemn them as such.

Who are they kidding ……. blind fellows who do not heed God’s warnings but tests the wrath of God. Hey ! This world, a what mac see ! Truly, it was predicted, leaders of doom are here with us ……. people take stock, how much damage, destruction and pain has Patni with faked corrupt group done to the people of Kenya and Africa, the poor children of God?

Their days are numbered.

Gaddaffi is no good man, a leader who is calling his people ants, mende, dogs and is killing mercilessly and stealing from other Africans including his colluding to Kenya and turning poor Kenyan men to rascal gigolo and ghetto’s, is just paying for his evil ways. And his stolen goods must be returned to the poor people of Kenya and Africa for reform and development……..Yes, these Patni’s and Company must join Gaddafi at ICC Hague so they can explain who gave them authority to sale poor Kenyans to Gaddafi.

We have Mungiki who have infiltrated the Police system, and the leader of Mungiki keep parading at Ranneberger’s office for loots and more loots, and Ranneberger is paying out the loot in the name of Youth Project …… Ranneberger cannot cut both-ways ….. his continuous stay is racking Kenya even more and pushing Kenya to a scenario worse than Somali. This must stop and those in cohort with Ranneberger must understand that we are not happy with their manoeuvres of destroying Kenya and Africa for their business interests. This must stop and stop now ….. Ranneberger must vacate Kenya’s office immediately…..they are the ones causing more havoc of destroying Kenya under table with other spoilers at equal contests with China and Libya. So Ranneberger must be removed now and immediately so peace can begin to settle in Kenya. With continuous stay of Ranneberger in Kenya, there is not going to be any peace, we will continue to have mushrooming and more sophisticated Mungiki’s, Al-Qaedas and Al-Shaabab, and this must be brought to a stop. Ranneberger is a complete spoiler.

I am truly very sad and ashamed by these kind of characters……This is the reason why Kenya must have the Ocampo six at Hague with no dilly dallying whether Kenya has the court or not.

Judy Miriga
Diaspora Spokesperson
Executive Director
Confederation Council Foundation for Africa Inc.,
USA
http://socioeconomicforum50.blogspot.com

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Traditional Elders Condemn Libya Bombing

Justus Ochieng
24 March 2011

House of Traditional Elders of Kenya Vice Chairman Riaga Ogallo has condemned the US, UK and French attack on Libya.

Ogallo said the attack was at a time when the Libyan government had hinted at initiating development projects in various parts of the country before end of the year.

This follows proposals presented by Kenyan elders drawn from various ethnic groups to President Muammar Gaddafi earlier this year in Tripoli.

Over 100 elders led by chairman Kamlesh Pattni took the development request to Gaddafi for Sh100 million for the first phase of the initiative to boost the economic standings of their people.

Ogallo said Gaddafi told the elders to craft a proposal of areas they would want to be assisted on back home and they mentioned construction of schools, hospitals and sinking of boreholes to better the lives of communities at the grassroots. “It is quite unfortunate that this man who would see the development of Africa is now facing the wrath of the white men,” he said.

Ogallo said the elders had also included in the proposal a request to help explore mineral resource deposits in various parts of the country. “I believe this would have helped this country a lot if the man was allowed to fulfill his dream,” he said. Ogallo said through Oilibya, Libya had shown its commitment to help improve people’s lives in Kenya.

House of Traditional Elders of Kenya was registered on December 22, 2009, with Kamlesh Pattni as chairman and Riaga Ogallo as deputy.

Other officials were Phares Ruteere (secretary general), Vincent Mwachiro (treasurer), former Ol Kejuado County Council chairman Daniel ole Muyaa (organising secretary), Haji Ahmed (deputy secretary), Peter Mumia (national coordinator), Julius Nyarotso (deputy treasurer), former Foreign Affairs PS Thuita Mwangi (deputy organising secretary) and Sam Muumbi (deputy coordinator).

Kenya, Sudan, Uganda: SOUTH SUDAN AND LUOS

From: Paul Nyandoto

Papa Likondi,

I have never seen an animal who write and read and uses internet and has even gone and opened an e-mail account as you have did. men you have made it very high, you are even better than the animals mentioned in George Orwell`s book ( the animal farm). But this thing you are now talking about luos. Does it concern only luos or it affects also Bantus. Because in Africa there had been allot of Bantu movements even from South Africa up to Nairobi long time ago. Do not forget that it was the Masais who are nilotics who gave nairobi such a beautiful name, since a lot of Bantus were being done by Arabs and never thought of any nomenclature. I would advice luos to remain in Kenya, Acholis to remain in Uganda, the southern Sudan luos or nilotic brothers to remain there and the nilotic in Democratic republic of Congo, Ruanda, Tanzania also to stay put, such that they can make the greater luo empire. I definitely think that from that empire Africa can also have a proud history, since we are already tired of the old history like slaves, slavery, slave trade, colonialism, corruption, tribalism, thieves, cannibalism: MEN it is just dirty past, nothing to make Africans be proud of the continent, because even Gold or oil in Africa is just benefiting non Africans. An African man hardly make enough to buy diamond for his loved one at a time when Africa is the largest diamond producer..

Paul Nyandoto

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>>> Papa Likondi >>>

We are aware that the Luos ran away from South Sudan when there was war at the beginning of the 18th Century. Now that the war is over and they have been given freedom by the North, I think they should start packing their belongings and go rebuild their country.
The Land they occupy now, around Lake Victoria belongs to the Banyore who were squeezed in some rocky place in Western Kenya. We are willing to occupy our ancestral land Kisumu City any time they leave which any case should not be later than 14rh February 2012.

African Programs and Activities Worldwide

from African Views

Dear friends, colleagues, brothers and sisters:

On February 17, 2011 Sotheby’s may auction off the Mask of Oba to the highest bidder. I write you in the hope that you and your organization can help persuade Sotheby’s not to auction off the heritage artifacts which are in dispute due to their colonial acquisition. I am convinced that Sotheby’s is a respectable company, and they might reconsider if enough people object to this sale.

Visit
http://africanreviews.org/African%20Views%20Report%20and%20Analysis-%20Colonial%20plundering%20and%20looting.htm

for a detailed explanation.

Contact detail for SOTHEBY’S is as follows:http://www.sothebys.comPhone: 212-606-7000UK: +44 (0) 20 7293 5000/+44 (0)20 7293 6000Email: Matthew Weigman | Matthew.Weigman@sothebys.comMitzi Mina | Mitzi.Mina@sothebys.com
More than this particular issue, I see a great window of opportunity for native Africans and the African Diaspora to forge a parallel between reparations and restitution. We can work together to meet our mutual societal challenges. While the problems of Africans and “blacks” are not identical they share a similar historical experience. On numerous occasions, many of us have tried to discuss this experience in different ways. In short, these types of problems cannot be solved in our individual silos.

My appeal to you as a stakeholder is that you help build connections that focus on our common challenges. These emerge in interdisciplinary studies and related student associations throughout academia, as well as across the spectrum of African and black focused organizations.

We are currently compiling a guide for African programs worldwide. We plan to inform other organizations and associations about all African related programs and activities in order to increase efficiency and collaborative opportunities This is a request for any entity, whether an academic, public or private institution.

Please complete and return the attached form to list your African affairs related programs and activities in the database of the African Programs Worldwide Guide. Any additional material regarding your company or institution will make your profile more complete and up to date. And in advance, we thank you for your cooperation.

