Category Archives: Corruption

KENYA: WAS JAKOYO MIDIWO BRIBED BY KNUT TO INTRODUCE AMENDMENTS?

By Our Investigative Reporter

We have learnt the national chairman of the Kenya National Union of Teachers (KNUT) has bribed lawmaker Jakoyo Midiwo with Ksh two million shillings to introduce an amendment bill in parliament to divert the money that was meant to buy laptops for Standard One pupils and pay teachers, a devastating allegation that would cast the head of the teachers union in very diabolical light.

Wilson Sossion, who lives lavishly in a plush Nairobi neighbourhood, delivered Ksh 1.5 million to Midiwo on Wednesday and the rest to be delivered on Thursday, sources said, explaining the move was to embarrass President Uhuru Kenyatta and his Deputy William Ruto.

“Money is changing hangs. Sossion bribed Midiwo with Ksh two million,” a highly-placed source told the Jackal News. The Kenyatta government had set aside more than Ksh 50 billion to meet its pre-election campaign of delivering laptops to Standard One pupils next year.

Jakoyo, alongside CORD lawmakers like Chris Wamalwa have introduced the Appropriation Bill in parliament compel the government to divert the cash from laptops and teachers. “The people who introduced the bill were bribed to do so.”

Hundreds of thousands of teachers have currently put down their tools demanding the government to pay them salary hikes that go back to a 1997 agreement KNUT reached with the teachers, but was ignored by the governments of Presidents Daniel arap Moi and Mwai Kibaki. Legal Notice 534 of 1997 — tasked the government to increase teachers’ hardship, special, house, medical and commuter allowances.

Kenyans must condemn the continued stealing of public resources by Mwaki Kibaki in retirement

From: Gordon Teti

The house that was built for Kibaki in Mweiga by the government using public money cost over Ksh. 500 million and indeed it has an office and other amenities meant to facilitate his retirement. Kenyans must stand up and say no to the Ksh. 700 million that is being stolen from the public coffers in the name of catering for an office for Kibaki. This corruption and an outright theft of public resources.

Reference:
http://www.nation.co.ke/News/Lawyers-protest-at-Kibaki-send-off-pay/-/1056/1885154/-/uygt45z/-/index.html

Kenya: MY HOMILY OF ELEVENTH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME

From: Ouko joachim omolo
The News Dispatch with Omolo Beste in images
SUNDAY, JUNE 16, 2013

The first reading of Eleventh Sunday in ordinary time is taken from 2 Sm 12:7-10, 13. While it shows us the weakness of human nature, at the same time it shows the infinite mercy of God. David acknowledges his sin and asks for God’s mercy and forgiveness. God’s forgives him and vows never to repeat that sin again.

The second reading is from St. Paul to the Galatians- Gal 2:16, 19-21. Paul is speaking here of justification and faith. In Christian theology justification is God’s act of removing the guilt and penalty of sin while at the same time declaring a sinner righteous through Christ’s atoning. In Protestantism, righteousness from God is viewed as being credited to the sinner’s account through faith alone, without works.

Catholic and Orthodox Christians distinguish between initial justification, which in their view occurs at baptism, and permanent justification, accomplished after a lifetime of striving to do God’s will.

Most Protestants believe that justification is a singular act in which God declares an unrighteous individual to be righteous, an act made possible because Christ was legally “made sin” while on the cross (2 Cor 5:21). This is contrary to James 2:24-26. “You see that a person is justified by what he does and not by faith alone. But faith without works is dead.”

In Romans, Paul develops justification by first speaking of God’s just wrath at sin (Rom. 1:18 – 3:20). Justification is then presented as the solution for God’s wrath. One is said to be ‘justified by faith apart from works of the Law.’

The Gospel is from Lk 7:36—8:3. It shows the mercy of God for sinners and the willingness and eagerness, with which God welcomes back the sinner. A Pharisee invited Jesus to dine with him, and he entered the Pharisee’s house and reclined at table.

Now there was a sinful woman in the city who learned that he was at table in the house of the Pharisee. Bringing an alabaster flask of ointment, she stood behind him at his feet weeping and began to bathe his feet with her tears.

Then she wiped them with her hair, kissed them, and anointed them with the ointment. When the Pharisee who had invited him saw this he said to himself, “If this man were a prophet, he would know who and what sort of woman this is who is touching him, that she is a sinner.”

Mary Magdalene was believed to be a reformed prostitute and is identified as the woman who ‘was a sinner at the house of Pharisees, who washed Christ’s feet with her tears, wiped them with her hair and anointed them. Christ then forgave her sins.