Remember to contact Sotheby’s and send us your information and various areas of expertise as an African issues stakeholder. We will keep you posted on relevant collaborative opportunities.

Best regards,
Wale Idris
African Views
1646-226-0262

USA: Remarks by the President at National Prayer Breakfast

from Judy Miriga

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The White House

Office of the Press Secretary
For Immediate Release

February 03, 2011
Remarks by the President at National Prayer Breakfast
Washington Hilton, Washington, D.C.
9:00 A.M. EST

THE PRESIDENT: Thank you so much. To the co-chairs, Jeff and Ann; to all the members of Congress who are here, the distinguished guests who’ve traveled so far to be here this morning; to Randall for your wonderful stories and powerful prayer; to all who are here providing testimony, thank you so much for having me and Michelle here. We are blessed to be here.

I want to begin by just saying a word to Mark Kelly, who’s here. We have been praying for Mark’s wife, Gabby Giffords, for many days now. But I want Gabby and Mark and their entire family to know that we are with them for the long haul, and God is with them for the long haul. (Applause.)

And even as we pray for Gabby in the aftermath of a tragedy here at home, we’re also mindful of the violence that we’re now seeing in the Middle East, and we pray that the violence in Egypt will end and that the rights and aspirations of the Egyptian people will be realized and that a better day will dawn over Egypt and throughout the world.

For almost 60 years, going back to President Eisenhower, this gathering has been attended by our President. It’s a tradition that I’m proud to uphold not only as a fellow believer but as an elected leader whose entry into public service was actually through the church. This may come as a surprise, for as some of you know, I did not come from a particularly religious family. My father, who I barely knew — I only met once for a month in my entire life — was said to be a non-believer throughout his life.

My mother, whose parents were Baptist and Methodist, grew up with a certain skepticism about organized religion, and she usually only took me to church on Easter and Christmas — sometimes. And yet my mother was also one of the most spiritual people that I ever knew. She was somebody who was instinctively guided by the Golden Rule and who nagged me constantly about the homespun values of her Kansas upbringing, values like honesty and hard work and kindness and fair play.

And it’s because of her that I came to understand the equal worth of all men and all women, and the imperatives of an ethical life and the necessity to act on your beliefs. And it’s because of her example and guidance that despite the absence of a formal religious upbringing my earliest inspirations for a life of service ended up being the faith leaders of the civil rights movement.

There was, of course, Martin Luther King and the Baptist leaders, the ways in which they helped those who had been subjugated to make a way out of no way, and transform a nation through the force of love. But there were also Catholic leaders like Father Theodore Heshburg, and Jewish leaders like Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel, Muslim leaders and Hindu leaders. Their call to fix what was broken in our world, a call rooted in faith, is what led me just a few years out of college to sign up as a community organizer for a group of churches on the Southside of Chicago. And it was through that experience working with pastors and laypeople trying to heal the wounds of hurting neighborhoods that I came to know Jesus Christ for myself and embrace Him as my lord and savior. (Applause.)

Now, that was over 20 years ago. And like all of us, my faith journey has had its twists and turns. It hasn’t always been a straight line. I have thanked God for the joys of parenthood and Michelle’s willingness to put up with me. (Laughter.) In the wake of failures and disappointments I’ve questioned what God had in store for me and been reminded that God’s plans for us may not always match our own short-sighted desires.

And let me tell you, these past two years, they have deepened my faith. (Laughter and applause.) The presidency has a funny way of making a person feel the need to pray. (Laughter.) Abe Lincoln said, as many of you know, “I have been driven to my knees many times by the overwhelming conviction that I had no place else to go.” (Laughter.)

Fortunately, I’m not alone in my prayers. Pastor friends like Joel Hunter and T.D. Jakes come over to the Oval Office every once in a while to pray with me and pray for the nation. The chapel at Camp David has provided consistent respite and fellowship. The director of our Faith-based and Neighborhood Partnership’s office, Joshua DuBois — young minister himself — he starts my morning off with meditations from Scripture.

Most of all, I’ve got friends around the country — some who I know, some who I don’t know, but I know their friends who are out there praying for me. One of them is an old friend named Kaye Wilson. In our family we call her Momma Kaye. And she happens to be Malia and Sasha’s godmother. And she has organized prayer circles for me all around the country. She started small with her own Bible study group, but once I started running for President and she heard what they were saying about me on cable, she felt the need to pray harder. (Laughter.) By the time I was elected President, she says, “I just couldn’t keep up on my own.” (Laughter.) “I was having to pray eight, nine times a day just for you.” (Laughter.) So she enlisted help from around the country.

It’s also comforting to know that people are praying for you who don’t always agree with you. Tom Coburn, for example, is here. He is not only a dear friend but also a brother in Christ. We came into the Senate at the same time. Even though we are on opposite sides of a whole bunch of issues, part of what has bound us together is a shared faith, a recognition that we pray to and serve the same God. And I keep praying that God will show him the light and he will vote with me once in a while. (Laughter.) It’s going to happen, Tom. (Laughter.) A ray of light is going to beam down. (Laughter.)

My Christian faith then has been a sustaining force for me over these last few years. All the more so, when Michelle and I hear our faith questioned from time to time, we are reminded that ultimately what matters is not what other people say about us but whether we’re being true to our conscience and true to our God. “Seek first His kingdom and His righteousness and all these things will be given to you as well.”

As I travel across the country folks often ask me what is it that I pray for. And like most of you, my prayers sometimes are general: Lord, give me the strength to meet the challenges of my office. Sometimes they’re specific: Lord, give me patience as I watch Malia go to her first dance — (laughter) — where there will be boys. (Laughter.) Lord, have that skirt get longer as she travels to that dance. (Laughter.)

But while I petition God for a whole range of things, there are a few common themes that do recur. The first category of prayer comes out of the urgency of the Old Testament prophets and the Gospel itself. I pray for my ability to help those who are struggling. Christian tradition teaches that one day the world will be turned right side up and everything will return as it should be. But until that day, we’re called to work on behalf of a God that chose justice and mercy and compassion to the most vulnerable.

We’ve seen a lot of hardship these past two years. Not a day passes when I don’t get a letter from somebody or meet someone who’s out of work or lost their home or without health care. The story Randall told about his father — that’s a story that a whole lot of Americans have gone through over these past couple of years.

Sometimes I can’t help right away. Sometimes what I can do to try to improve the economy or to curb foreclosures or to help deal with the health care system — sometimes it seems so distant and so remote, so profoundly inadequate to the enormity of the need. And it is my faith, then, that biblical injunction to serve the least of these, that keeps me going and that keeps me from being overwhelmed. It’s faith that reminds me that despite being just one very imperfect man, I can still help whoever I can, however I can, wherever I can, for as long as I can, and that somehow God will buttress these efforts.

It also helps to know that none of us are alone in answering this call. It’s being taken up each and every day by so many of you — back home, your churches, your temples and synagogues, your fellow congregants — so many faith groups across this great country of ours.

I came upon a group recently called “charity: water,” a group that supports clean water projects overseas. This is a project that was started by a former nightclub promoter named Scott Harrison who grew weary of living only for himself and feeling like he wasn’t following Christ as well as he should.