The lesson we learn here is forgiveness, a decision to let go your sins and never to repeat them again as we see in the first reading and the gospel. David and Mary Magdalene never repeated the action they were accused of. It was wrong for David to kill Uriah and take his wife.

For unfaithful partners in Kenya where marital infidelity is as intertwined as nyama choma, also known as mpango wa kando, it would mean that forgiveness must go with justice. It means doing justice to your partner and your entire family that you will never cheat on your partner anymore.

In Kenya men are the ones closely linked with big percentage of mpango wa kando than women. A 2008 study carried out by Spylink International, a private investigation outfit based in Kenya, revealed that marital infidelity was on the rise with men taking the lead with 75 per cent share of cheating, while women at 25 per cent in 2002. By 2008 this figure rose from 25 to 45 percent of women cheating on their men.

The study pegged this scenario on “changing lifestyles, and women’s empowerment through higher education and knowing “their rights.” Hard economic times implied that more women were exchanging their bodies for material favours. The survey, however, revealed that “as the data stands, women in Kenya will be “leading the infidelity game by 2010.”

Even worse was the fact that 99 per cent of married couples cheat on each other, with Nairobi, of Kenya’s eight provinces, leading with 60 per cent of unfaithful men, and women at 40 per cent.

Nyanza comes second with 55 per cent of men and women at 45 per cent. Western and Rift Valley take fourth and fifth slots respectively, with men taking 65 per cent, while Coast came fifth with men leading with 60 per cent.

In Eastern province, unfaithful men stood at 70 per cent and 85 per cent in case of men in North-Eastern, a region where women are socially, culturally and economically suppressed.

Central Province was the surprise package with women taking a 60 per cent stake a head of their men.

This trend has led to single women in Kenya. A survey released few years ago by consumer market research firm Ipsos-Synovate, shows that 44 per cent of women dislike infidelity among men.

In terms of the state where the government is to ensure that all the citizens have an equal right to the most extensive total system of equal basic liberties compatible with a similar system of liberty for all, the forgiveness would also mean doing justice.

You must do justice on social and economic inequalities, nepotism, negative ethnicity, human rights abuses, and assassinations, tortures among other ills as recommended by The Truth Reconciliation and Justice Commission (TRJC) in their report.

The report recommends that the head of the state and other departmental heads apologize to Kenyans and then for justice to be done it recommends that actions should be taken. IDPs must be reallocated, people who lost their dear ones be compensated.

TRJC was set up following deadly post-election clashes five years ago. After those elections some 1,500 people were killed and more than 600,000 forced to flee their homes. Some IDPs are still in the camps and people whose dear ones died have not been compensated.

TRJC mandate was to investigate and recommend appropriate action on human rights abuses committed between Kenyan independence in December 1963 and the end of February 2008 – including politically motivated violence, assassinations, corruption and land disputes.

It recommends that those with alleged involvement in the Wagalla massacre should no longer hold any public office. The killings occurred in 1984 during efforts to disarm ethnic Somali clans in the north-east of the country. Survivors say close to 5,000 people died.

When justice is done it is when the forgiveness will bring a kind of peace that helps the victims go on with life. Forgiveness here means that you are now at peace with yourself and the community. Click here to read Pope John Paul II Message for the World Day of Peace 2002.

Fr Joachim Omolo Ouko, AJ
Tel +254 7350 14559/+254 722 623 578
E-mail omolo.ouko@gmail.com
Facebook-omolo beste
Twitter-@8000accomole

Real change must come from ordinary people who refuse to be taken hostage by the weapons of politicians in the face of inequality, racism and oppression, but march together towards a clear and unambiguous goal.

-Anne Montgomery, RSCJ UN Disarmament Conference, 2002

KENYA: HEADTEACHER SET ABLAZE PUPILS SANDALS

By Agwanda Saye

There was drama at Raga Primary School in Karungu Division, Nyatike district after parents and pupils went on the rampage demanding the transfer of the head teacher after he burned pupils’ sandals.

The head teacher collected the sandals from the over 400 pupils and set them ablaze arguing they are not part of the school uniform.

Today, pupils and parents demonstrated up to the school carrying placards and twigs demanding his immediate transfer from the school.

The head teacher who is also the Migori KNUT vice chairman locked his office and fled from the angry pupils and parents.

The pupils who accompanied their parents on barefoot vowed never to resume classes until the head teacher is transferred.

Nyatike district education officer Kinaiya Siloma confirmed that his office is aware of the incident and there is already a panel constituted to look into the matter.

Siloma however urged parents to give dialogue a chance and not to disrupt the learning process of their children.

Ends.

KENYA: DID A MILLION GHOSTS VOTE? DOES IT MATTER?

From: Paul Adhoch

From: “padhoch@ . . . ”

Weelllll
DID A MILLION GHOSTS VOTE? DOES IT MATTER?

Source: the-star.co.ke

Last Thursday, The Star published a seemingly innocuous piece titled ‘IEBC wants Political Parties Act amended’. The amendment, the report explained, was because the IEBC is now considering changing the way of “calculating funding for the parties”. Currently, the Act ‘provides that political parties’ funding should be computed on the basis of election votes. The new proposed formula is based on the number of elected representatives that each party has.

Kenya: Mega land scandal reported in Kericho where the DC, Chief, MPs and ex-civic leaders grabbed the land meant for the landless Talai clan

WRITES Leo Odera Omolo In Kericho Town.

A MEGA land scandal, which looked similar to the now infamous “Anglo Leasing Financial Scandal” has hit Kericho town like Tsunami. It has prompted the residents to call for the revocation of the allotment and start a fresh. This is after it has been discovered that those earmarked to be settled on the land were not given anything. But the D.C. and the Town’s chief had chosen to allocate the land for themselves.

The ex-Kericho Municipal Councilors, relatives and friends of the former MPs, and their political cronies undeservedly benefited from illegal allotment.

The residents were now up in arms appealing to the Kericho County governor Prof. Paul Kiprono Chepkwony to order for all the pieces o land which were dished out t undeserved persons revoked for fresh re-allocation.

Prof Chepkwony could not be reached for his comment as it was stated that he had travelled outside the region.

The scandal involved the peace of land parcel in the town ,which was set aside by the government to be use in settling members the landless Talai{Laibon} who returned to the region in 1962 after being force into colonial exile for 40 years by the former British Colonial rulers.

The Talai clan estimated to be numbering about 259 families have since been living in a small piece of land which belonged to the Municipal Council of Kericho in the most squalid condition.

Al l the previous KANU administration had failed to have the Talai clan settled on the land they can call their own ever since independence. But the defunct coalition government headed by he retired President Mwi Kibaki and the Prime Minister Raila Odinga had agree to have the matter solved once for all. The government negotiated with one of the multinational Tea companies operating in Kericho and Bomet Counties and secured the land which is next to the posh Tea Hotel.

The Prime Minister visited Kericho on several occasion in the company of the then Lands minister James Aggrey Orengo and it was agreed that the Talai people be settled.

Unconfirmed allegation and rumor say the DC had allocated himself five plots of 500X100 each using the names of his junior staff, mainly the local Kipsigis working in his office including Administration Policemen. The D.C.Joseph Njora has since been transferred to Makueni district in Eastern Province. All the alleged grabbed plots were sold like hot cake.

It is also being rumored that former Belgut MP Charles Keter who is now the Senator for Kericho had the lion’s share. All of his supporters and his multi-million cousin Ken Mutai were the beneficiaries. Former Kericho Mayor John Kauria, it is being alleged, to have grabbed several plots.

Most of the ex-Councilors who grabbed the plots are said to have quickly sold them and have since been seen driving sleek new cars in own.

The MP who benefited from the allocation included Magerer Lang’at [Kipkellion} and the Chief Town Duncan Bii is said to have allocate himself 12 plots.

Prior to the negotiation between he government and the Unilever Tea company, the company had already earmarked the plot toe used in establishing an aborreterum in own. The grabbers who seemed to have been in hurry moved in with the snake speed and started demarcating the land even before the el was sealed off and the land surveyed as required by the law. The grabbers went as far as breaking the beacons of the adjacent land plot and house belonging to the former director of the Brooke Bond tea Company Mzee Musa sang’.

Members of the Talai sub-clans were previously scattered in various districts whose inhabitants are the members of the larger Kalenjin ethnic groups. The had their ancestral land homes in Emngwen, Nandi County, Kericho and Bomet Counties, Baringo and Koibatek,mosty Eldama Ravine and in other regions.

But following the malicious ad falsified accusation by the colonial chiefs, white missionaries and white selrs, that they were practicing witchcraft, the Colonial administration in Kenya I the year 1934 ordered thathey be rounded up and exiled in a remote section of Gwassi Hills in South Nyanza.

Some of them were vanished in Northern Tanzania. Some of their elderly leaders were detained in Embu, Meru and Nyeri prisons where they died. Other were dispatched to Kismayu while one who was known as Arap Koilgen was detained on Mfangano island inside Lake Victoria where he died around 1956In 1961 one a diminutive Member of the Colonial Legislative Council the late Dr Taaitta Araap Toweett, who was representing the entire Kipsigis region moved a motion in the House asked the government to allow thetalai n toreturn toteir ancestral land. The motion which was supported by other MLC including Daniel T Moi, Jaramogi Oginga Odinga, Dr Julius Kiano,Tom Mboya and other nationalist was accepted by the colonial government.