And because of Scott’s good work, “charity: water” has helped 1.7 million people get access to clean water. And in the next 10 years, he plans to make clean water accessible to a hundred million more. That’s the kind of promoting we need more of, and that’s the kind of faith that moves mountains. And there’s stories like that scattered across this room of people who’ve taken it upon themselves to make a difference.

Now, sometimes faith groups can do the work of caring for the least of these on their own; sometimes they need a partner, whether it’s in business or government. And that’s why my administration has taken a fresh look at the way we organize with faith groups, the way we work with faith groups through our Office of Faith-based and Neighborhood Partnerships.

And through that office, we’re expanding the way faith groups can partner with our government. We’re helping them feed more kids who otherwise would go hungry. We’re helping fatherhood groups get dads the support they need to be there for their children. We’re working with non-profits to improve the lives of people around the world. And we’re doing it in ways that are aligned with our constitutional principles. And in this work, we intend to expand it in the days ahead, rooted in the notions of partnership and justice and the imperatives to help the poor.

Of course there are some needs that require more resources than faith groups have at their disposal. There’s only so much a church can do to help all the families in need — all those who need help making a mortgage payment, or avoiding foreclosure, or making sure their child can go to college. There’s only so much that a nonprofit can do to help a community rebuild in the wake of disaster. There’s only so much the private sector will do to help folks who are desperately sick get the care that they need.

And that’s why I continue to believe that in a caring and in a just society, government must have a role to play; that our values, our love and our charity must find expression not just in our families, not just in our places of work and our places of worship, but also in our government and in our politics.

Over the past two years, the nature of these obligations, the proper role of government has obviously been the subject of enormous controversy. And the debates have been fierce as one side’s version of compassion and community may be interpreted by the other side as an oppressive and irresponsible expansion of the state or an unacceptable restriction on individual freedom.

That’s why a second recurring theme in my prayers is a prayer for humility. Now, God answered this prayer for me early on by having me marry Michelle. (Laughter and applause.) Because whether it’s reminding me of a chore undone, or questioning the wisdom of watching my third football game in a row on Sunday, she keeps me humble. (Laughter.)

But in this life of politics when debates have become so bitterly polarized, and changes in the media lead so many of us just to listen to those who reinforce our existing biases, it’s useful to go back to Scripture to remind ourselves that none of has all the answers — none of us, no matter what our political party or our station in life.

The full breadth of human knowledge is like a grain of sand in God’s hands. And there are some mysteries in this world we cannot fully comprehend. As it’s written in Job, “God’s voice thunders in marvelous ways. He does great things beyond our understandings.”

The challenge I find then is to balance this uncertainty, this humility, with the need to fight for deeply held convictions, to be open to other points of view but firm in our core principles. And I pray for this wisdom every day.

I pray that God will show me and all of us the limits of our understanding, and open our ears and our hearts to our brothers and sisters with different points of view; that such reminders of our shared hopes and our shared dreams and our shared limitations as children of God will reveal the way forward that we can travel together.

And the last recurring theme, one that binds all prayers together, is that I might walk closer with God and make that walk my first and most important task.

In our own lives it’s easy to be consumed by our daily worries and our daily concerns. And it is even easier at a time when everybody is busy, everybody is stressed, and everybody — our culture is obsessed with wealth and power and celebrity. And often it takes a brush with hardship or tragedy to shake us out of that, to remind us of what matters most.

We see an aging parent wither under a long illness, or we lose a daughter or a husband in Afghanistan, we watch a gunman open fire in a supermarket — and we remember how fleeting life can be. And we ask ourselves how have we treated others, whether we’ve told our family and friends how much we love them. And it’s in these moments, when we feel most intensely our mortality and our own flaws and the sins of the world, that we most desperately seek to touch the face of God.

So my prayer this morning is that we might seek His face not only in those moments, but each and every day; that every day as we go through the hustle and bustle of our lives, whether it’s in Washington or Hollywood or anywhere in between, that we might every so often rise above the here and now, and kneel before the Eternal; that we might remember, Kaye, the fact that those who wait on the Lord will soar on wings like eagles, and they will run and not be weary, and they will walk and not faint.

When I wake in the morning, I wait on the Lord, and I ask Him to give me the strength to do right by our country and its people. And when I go to bed at night I wait on the Lord, and I ask Him to forgive me my sins, and look after my family and the American people, and make me an instrument of His will.

I say these prayers hoping they will be answered, and I say these prayers knowing that I must work and must sacrifice and must serve to see them answered. But I also say these prayers knowing that the act of prayer itself is a source of strength. It’s a reminder that our time on Earth is not just about us; that when we open ourselves to the possibility that God might have a larger purpose for our lives, there’s a chance that somehow, in ways that we may never fully know, God will use us well.

May the Lord bless you and keep you, and may He bless this country that we love. (Applause.)

END
9:23 A.M. EST

Zanzabar & UN: Zanzibaris authority to investigate the allocation of heritage sites to hotel investment

Reports Leo Odera Omolo

INFORMATION emerging from Zanzibar says the revolutionary government is reported as planning to launch a full scale investigation over the alleged irregular award of contract to develop a popular cultural site into a five star class hotel.

The controversy, which some government officials says is affecting a former cabinet member, they insist carries a risk hurting the country’s tourism, sector.

Mambo Msiige, an old cultural building is to be redeveloped but Kempinski at Stone Town. But UNESCO World Heritage Center has warned that this could see one of the most popular tourist attractions, in the Zanzibar Island, being struck off the prestigious list of World Heritage sites.

The Isles Minister for Information, Culture, Tourism and Sports in the semi-autonomous Revolutionary Government Abdilahi Jihad Hassan was widely quoted by the press last week as having said that the government is soon going to launch an extensive inquiry on some government official who have issued investment certificates without the government knowledge.

The Minister disclosed that the government would soon form a task force to probe the controversy.

“The government is supposed to be informed on any major rehabilitation project, but we have not had any information. What I know is that the private investor may have got the go-ahead from higher authorities,” the Minister told the EASTAFRICAN weekly without giving details on the lists of officials to be investigated.

It was further reported, however, that a decision on the Heritage Site will be made next month during the United Nations Education and Scientific and Cultural Organization {UNESCO} general conference.

Meanwhile, a team of experts from UNESCO is expected in the country this week to assess the situation on the ground and consult the Isles government.

If de-listed, Zanzibar would become the third Heritage Site to suffer such a fate since the creation of the World Heritage sites in 1972.

Mounting opposition to the development of the site is high from environmentalists’ and conservationists on this Indian Ocean archipelago, with critics reportedly asking UNESCO for a thorough review of the situation.

Among the world renown heritage sites removed so far from the Unesco list is Germany’s Dresden Elbe Valley in June 2009,owing to construction of a four-lane bridge at the heart of the cultural landscape.

The Arabian Oryx Sanctuary in Oman, a home to the rate antelope was the first to be dropped from the list in 2007 after the government reduced the sanctuary’s land by at least 90 per cent for a hotel investment.

Some official in Zanzibar says the loss will damage both the Stone Town’s reputation and its tourism revenue.

The proposed hotel, the critics maintained will ruin the city’s unique low-rise skyline and dwarf its neo-classical architecture, which includes 500 different type of workmanship reflected in brass studded carved, wooden doors, and a fascinating labyrinth labyrinth of narrow streets and alleys.

The planned hotel is to be built at the Forodhani seafront. The Zanzibar lobby groups said it was not consulted prior to plans to release Starehe Club – an open space- and Mambo Msiige building to the new investor.