And in the middle of the 1962 when it was only six months to the attainment of Kenya’s political independence

As political independence the journey of returning home.

The deal , however, was hurriedly and poorly negotiated and brokered with the British colonial administration and did not produce a tangible plan and program for the land on which the returnee could be settled on.

All the land previously owned by the Talai clan had been taken over by their neighbors and relatives during the many exile.

In Nndi the Talai oved nd settled in a place called Kaptel near the SDA University of East Africa {Barraton} and settle at Kapsisiywo, Other went to Cheranganyi,other to Trans-Nzoia and Uasin Gishu districts and found land for them in the settlement schemes. Others went Eldama Ravine Iand Baringo County.

Their population had grew from 2700 to about 7000 people.So aboiut 200 family remain stuck as squatters in Keicho Municipality for all these years.

This is the can of the famous freedom fighter Orkoiyioyot Koitalel Arap Samoei w hose rug-tug forces of the Nandi warriors fought he British for nine years and also prevented tem from building and completing the Mombasa-Kisumu Railways l ine. Samoei was shot and killed in 1905 after he was tricked to attend a peace meeting with the head of the British expedition forces who shot it point-blank.

The Talai before their expulsion were being accused by the colonial chiefs of practicing sorcery and preventing the population from becoming member of the churches and the youth from acquiring modern education in schools run by missionaries. Other allegations were that they were intimidating the white settlers and stopping from acquiring more land for tea plantation in Kericho, Sotik ,Nandi Hills and other areas.

Ends

KENYA: THE TRUTH AND JUSTICE AND RECONCILIATION COMMISSION {TJRC} DID SHODDY, SHALLOW AND HOLLOW JOBS AND FAILED TO CONVINCE KENYAN OF ITS SERIOUSNESS.

COMMENTARY By Leo Odera Omolo In Kisumu City

I have sat down for a length of time perusing and scrutinizing the report released last week by the Truth and Justice Reconciliation Commission and found them to be shallow shoddy and hollow, not even worth reading any sane person.

Perhaps the Bethwell Kiplagat team just wanted to justify the millions of taxpayers money its members had consumed during the stormy period it conducted it half-baked inquiries.

The TJRC did not caste its net wide open, though it came up with some names of leaders both in the present and past it has recommended should be probed further so as to ascertain the truth about their wrong doing.

In regards to past politically motivated assassinations TRC reported is highly rubbished for merely bush-beating, which are devoid of any iota of the truth.

The TJRC chairman Kiplagat himself had long been rejected by the entire Kenyan society that he was not the right person for the job, but insisted on carrying it out and even went to court so that he could be clear to proceed on with the job. Those had loudly raised objections knew it pretty well that Kiplagat was not the right person taking it into account his covert operations and flirting with RENAMO of Mozambique and its renegade forces under the rebel leader Dr Dhlakama .

The TJRC came out with the large number of names of innocent Kenyans, which it has recommended should be probed further in connection to human right abuse of the past regimes.

Conspicuously missing from the names that the TJRC wanted to be investigated was the name of the late James Kanyottu, the former director of the security intelligence police unit, which was known as the {Special Branch}.

Kanyottu who has since died after retiring from the security intelligence service which he headed ever since 1965 after succeeding Benard Hinga might have gone into his grave with the heaps of secrets about the past political assassinations in this country, therefore any inquiry report which exclude his names is considered by Kenyans of average intelligence as shoddy and shallow and not worth its salt.

Kanyottu might have not personally participated in actual assassination exercises, but definitely knew the political enemies of the victims who might have been involved in hatching plots to eliminate those whom their perceived to be their political enemies.

During Kanyotu’s rein as the head of the security intelligence five senior Kenyan politician were gunned down or killed

The victims were Pio Gama Pinto, a specially elected member of parliament who was the first to die I a series of well hatched plots of assassination, Thomas Joseph Mboya, C.MG.Argwings-Kodhek, Ronald Gideon Ngala, Josiah Mwangi Kariuki {JM} and finally Robert John Ouko being the last one to die.

From my own intelligent guesswork Kiplagat ‘s commission job was only to rekindle the communal emotions of families and relatives of the victims while serving the interests of some evil and invisible forces still operating lie mafia groups in this country.

For Mr Kanyottu, there was no way someone of the late Tom Mboya status could be assassinated without the knowledge of the head of the national security intelligence unit unless the unit’s operations had long collapse or were on the verge of total collapse.

If it was so Kanyottu couldn’t have lasted on his job for close to 40 years after those painful events of the early and late 1960s.

We have been eagerly waiting to read from the TJRC report as to who ordered fro the closing down of all the phone communications between Nairobi an Addis Ababa as from June 29,1969 to July 4,1969 on the very day Mboya and his delegation to the UNCEA returned home to be killed the next day July 5,1969.

There were strong rumors making the round in the Kenyan capital of Nairobi ad its environs, that some of the late Mboya’s closes friend who hah heard o the assassination rumors made frantic effort to reach him in Addis Abba by phone for the purpose of alerting him about the dreadful rumor in Nairobi, but Nairobi Addis phone were severed off at the external-telecom. Surely such events if it is true they took place could not have escaped the knowledge of the head of the nation’s national security organ, and here is where the name of Kanyottu comes in hand.

Obviously someone in a very senior position in the government of the day might have been the one who ordered the phone line between Addis and Nairobi line severed of for a specific pupose.

These are some of the area which were so fertile for the TJRC team to visit an make thorough inquiries because all the records in those institutions are said to be still intact for probe.

In the case of Dr. Robert John Ouko, reports were made I courts tat his phone lines at his Koru Farm in Kisumu had also gone off during the fateful night of his mysterious disappearance and death. Obviously the head of the security intelligence cannot be exonerated for having been totally ignorance of these events.

The same could be said of the deaths by faked road accidents of Ronald Gideon Ngala and CMG Argwings-Kodhek. Like Mboya both died while serving in the cabinet as Minster for Foreign Affair and minister for Power and Communications respectively. All the four Mboya, Ngala, Argwings-Kodhek and Ouko were the possible future presidential materials during the reign of the late Jomo Kenyatta. And as such Kenyans were expecting Kiplagat’s TJRC to caste its net much more wider and come out with some truth about thee past politically motivated killings in Kenyatta instead of writing rubbish and perhaps copying some old reports from other regions.

Leo Odera Omolo

KENYA: CLAIMS ARE MADE THAT DEAD PEOPLE CAST THEIR VOTES IN KASIPUL CONSTITUENCY DESPITE SERIOUS OBJECTIONS RAISED AT TIME BY ASPIRANTS.

Writes Leo Odera Omolo

SEVERAL dead people were reported to have their votes casted and their names ticked off in the voters registration as having duly voted on March 14. 2013.

These are some of the complaints lined up as evidence of the irregularities during the violence marred election by a petitioner seeking or the nullification of the election of the MP for Kasipul Joseph Oyugi Maguwanga.

The petition which is before the Homa-Bay High Court is filed by the election loser Charles Ong’ondo Were.

According to the detailed account of the allegation contained therein the petition paper, the petitioner had submitted copies of the government issued death certificates as well as the burial certificates to confirmed that the two voters whose names are featuring prominently in the petition paper had died, but the presiding officers had allowed their names to be ticked off as if they had come back from the dead and voted on March 14, 2013.

Were said, he believed that more dead people and ghost voters could have participated in the elections on the polling day. His effort in alerting the Provincial administration of these irregularities had hit the rock. The area D.C. is reported to have instructed the Location chiefs not to co-operate with those seeking the official document about the dead people within the constituency.

The death and burial certificates are being accompanied by affidavits sworn by he petitioner and the family of the decease persons as well as the local administrators.

Maguwanga had squeezed narrow victory over Were who has since moved to court seeking the nullification of the election an also recounting o the votes cast during the process.

Ends

KENYA: WHEN GREATER ANIMALS CONTROL POWER IMPUNITY DOESN’T COUNT

From: Ouko joachim omolo
The News Dispatch with Omolo Beste in images
WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 2013

While the Anti-corruption Court in Uganda orders the arrest of the Health Ministry Permanent Secretary, Dr Asuman Lukwago, for charges related to theft of more than Shs1 billion for a Global Fund project, in Kenya a parliamentary committee disregards a letter from the anti-corruption commission, advising against Mr Francis Kimemia’s clearance for Secretary to the Cabinet post.

In Kenya there are other animals greater than the others that is why when the greater animals are implicated with corruption and human rights abuses those responsible are not only seldom punished, but also given high posts to acknowledge and thank them for their heroism in the abuse.

That is why widespread impunity at all levels of government will continue to be a serious problem, despite implementation of judicial reform and the vetting of all judges and magistrates.