However ,Issa Makarani, the director general of the Stone Town Conservation and Development Authority, admitted his group were fully involved in the planning of the hotel, adding that the architecture heeds conservation regulations.

Ends

KENYA: CULTURE

Sent by Leo Odera Omolo

BY JUSTUS OCHIENG’ JANUARY 20, 2010 CULTURE

US President Barrack Obama’s grandmother Sarah Obama has challenged members of her Luo community not to deviate from their culture.

Flanked by PM Raila Odinga’s younger sister Adhiambo Odinga, Homabay senator aspirant Hillary Alila and a Nairobi businessman Thomas Mariwa, They appealed to the community to appreciate Luo cultural heritage through exhibitions and performances.

The four lamented that it is unfortunate that nowadays parents do not teach their children about their cultural background.

Hilary Alila (left) Adhiambo Odinga and Mama Sarah Obama at the function in Kogelo.

– – – – – – – – – – –

From: justus ochieng

“It is regrettable that children whose parents have moved to towns especially from this community are not taught their mother language,” said mama Sarah.

– – – – – – – – – – –

From: Hilary Ochieng

Alila cited that just like in the early days when the elderly from the community used to teach the young ones about culture, the trend should continue so as to preserve the custom.

They appealed to the government through the Ministry of State for National Heritage and Culture to move with speed and develop the Kogelo Community Cultural Centre which has since stalled.

They pointed out that such a centre will be vital not only in serving as a cultural centre but also promote and safeguard intangible cultural heritage and further create new opportunities for the community.

The four were addressing members of the community who had turned up during celebrations to mark the second Anniversary Celebrations of US President Barrack Obama in Kogelo during the opening of the Obama Kogelo Cultural Festival which ended yesterday. (Thursday)

“This festival is of great significance as it was initiated after the inauguration of the 44th President of America who traces his cultural roots in Nyang’oma Kogelo village, Siaya County,” added Alila.

He noted that the Kogelo Community Cultural Festival’s objectives were vital as they will showcase and appreciate cultural heritage through exhibitions and performances, promote Unity in diversity among the Kenyan communities and international community and more so promote cultural tourism for economic development.

Adhiambo urged the government to be committed to the development and safeguarding of cultural heritage citing that no meaningful development can take place without cooperating with the aspirations of people in the development process adding that cultural festivals such as Obama Kogelo Cultural Festival should be all inclusive of the community’s cultural heritage.

Meanwhile, Adhiambo who will be vying for a Kisumu Parliamentary seat on an ODM Party ticket urged Party members to vote good leaders in the impending party elections citing that the upheavals in ODM were caused by bad leaders with selfish interests.
“The rain started beating our party moments we elected bad leaders at the grass root level, let us take the challenge and ensure we cast our votes to visionary leaders in the forthcoming elections,” she added.

Alila appealed to voters to shun tribalism and ensure they cast their votes to youthful leaders who can propel this country to its glory.
“It is high time we united as youths and voted for young leaders who can move this country ahead,” he added.

He at the same time dared rebel ODM MP’s to toe the line or quit the party altogether.
“They cannot continue holding our good party at ransom the way they have done in the past 3 years, It is high time they packed and go,” he added.

The Homabay Senator aspirant also took the opportunity to applaud PM Raila Odinga for instilling good leadership in the Orange party.

Mariwa said young leadership of visionary members with integrity should be supported so as to ensure challenges facing the youths are solved.

Ends…

Kenya: My people have lost their sense of genuine heroism

From: Kuria-Mwangi

I don’t want to dwell on the major issues raised by my friend Philip Ochieng on why Luo Nyanza is lagging behind. I was interested in the piece below. We have discussed the same in these fora. Memories of the days when folks from my home areas flocked to the Sagana fisheries and to River Tana looking for fish especially during the exam times because we believed that Luo had excelled in the academic arena because of eating fish. Those who failed the exams after restricting themselves to a fish diet blamed the short period of fish eating or the species eaten (believing that one had to eat kamongo from lake victoria to excel.

When the man of cloth managed a lower second division and had just enough to grant a second selection which saw him arrived at Mbita Point for A-levels and being not among the very promising of loco 15 to go University, rumors spread in the village and beyond that I was after the lake kamongo. Yes, I had a good share of not very good smelling Kamongo and then went to top the form six class at Mbita High school. Back in Murang’a, my hard work was not credited to the good performance but kamongo got the credit. It was difficult arguing against that especially with my poor performance in form four at Githumu High school and the fact that I was not among the best at Kimathi primary school. Some even claimed that I attended Maseno National School. This was not helped by the fact that I never denied this rumor because it earned me lots of admiration from skirt wearers, many of whom would not have have bothered to give me a peck leave alone a french kiss if they realized that I attended a third rate A-Level school where we found it more comfortable going for long calls on top of the huge rocks surrounding Mbita High School. Now those who think this is stupid need to know that there is nothing as enjoyable as doing a No. 2 on top of a hill and on a rock and then looking at the beautiful lake Victoria and the surrounding Mfangano and Rusinga Island. As you did your bio function, Kampala or some Ugandan city would be visible from the horizon and this allowed you to enjoy the scenery as you completed what took you to the mountain and on the rock. From there you run to the lake, dived and swam for the rest of the afternoon.

Now let us hear what others have to say about this hard hitting piece from filifu as call Philip in my home area.

Many older-generation individuals among the Kikuyu – a community whose education was disrupted considerably by the Mau Mau hostilities — hold on to the myth that the Luo have a special kind of intelligence as a result of a diet dominated by fish.

http://www.nation.co.ke/oped/Opinion/My%20people%20have%20lost%20their%20sense%20of%20%20genuine%20heroism%20/-/440808/1090226/-/10smrkbz/-/index.html


http://www.kuria-mwangi.blogspot.com
http://www.facebook.com/kjmwangi

KENYA: A PRAYER FOR THE NATION!

From: Joshua Odhiambo Nyamori

As we start the 2011, I pray that we all rededicate ourselves to the struggle for Kenya to rise up and live out the true meaning of its creed: The Republic of Kenya shall be a multi-part democratic State founded on the national value and principles of governance referred to in Article 10 of the Constitution. May the old spirit of this celebrated nation, that spirit that has over the years lifted us up from the lowest ebbs of hopelessness to the highest pinnacles of faith in possibility of change, permeate the generation of today; may it liberate us from selfishness and ethnic strife and bring us together in national self-consciousness to bless a proud and free Kenya, united in herself.

Happy New Year!

Kenya: PM Raila Odinga assured of the Kalenjin votes for his presidential bid in 2012

Reports Leo Odera Omolo In Kisumu City.

The installation ceremony of the newly crowned Ker of the Luo Council of Elders, Mzee Willis Opiyo Otondi, had brought together the largest number of community’s elders from the major ethnic groups in Western Kenya and beyond.

Ker Opiy, who hails from Kisumo-Nyahera, takes over the mantled of leadership from the ousted controversial former Ker Meshack Riaga Ogal, from Kasipuil-Kabondo in Homa-Bay County.

The colorful ceremony was held at the Kenyatta’s Sports Ground, which is located right in the middle of Kisumu City and witnessed by thousands of enthusiasm crowd.

The gathering attracted several cabinet ministers, who included Gerald Otieno Kajwang’{Immigration}’, James Aggrey Orengo{Lands} Prof Anyang’ Nyong’o {Medical Services, Assistant Ministers MPs, civic leaders and representatives of special interests and ODM stalwarts.

For the first time, a large delegation of elders from the neighboring communities, like the Abagusii, Kurias, Luhyiah, Kalenjin, Pokot, Turkana, Samburus, Maasais and the Kikuyus, were adequately represented at the ceremony.

The elders from the Kalenjin community, who included Mzee Jackson Kibor, Mzee Said Chepkeitany from Eldoret, Mzee Eliud Koech, Mzee Kipsugut Lelei from the Kipsigis Laibons, Lt. Gen. {rtd} John Arap Koech, the retired former deputy CGS and others assured the Prime Minister Raila Odinga of the community unswerving support and backing for his quest for the presidency comes 2012.

Mzee Koech is the patron of the Kipsigis Council of Elders. He told the gathering that Raila Odinga was the most promising leader in this country and as such should be given the chance to have a shot at the presidency comes the year 2012.

Mzee Jackson Kibor, in a brief speech, during a meeting with the Prime Minister in his Rural Opoda Bar Opuk home in Bondo, said the perceived political differences between the Prime Minister Raila Odinga and the Eldorey North MP William Ruto, who is the deputy leader of the ODM party, are personal and have got no bearing nor they could tilt the Kalenjin voting pattern in the next general election. He said the ODM members in the Kalenjin region have confidence and faith in Raila Odinga whom they viewed as the most forthright, trusted who is committed to the services of the Kenyan people.

Gen Koech, who appeared of late to have taken over the mantle of ODM political leadership in the entire Kipsigis region, said the community had no problem with Mr Odinga, and would definitely vote for him in bloc comes the year 2012.

Mzee Eliud Koech, the patron of the Kiosigis Council ODM Elders, urged Kenyans to adopt the political slogan of “One Kenya. one people”, as the unifying symbol. .Kipsugut Lelei, an elder from the <Laibon community, who was born in Gwassi during the time when the Kiposigis, Nandi and Tugen Laibons were vanished to the remote Gwassi Hills part of Southern Nyanza by the British Colonualk administration, and who speaks Dho-Luo fluently, said Raila Odinga is the right person to be the next president due to his total commitment to the services of all Kenyans irrespective of their tribes, color, religion and creed.

The Kisumu ceremony was also addressed by the Kuria elder, John Magaywa, who promised that his community will go along with other neighboring communities in voting for Raila Odinga to be the next President of the Republic of Kenya.

The gathering was also addressed by the Abagusii chairperson of Council of Elders, Mzee Kenneth Matundura Araka, who told the Kenyans to ensure that political differences do not deter the PM from winning the 2012 presidential bid.

Also in attendance was Dr. Wangari Gidhinji, who rep[resented the Kiukuyu Council of Elders who told the meeting that his community had Raila Odinga deeply placed in the peoples minds.

Six MPs from the Rift Valley, led by Assistant Minister for Energy Magerer Lang’{Kipkellion}, Dr. Lorna Laboso {Sotik} Musa Sirma {nominated} Beatrice Kones {Bomet and Chepkitony {Elkeyo North} were also in attendance.

Guessing from what transpired in Kisumu and Bondo, the perceived belief that Raila Odinga is no longer the darling of the Kalenjin voters, was brushed aside, judging from pledges made by the community leaders in their brief addresses.The Prime Minister therefore still commands the highest following among the Kalenjin in both the North and South Rift regions. This time the delegates had travelled as far as from Pokot, Turkana and Tugen communities.

Kisumu City was the beehive of activities, which saw most of the hotels in town filled to capacity with the visitors for the ceremony which was held on Monday 27th December 2010.

Ends

leooderaomolo@yahoo.com

Luo Thuondi!

From: MOSES OPADO

Once upon a time . . .

A duokoni Ruoth Nyasaye Nyakalaga Erokamano Maduong’ kuom miyowa thuolo mondo wabed janeno Epiny Kenya.Ero sikukuu Ochopo Cham Uro kod Wedeu! Kuom yie achiel paro A chiel gi Geno Achiel.Jaluo ok Cham
Thuol! Wa lem Uru ni jowamatie eot Ang’enge,Ood Chieth,Endara kaachiel gi Mond Liete kod Maskindee!Ruoth Omiu Ngima mogudho kuom Ng’uonone.I wish you Merry Christmass and Happines comes New Year- Opado Obingo wuod Olwalo!

USA: Share our progress

Folks,

Yes, 2010 is a year we recognize to have made strides of notable progress in many angles and earmarked potentials for economic progress in the coming years.

We couldn’t have done it any better. The effects may not be felt immediately but will be realized in the coming months.

I therefore take this wonderful moment to join with the President to extend Seasonal Greetings to you, Wishing you with your family and friends a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year with many more Blessings.

Although physically apart, we are all united for a common purpose sharing the universe and striving to better Human lives and preserving nature.

Cheers !

Judy Miriga
Diaspora Spokesperson
Executive Director
Confederation Council Foundation for Africa Inc.,
USA
http://socioeconomicforum50.blogspot.com

– – – – – – – – – – –

From: Barack Obama
Subject: Share our progress

Hello:

This time of year, Americans around the country are taking the time to exchange heartfelt messages with friends and loved ones, reflecting on the past year. They write of achievements and setbacks, of births, graduations, promotions, and moves.

These messages allow us to overcome the miles that separate us. And they allow us to continue one of the most basic American traditions that has held folks close for centuries — the simple sharing of stories.

And as families gather around holiday tables this season, we also have the opportunity to share the stories of the change this movement has achieved together.

It is a narrative woven by individuals across America — in big cities and small towns, hospitals and classrooms, in auto manufacturing plants and auto supply stores.

These are stories of rebuilding, and of innovation. Stories of communities breathing new life into old roads and bridges, of local plants harnessing alternative fuel into new energy. Stories of small businesses getting up, dusting themselves off, and beginning to grow again. Stories of soldiers who served multiple tours of duty in Iraq now coming home — and enjoying the holidays this year in the company of loved ones.

These are stories of progress.

They unite us, and they are ours to share.

We’ve pulled many of them together in one place, PROGRESS. You can see what our reforms have meant to Americans in every state — block by block, community by community.

Click here to read about stories of progress in your area — and share them with your friends and family.

The reforms that we fought long and hard for are not talking points.

And their effects don’t change based on the whims of politicians in Washington. They are achievements that have a real and meaningful impact on the lives of Americans around the country. They are achievements that would not have been possible without you. PROGRESS localizes them — and brings them to life.

It tells of how a green technology business in Phoenix, Arizona, is using a grant through the Recovery Act’s Transportation Electrification program to bring the first electric-drive vehicles and charging stations to cities around the country.

It tells how, thanks to closing the “donut hole” in prescription drug coverage, a diabetic woman in Burlington, Vermont will no longer have to choose between purchasing her monthly groceries or the insulin she needs to survive.

It tells about how 56,000 Maryland residents’ jobs were saved or created by the Recovery Act.

And about how, thanks to the Affordable Care Act, 17,600 small businesses in Maryland’s 8th Congressional District are now eligible for health care tax credits — and how 11,500 residents in Maryland’s 8th with pre-existing conditions can no longer be denied coverage.

There are thousands more stories like these.