That is also why, even though the Truth, Justice and Reconciliation Commission, mandated in 2008 to investigate alleged torture of Kenyans since independence has been presented to President Uhuru Kenyatta Kenyans should not rejoice as yet since the report touches the greater animals in Uhuru’s government.

Even though the judiciary asserted and maintained its independence, attempts by the executive branch to influence the outcome of judicial decisions, the judiciary cannot do much since their hands are tied.

The Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission (EACC) had written to the committee on Administration and National Security that vetted Mr Kimemia, raising issues touching on his integrity with regard to two corruption cases.

EACC had accused Mr Kimemia of blocking the suspension of a former Kenya Airports Authority managing director and the Foreign Affairs PS over the Sh56 billion Greenfield Terminal Project at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport and the purchase of the Tokyo Embassy property, respectively.

Because the majority in the House committee, investigations into the two matters comprises of the greater animals camp, is why they have disregarded the letter, arguing that the investigations were still at a preliminary stage and it was therefore difficult to draw conclusions on Mr Kimemia’s integrity.

In a report tabled before Parliament yesterday afternoon, the committee says the commission’s letter linking Mr Kimemia to ‘mega corruption’ was based on suspicion.

The report adds that the commission had no objection to Mr Kimemia being appointed as the Secretary to the Cabinet.

In their report, the 29-member committee chaired by Mr Asman Kamama (Tiati MP) says Mr Kimemia has the necessary qualifications and has vast experience in the public service which qualifies him for the position.

It says the nominee has risen through the ranks progressively, from a DO to his current position as Head of Public Service and Secretary to the Cabinet. “Mr Kimemia has never been implicated in any scandal,” the report says in the findings that will be debated by Parliament

Fr Joachim Omolo Ouko, AJ
Tel +254 7350 14559/+254 722 623 578
E-mail omolo.ouko@gmail.com
Facebook-omolo beste
Twitter-@8000accomole

Real change must come from ordinary people who refuse to be taken hostage by the weapons of politicians in the face of inequality, racism and oppression, but march together towards a clear and unambiguous goal.

-Anne Montgomery, RSCJ UN Disarmament Conference, 2002

“Plundering of Africa Through Secret Mining Deals,” Kofi Annan

From: Judy Miriga

Good People,

When a problem of multitude involving “Land Grabbing” is looming about to endanger life it is fundamentally right for people to stand up and demand that problem be fixed. In a haste, leaders must be taken to task and they must take full responsibilities and immediately accept to engage people to help in finding ways and means for resolution and recovery. Good people must unite to get to the bottom and root-cause of the problem for any reasonable good results. Those who are found to have participated and stolen public wealth and resources must be made to pay back.

We must never run away from the problem leaving only a few people who most likely were the reason for the problem to fix the problem will never work.

Africa has the resource needed to feed the world’s economic engine, a driver needed for progressive development. Africa is where the Emerging Economy all eyes in the Global Economic success depend on, but without Africa being put on a secured plan where the Chinese and the BRICS will not find room to mess Africa in a worse-case-scenario than what Africa has been exposed to ….. and where we all shall regret finding ourselves in deeper troubles to a point of no return.

Wake up good people so we all can unite to work with Africa to our mutual advantage secured under fair and balanced Partnership Development where all shall benefit equitably.

Again I say, Wake-Up !!!

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

– – – – – – – – – – –

How to Rob Africa -People Power- Al Jazeera English

Published on Nov 8, 2012
A film by Stanley Kwenda, Clive Patterson and Anas Aremeyaw Anas
The world’s wealthy countries often criticise African nations for corruption – especially that perpetrated by those among the continent’s government and business leaders who abuse their positions by looting tens of billions of dollars in national assets or the profits from state-owned enterprises that could otherwise be used to relieve the plight of some of the world’s poorest peoples.

Yet the West is culpable too in that it often looks the other way when that same dirty money is channelled into bank accounts in Europe and the US.

International money laundering regulations are supposed to stop the proceeds of corruption being moved around the world in this way, but it seems the developed world’s financial system is far more tempted by the prospect of large cash injections than it should be.

Indeed the West even provides the getaway vehicles for this theft, in the shape of anonymous off-shore companies and investment entities, whose disguised ownership makes it too easy for the corrupt and dishonest to squirrel away stolen funds in bank accounts overseas.

This makes them nigh on impossible for investigators to trace, let alone recover.

It is something that has long bothered Zimbabwean journalist Stanley Kwenda – who cites the troubling case of the Marange diamond fields in the east of his country.

A few years ago rich deposits were discovered there which held out the promise of billions of dollars of revenue that could have filled the public purse and from there have been spent on much needed improvements to roads, schools and hospitals.

The surrounding region is one of the most impoverished in the country, desperate for the development that the profits from mining could bring. But as Kwenda found out from local community leader Malvern Mudiwa, this much anticipated bounty never appeared.

“When these diamonds came, they came as a God-given gift. So we thought now we are going to benefit from jobs, infrastructure, we thought maybe our roads were going to improve, so that generations and generations will benefit from this, not one individual. But what is happening, honestly, honestly it’s a shame!”

What is happening is actually something of a mystery because though the mines are clearly in operation and producing billions of dollars worth of gems every year, little if any of it has ever been put into Zimbabwe’s state coffers.

Local and international non-governmental organisations say they believe this is because the money is actually being used to maintain President Robert Mugabe’s ruling Zimbabwe African National Union – Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF) in power.

True or not, it is clear that the country’s finance minister, Tendai Biti, has seen none of it. A representative of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, which sits in uneasy coalition with ZANU-PF, he says he has no idea where it is going.

“We have got evidence of the quantities that are being mined, the quantities that are being exported but nothing is coming to the fiscus …. All I know is that it’s not coming to the treasury. So that is a self-evident question. It is not coming to us. That means someone is getting it. The person who is getting it is not getting it legally. Therefore, he’s a thief, therefore she’s a thief.”

Sadly, as Stanley Kwenda has realised, it is typical of a problem found all over Africa.

The continent is rich is natural resources that are being exploited for big profits, but the money is rarely used for the benefit of the people. Instead it goes to line the pockets of corrupt officials who then often smuggle it out to be deposited in secret offshore bank accounts in the developed world.

So who facilitates these transactions? And how and why does the developed world make it so easy to launder this dirty cash?

In this revealing investigation for People & Power, Kwenda and the Ghanaian undercover journalist Anas Aremeyaw Anas, set off to find out. Posing as a corrupt Zimbabwean official and his lawyer, their probe takes them deep into the murky world of ‘corporate service providers’ – experts in the formation of company structures that allow the corrupt to circumvent lax international money laundering rules.

It just so happens that the pair’s enquiries take place in the Seychelles but, as they discover to their horror, they could just as easily be in any one of a number of offshore locations (or even in the major cities of Europe and the US) where anonymous companies can be set up for the express purpose of secretly moving money and keeping its origins hidden from prying eyes.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TAO035…

Investors deny Africa land grab claims
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iuU31d3QVEQ
Published on Jul 12, 2012
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Investors interested in buying land in Africa, have denied accusations that they are involved in landgrabs, insisting their practice is the only way to feed growing populations. Land in Africa, often extremely fertile and absurdly cheap, is the current talk of the investment market. The wealth funds assess issues to do with political volatility, risk of extreme weather, bribery and corruption. One problem with the buyup of africa is that there is little oversight except from local governments and the investment funds themselves. Al Jazeera’s Laurence Lee reports from London.

“Blood diamonds”

Published on Jul 17, 2012
The Kimberley Process, set up under the auspices of the United Nations, aims to put an end to the traffic in so-called “blood diamonds” and the use of the proceeds to finance guerrilla wars.

Blood Diamonds – The True Story
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C7lmjjDlzp0
Published on May 3, 2012
This documentary examines the little-known truth about how the worldwide diamond trade has funded wars across western and central Africa, leading to the deaths of millions of people.

Update on the Kimberley Process

Uploaded on Apr 28, 2011
Elly Harrowell a Campaigner for Global Witness provided an update on the Kimberley Process at Objective Capital’s Precious Metals Diamonds & Gemstones Investment Summit.

To view full video, visit: http://www.objectivecapitalconference…

Final hearing of the Special Court for Sierra Leone in the war crimes trial of Charles

Uploaded on Feb 2, 2009
United Nations, 2 February 2009 – Stephen Rapp, Chief Prosecutor for the Special Court for Sierra Leone (SCSL), has heard on 30 January at The Hague the 91st and final prosecution witness in the war crimes trial of former Liberian president Charles Taylor. The Special Court for Sierra Leone was set up jointly by the Government of Sierra Leone and the United Nations. It is mandated to try those who bear the greatest responsibility for serious violations of international humanitarian law and Sierra Leonean law committed in the territory of Sierra Leone since 30 November 1996.

Blood Diamonds – Sierra Leone

Uploaded on Jan 31, 2008
February 2006
West Africa’s civil wars were almost exclusively funded by the trade in ‘blood diamonds’. But now, the UN and EU is tightening the trade in precious gems through the Kimberly Process.