In the coming days, as we gather with our loved ones at dinner tables around the nation, let’s pass them on. Let’s celebrate the spirit of service and responsibility that brought them to fruition. And let’s steady ourselves with the resolve to continue pressing forward.

Because the coming year will hold new challenges — battles that have yet to be fought, and stories of progress that have yet to be written.

Take a look at the progress we’ve made in your area — and share the stories you read with your friends and family:

http://progress.barackobama.com

Happy holidays, and God bless,

Barack

P.S. — Last week, seven OFA volunteers joined me at the White House for a special meeting — and they brought along your feedback from the Vote 2010 campaign. It was incredibly meaningful for me to be able to hear directly from supporters like you. And your input will be front and center as we plot our course moving forward into the new year. Please take a couple minutes to check out some photos and stories from the meeting.
http://my.barackobama.com/page/content/AMeetingWithThePresident/?source=20101223_BO_em

Uganda: 120 Ugandan girls traumatized after forced circumcision in Sabiny

Reports Leo Odera Omolo

SOME cried. Some were confused. Others still traumatised, while many were left speechless.They looked on in disbelief as a local female surgeon tried in vain thrice, probably using a very blunt knife, to cut off a girl’s clitoris.

Sabiny girls during the Wednesday night circumcision ritual in Bukwo district.

She then asked for another, similarly blunt knife and to make it work, applied extra force, going back and forth, the way a saw cuts into timber. The girl struggled not to show fear and to contain her trembling, which is culturally unacceptable and would have attracted scorn and ridicule from the attentive crowd.

As blood gushed from her private parts, the crowd urged the girls: “Be strong! You are almost done! Remain calm!”,the semi official newspaper, the NEWVISION has reported this morning.

People stood on hills; others climbed trees and some pitched camp on roof tops of huts to catch a glimpse of the ritual.

A white lady in the crowd was so shaken, she said later that she wished she could have saved the girl from the severe pain and embarrassment.

Once cut, the girl was pushed aside, like a slaughtered chicken, her legs put together as if to stifle the pain and another descended upon.

Yet, when Saturday Vision interviewed her, she said she was happy and excited. But her facial muscles reflected the pain buried inside her, away from society. “I am happy I have become a woman by being circumcised. I will be able to do what other cut women do. I will now be able to climb into the granary or milk cows, which I was not allowed to do till now,” Alice Chemutai said.

She had a blanket wrapped around her waist.

Eight girls cut with two knives

Then seven other girls – one by one, wrapped in dirty blankets and strewn all over a compound hosting two huts, were circumcised. The circumciser would first throw fine millet flour into their private parts to reduce friction and wetness.

She used the same knife to cut each of them. The knife was not sterilized, exposing all of them to the risk of the deadly HIV.

The cuts lasted close to 50 seconds. As the mutilated girls lay helpless, an old woman, threw millet flour over them to appease the spirits and ordered them to kneel so that the blood could pour out.

Most of the girls were barely in their early twenties but someone in the crowd said they were all married. “Girls here marry by their 15th birthdays,” he said.

A few minutes later, the girls were told to march into a hut where they would spend the next three weeks healing from the mutilation. But they did not march; they staggered.

The eight are part of over 120 girls who have been mutilated in Sebei region since the Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) season kicked off in Sebei in eastern Uganda.

According to information compiled by local authorities, the girls hail from the districts of Bukwo and Kween. Kapchorwa district has not registered any case.

According to Alfred Ayebwa, the LC1 chairman for Kapkorosia village, over 50 girls were mutilated in Kabei and Kortuk sub-counties, 20 in Chesower sub-county, and 34 in Chekwasta sub-county. Another 16 were mutilated in Suam sub-county.

Bukwo vice-chairman John Chelangat said the mutilation was done between midnight and two in the morning, behind closed doors.

“This is due to fear of the new law that calls for the ban on FGM and gives harsh penalties to anybody participating in FGM or withholds any information about it,” he said

No sensitisation about the new law

The Government passed a law prohibiting FGM in December 2009 but nobody in the FGM areas seems to care.

According to Chelangat, no sensitisation has been done to educate the people about the new law because there are no funds to do it.

The United Nations allocated about $300,000 (about sh600m) for FGM activities but, to-date, people on the ground report no sensitisation activities.

The national gender officer for the UN Fund for Population Activities, Brenda Malinga, said some of the money has been used at the national level to get the law working and the rest was supposed to be disbursed to the districts in November for sensitisation about the law.

She says last year, focus was mainly on enactment and enforcement of legislation against FGM.

“We have been supporting training on community dialogue for FGM abandonment in Amudat, Bukwo and Kapchorwa. We also simplified the new law for them.”

But when Saturday Vision visited FGM districts, no impact was seen. And the FGM season started in July 2010.

Women who usually do the cutting are complaining that FGM activists promised them compensation for income lost but up to now, nothing has been done.

“We shall continue cutting girls because this is where we get our income. They have also not sensitized us and we do not know what is in the law,” said Sunday Kokop, the surgeon in Suam-sub-county. According to the law, aggravated FGM gets life imprisonment.

This is when death occurs or where the victim is disabled or is infected with HIV. It is also aggravated FGM where the offender is a parent, guardian or person with control over the victim, or where the act is done by a health worker.

Others who engage in FGM shall be imprisoned for a period not exceeding 10 years.

The problem

The lack of sensitisation about the law can be blamed on factors like lack of a radio especially in Bukwo district to carry the message, low levels of education and high levels of poverty.

Alex Cherop, 34, of Chesimat village in Kortek sub-county, said nobody has ever told them to abandon FGM. They hear about a campaign in Kapchorwa but do not know how it fits in their culture and customs.

According to the Sabiny, a girl is circumcised to initiate her into adulthood. The clitoris is cut out to interfere with a woman’s arousal process.

Saturday Vision established that over 220 girls were mutilated in Amudat district between July and September this year. According to the LC5 chief of Amudat, Pauline Isura, the girls were mutilated in the remote sub-counties of Loro and Karitek, on the Uganda-Kenya border, which is difficult to reach.

“We do not have logistics to facilitate us to reach there. There were also some girls who crossed to their kin in Pokot north in Kenya to get mutilated,” Isura adds.

Why is there no action taken against perpetrators?

Local leaders are reluctant to swing into action because, according to Chelangat, they may lose votes.

The police are also unable to arrest the culprits because, according to the Bukwo district Police chief, James Wamwenyerere, they do not have transport.

“We lack transport and most of the places are vast and hilly for us to reach.”

The Police chief said he had the names and location of the girls who were to be mutilated on December 2, but they did nothing due to lack of transport.

The DPC, however, says they have managed to arrest about four girls who were mutilated in Chesower sub-county and five of their parents. They are in custody.

But recently, when they arrested three girls in Binyinya, Kween district over FGM, court acquitted them because the girls refused to name the people who mutilated them. They told the magistrate that they mutilated themselves.

When the local surgeon, who had been arrested by police was paraded in court for identification, the girls said they did not know her. The case was dismissed.

However, Beatrice Chelangat, the executive director of the Reproductive Educative and Community Health Project, says investigations are going on.

Ends

The Wonder of Western Civilization

Mr. Streiber has posted some thoughts for those of us who care about modernistic society which recognizes individual rights, and its status.

– pwbmspac –

– – – – – – – – – – –

Western civilization is in the doghouse. Its popularity among intellectuals has dropped to an all-time low. To the far left, it’s invalidated by its historical prejudices. To the far right, it’s annoyingly insistent on freedom for all–even the far left.

Politicians give lip-service to freedom, but the enormous government bureaucracies that are characteristic of the developed world would prefer to replace choices with rules, which is actually a decivilizing process.
. . .
Read more of author Whitley Streiber’s essay at the web address below.
http://www.unknowncountry.com/journal/wonder-western-civilization

KENYA: KER WILLIS OPIYO OTONDI WARNS RIVAL GROUPS TO STOP MASQUERADING AS OFFICIALS OF THE COUNCIL OF ELDERS.

Writes Leo Odera Omolo In Kisumu City.

The Luo Council of Elders is only one entity and as such no other organization or parallel groups can operate using the same name and title of the organization.

The Council Chairman Ker Willis Opiyo Otondi yesterday issue a stern warning in a letter which was also copied to the Provincial Administration, the police and all relevant authorities throughout Nyanza Province asking them not to deal with any splinter group masquerading as the officials of the Luo Council of Elders.

Ker Opiyo Otondi broke his silent for the first time ever since he was anointed as the head of the controversy ridden cultural organization by the Prime Minister Raila Amolo Odinga.

The ceremony held at the guest house of the SONYSUGAR company at Awendo in Rongo constituency within Migori County was boycotted by the other members led by the ousted former chairman Meshack Riaga Ogalo.

Ker Opiyo Otondi in a terse two paragraph letter, which was copied to all D.C.s, and OCPDs in Nyanza Province advised all the relevant authorities in the region not to deal with the ousted group. A copy of registration certificate from the Registrar of the Societies, signed by one L.N.Waithaka is attached.

The registrar gave the following names as the officially registered new officials of the Luo Council of Elders.

It gave the following names as the duly registered new officials.Chairman {Ker} Willis Opiyo Otondi, Vice chairman Ex-Senior Chief John Omolo Anditi, Secretary Samson Otieno Oyieko, Assistant Secretary Owino Nyady, Treasurer Paul Owino Ombuor, Assistant Treasurer Michael Odote Kojiem, Organizing Secretary Stephen Otho Deya and Assistant Organizing Secretary Alogo Raila.

Waithaka’s letter, which Ker Opiyo Otondi has circulated to all government offices in the region says in part that the new officials were registered on June 9,2010 under the Societies Act {CP.108} And Soc/48261.

Ker Opiyo Otondi has also advised all rel;event government offices not to recognize or register any new body calling itself Luo or REamogi Supreme Council of Elders saying the two names Luo and Ramogi are culturally sacred names and such cannot be misused by anyone to satisfy his or her personal egos.

Ker Opiyo Otondi’s letter came in the form of clarification following reports that rival groups have of late been visiting D.Cs and police authorities seeking permission to hold public gathering or meeting in some districts. . “People are free to hold their meeting anywhere at anytime, but there must be a clear-cut understandable policy that nobody be allowed to use the name of Luo Coiuncil of Elders without express permission and authority from Ofafa Memorial Hall Offices of the Council, which is located in Kisumu City,”a source in Kisumu. has said.

The letter says in part; “It is therefore follow that, the activities of the other group masquerading as the official of the Council of Elders is illegal and should not be allowed to hold any public meetings within your area of jurisdiction unless there is endorsement of such a gathering by our branch officials within your district.”

Ker Opiyo Otondi ‘s letter also listed the following branches throughout Luo-Nyanza as Suba, Mbita, Homa-Bay,Ndhiwa,Rachunyo North,Rachuonyo South,Nyatike, Uriri, Migori,Rongo, Nyakach, Nyando, Muhoroni,Kisumu West, Kisumu North, Bondo, Rarieda, Gem, Alego-Usonga,Ugenya, Ugunja.

It asked all the DCs to cooperate with its head office by stopping any illegal meetings.

Former Councilk chairman Meshack Riaga Ogalo recently held a press conference at the Museum View Hotel whose owner Mzee Yusto Ondigo Oyoo is a member of the splinter group and severely criticized the Prime Minister Raila Odinga for having anointed the new Ker, and yet he and his group were still in office.

They argued that Raila has no mandate to anoint new Ker because the Council is not part of political party nor is it affiliated to any political movement.

The Ogalo group was ousted on an election which took place on June 4 at the Ofafa Memorial Hall, which they boycotted. This was latter followed by a tension consultative meeting chaired by Raila Odinga and attended by over 10 MPOs at the same venue in attempt to reconcile the group, but it became overwhelmingly apparent that the two functions were irreconcilable.

Ends

leooderaomolo@yahoo.com

Kenya: SUBBA Community Elders launches their own Council, of Elders separated from the wrangling ridden Luos

Reports By,Leo Odera Omolo

Elders from the Suba community have launched their own Council of Elders, which a spate entity from the power struggle ridden Luo Council of Elders.

The new Council of Elders has already been registered by the registrar of the societies.

Its members comprises of elders from Mfangano and Rusinga Island region within Mbita district. Others are from Gwasi and Kakisingiri regions within the Gwassi district. Other members come from Lambwe and Gembe locations on the mainland..

The group’s interim officials are as follows. Mzee Apollo Okeyo Omuga is the chairman with, Ex-Senior Chief Thomas Okang’a of Gwasii as the Vice chairman. The secretary is Samuel Oketch while vice secretary is Nicholas Ouma Ajwang’. The group’s treasurer is Mzee Asher Abonyo Ochieng’. Nicholas Ouma Ajwang’.

Speaking at Mbita point Mzee Okeyo Omuga explained that the aims and objectives of the new group is to restore the Suba language which is fast vanishing and to press hard for the language to be taught in all schools located in the Suba community dominated from class one to class four.

The group, He said is very much concerned that the Suba culture and tradition is being diluted and concocted with the Luo culture, and yet the two communities have their own way of life, although there has been a lot of intermarriage between them.

The group has cited the politically infested Luo Council of Elders as a discredited organization which can no longer work for the welfare of the Suba people. But its members are free to maintain their individual membership of any political party of their choice.

Mzee Okeyo said that his group is also going to liaise with the national vernacular radio stations to ensure that Suba programmes are aired regularly on those stations. It will do so by way of sponsoring Suba language in other stations including those airing mainly Luo programmes.

Suba language is dying fast and it is only spoken in patches of land around Kakisingir, Gwassi and Mfangano Island. Most people, especially the current generation preferred Dho-Luo and the majority of the younger people do not understand. So the group want this language revitalized and restored for the future generation.

The group says it will sponsor a series of cultural events in the WSu8ba inhabited areas like Muhuru Bay and Suna Migori, just for the purpose of promoting and reviving the Suba language.”We shall press hard and even work hard to sensitize the Suba Language and ensure it is taught in primary schools from Standard one to four and even books published in that language. We shall encourage others and sponsor more people of Suba origins to write books so that the language is stored for the future generation.

The committee members are also drawn from Gwassi, Kakisingiri, Mfangano and Rusinga Islands,Gember and Lambwe locations.

Ends

leooderaomolo@yahoo.com

KENYA: ELDERS WHO BACK THE EMBATTLED LUO KER TAKES RAILA ODINGA HEAD ON.

BY REPORTER.

As if to add more fire to an already bad situation, a group of over twenty elders from across Luo Nyanza yesterday converged at a Kisumu hotel where they declared their full support for the embattled chairman of the Luo council of elders Ker Riaga Ogalo

.In what many observers are likely to view as an open defiance against the prime minister Raila Odinga’s move to change guard at the council by installing Willis Opiyo Otondi as new Ker, the 28 elders declared their manm of choice still remains Riaga and asked politicians from the region to keep off the affairs of the organization.

In a press release signed by all the elders who converged at the Museum View hotel in Kismu dismissed the decision as not only ”outrageous,misplaced,political but also absurd,dictatorial and misleading”,

And the tough talking elders categorically told Raila Odinga who is also the ODM supremo to keep off the affairs of the council adding that in the history of the community no politician has ever single handily elected a Luo Ker, to the least installing one like he purportedly did with Otondib recently in Migori.

While reading the statement on behalf of the other elders, Mzee Adera Osawa who is also the Secretary General of the council said Riaga was cordially elected by delegates drawn all over the Luo Nyanza region and his position still stands firm and unshaken according to them.

They pointed out that nowhere in the council constitution from days past has a politician been allowed to nominate and solely install a top most community elder since the council was non political.

Parts of the press statement read”The written and ancestral stipulated constitution is noble,humane, supreme and cherishes justice and democracy. It stipulates clearly that Ker once nominated serves without being put through to any elections ,unless he dies,abdicates duty or is simply impeached by the three council organs of the National Executive committee,and annual general meeting and if proved guilty by the organs then the Ker is requested to own up and stand down”.

The elders said in the absence of the above procedure, then any purported election is irrelevant, null and void.

Describing the recent move as a coup hatched and executed by unconstitutional authority,the elders said they were making a strong protest to the prime minister to stop dictating and dividing the community.

Osawa also the council was devoid of patronage and dismissed as baseless claims that it has a patron.

Otondi was crowned last weekend in Migori town the new Ker in a ceremony attended by a section of MPs from the region and Raila himself.

Inheritance & Kenyans – Kirima’s Case Study

From: KENNEDY KORIR

Kenyan courts are awash with civil cases touching on inheritance, we have also witnessed cases of brother killing brother over disputes pertaining to inheritance.
I do not know how Mr Kirima made is 750 Million worth estate but there some cases I know where the virtues of hard work – to make your own money within the family have been discarded for “lets wait to inherit” when the Mzee passes on.

The most affected are the families where the wealth was not created from the bottom but obtained through corrupt and shady deals.

The children woke up one day to find themselves changing homes from Umoja to Loresho and from Umoja primary school to Braeburn and being chauffeured everyday to this expensive school.

The mentality of we are awash with money is imparted and whatever they ask for is given without question just to keep the children happy since dad and mum do not have time for them.

I am reminded of one Hoseah Kiplagat who once flew his family to a 5 star Tourist Club he ask his 4 kids to shop in an expensive tourist souvenir shop, they bought “this and that” and were all broken and strewn all over the following day as they could not understand what they were buying, he later paid 120,000/-

Now tell these kids when they are in their 20s & 30s that they cannot go out like all the other ‘richees’ or they have to look for a job and earn for the themselves and surely they will demand their share of inheritance so as to spend as they wish.

I am sure you have better examples

Kenya: Raila Odinga has installed the new Ker of the Luo Council of Elders to end bickering

Reports Leo Odera Omolo In Awendo Town.

The week end installation of the new Ker of the Luo Council of Elders by the Prime Minister Raila Odinga in a colorful ceremony attended by three cabinet ministers and a host of MPS from the various constituencies within Luo Nyanza now bring to an immediate end the protracted bickering and power struggle.

The installation ceremony was held at the SONYSUGAR Guest House in Awendo town within Rongo Constituency in Awendo district.

The anointing of Ker Willis Opiyo Otondi as the officially recognized chairman of the squabble-ridden Luo Council of Elders now permanently seals off permanent the fate of the former belligerent officer holder Meshack Riaga Ogalo who had put up a hard fight against his ousters

It was attended by four invited delegates from all the 21 one parliamentary electoral constituencies.b Security was tight and ven some delegates had togo through thorough security check-ups before being allowed entry to the facility,though some had the invitation budges.

Ministers in attendance included the Dalmas Otieno ( Public Service} Peter Anyang” Nyong”o [Medical Services} and Gerald Otieno Kajwang’ {Immigration and Registration of Persons}.

Also in attendance were MPS Oyugi Maguwanga {Kasipula-Kabondo}, Dick Omondi Anyanga {Omuk-Lela of Nyatike},Martin Otieno Ogindo {Rangwe},Cyprian Ojwang’ Omolo {Uriri},.

_The Migori MP John Pesa who is the chairman of the Luo Parliamentary Group read messages of apology from those who were unable to attend the meeting.

Opiyo Otondi became the 9th Ker of the Luo community in a chain of command which began in 1945 when the first modern “Ker” the late Jaramogi Oginga Odinga was installed to serve in the same position, but under the auspices of the defunct, but powerful Luo Union East Africa.

The delegates to the facility were thoroughly scrutinized by the security personnel as a result of the high tension which had built itself up following rumors that the ousted group led by the former Ker Meshack Riaga Ogalo would storm the venue and cause mayhem. But nothing like that happened and the meeting was held under peaceful atmosphere. The observers were also ushered in after thorough security vetting.

The former Ker Meshack Riaga Ogalo skipped the meeting, but unconfirmed rumors renting the air at the venue of the meeting was the ousted group is in the process of launching a splinter group called Luo Supreme National Council of Elders. But many observers doubted whether the new splinter group would really see the light of the day with Raila Odinga the Luo political kingpin having endorsed the Opiyo Otondi group.

In the new lineup Willis Opiyo Otondi became the new Ker and his deputy is Ex-Senior Chief Omolo Anditi,Sam Ayieko is the Secretary-General, the deputy secretary general is Owino Nyande, whike the treasurer is Abel Ombura and the deputy treasurer if Michael Odote Kojiem,Mzee Othoo Deya is the national organizing secretary with Alogo Raila as his deputy. Also confirmed in their positions were the three members of the board of trustee headed by the former PEO Seth Oluoch, the former educationist Oyuga Tado is the secretary while the treasurer of the board of trustee is N.Okello. The long serving form Kisumu Town MP Dr Mrs Grace Aketch Onyango is the women leader.

Ministers Dalmas Otieno, Otieno Kajwang’ and Anyang Nyong’o also addressed the delegates briefly before Luo Council of Elders members have the responsibility of preserving the community culture and welfare by offering wise counsel on health and socio-economic. Other task before the including fighting HIV/Aids, eradication of poverty and fighting illiteracy and to promote development.

“We have today installed the new “Ker” and there will be no more elections,” Te Council is mandate with heavy task o to tackle many problems which lies ahead, which need to be addressed adequately.

Ker Opiyo Otondi took over from Ker Meshack Riaga Ogalo whom members threw out in June this year following allegations of abuse of office and for making many unauthorized foreign trips without consulting members of the executive, his twice visit to Libya where he had a meeting with the Kibyan strongman Col Muamor El-Gadhafi was among those cited. And for having accepted a gift of a motor vehicle from Patni on behalf of the Council, but which the members had promptly rejected.

Ker Opiyo Otondi pleaded with the MPs for the support from the MPs and Luo technocrats and professionals saying he would like to leave behind a legacy similar to those which were left behind by the late Jaramogi Oginga Odinga who initiated several business enterprises during his tenure.

Ends

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