The Truth Behind Africa’s Conflict Diamonds

Uploaded on Nov 24, 2008
This video was prepared for the WRIT 340 class at the University of Southern California. It is for educational purposes only and is covered by the Fair Use doctrine.

“Plundering of Africa Through Secret Mining Deals,” Kofi Annan

May 10, 2013 By admin Leave a Comment

Mr. Kofi Annan, former UN Secretary-General and Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, former Nigerian President

Tax avoidance, secret mining deals and financial transfers are depriving Africa of the benefits of its resources boom, ex-UN chief Kofi Annan has said.

Firms that shift profits to lower tax jurisdictions cost Africa $38bn (£25bn) a year, says a report produced by a panel he heads.

“Africa loses twice as much money through these loopholes as it gets from donors,” Mr Annan said.

It was like taking food off the tables of the poor, he said.

The Africa Progress Report is released every May – produced by a panel of 10 prominent figures, including former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo and Graca Machel, the wife of South African ex-President Nelson Mandela.

‘Highly opaque’

African countries needed to improve governance and the world’s richest nations should help introduce global rules on transparency and taxation, Mr Annan said.

The report gave the Democratic Republic of Congo as an example, where between 2010 and 2012 five under-priced mining concessions were sold in “highly opaque and secretive deals”.

This cost the country, which the charity Save the Children said earlier this week was the world’s worst place to be a mother, $1.3bn in revenues.

This figure was equivalent to double DR Congo’s health and education budgets combined, the report said.

DR Congo’s mining minister disputed the findings, saying the country had “lost nothing”.

“These assets were ceded in total transparency,” Martin Kabwelulu told Reuters news agency.

The report added that many mineral-rich countries needed “urgently to review the design of their tax regimes”, which were designed to attract foreign investment when commodity prices were low.

It quotes a review in Zambia which found that between 2005 and 2009, 500,000 copper mine workers were paying a higher rate of tax than major multinational mining firms.

Africa loses more through what it calls “illicit outflows” than it gets in aid and foreign direct investment, it explains.

“We (Africans) are not getting the revenues we deserve often because of either corrupt practices, transfer pricing, tax evasion and all sorts of activities that deprive us of our due,” Mr Annan said.

“Transparency is a powerful tool,” he said, adding that the report was urging African leaders to put “accountability centre stage”.

Mr Annan said African governments needed to insist that local companies became involved in mining deals and manage them in “such a way that it also creates employment”.

“This Africa cannot do alone. The tax evasion, avoidance, secret bank accounts are problems for the world… so we all need to work together particularly the G8, as they meet next month, to work to ensure we have a multilateral solution to this crisis,” he said.

For richer nations “if a company avoids tax or transfers the money to offshore account what they lose is revenues”, Mr Annan said.

“Here on our continent, it affects the life of women and children – in effect in some situations it is like taking food off the table for the poor.”

Source: BBC

Africa’s “lift-off” held back by illicit finance drain: AfDB

By Pascal Fletcher | Reuters – Fri, May 10, 2013
By Pascal Fletcher

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) – Africa’s economic development is being held back by a “hemorrhage” of illicit financial flows, which may be getting worse, the African Development Bank said on Friday, calling for reforms to stem the losses.

A draft report to be presented at the AfDB’s annual meeting in Morocco later this month shows net resource outflows from Africa totalling up to $1.4 trillion over the 30-year period to 2009, far exceeding inflows to the continent.

Illicit financial flows were “the main driving force” behind $1.2-1.3 trillion of the three-decade net drain, it said.

This is about four times Africa’s current external debt and almost equivalent to its current GDP.

“The trend is continuing, it could even be increasing,” AfDB Chief Economist Mthuli Ncube said in a phone interview. Figures for the period since 2009 were not yet fully available.

“We need to block the leakage … It is holding back Africa’s lift-off,” he added.

The report, by the AfDB and the Washington-based advocacy group Global Financial Integrity and made available to Reuters, called for anti-corruption agencies and laws, and mechanisms to combat money-laundering, to be reinforced and for government budget processes to be made more transparent.

The illicit outflows between 1980 and 2009 were often linked to the extraction of oil and minerals and covered criminal activities like money-laundering, tax evasion and transfers from corruption, kickbacks and contraband, the report said.

But they also included what the report called “mispricing of trade” – for example, opaque business deals negotiated with local authorities which flout or ignore existing legislation.

The study on illicit transfers comes as the world’s least developed continent experiences an economic growth surge, outpacing global averages. The World Bank and IMF see Sub-Saharan Africa’s GDP accelerating to over 5 percent in coming years, driven by investment and high commodity prices.

“This is the poorest region in the world and that is why we are shining a torch on this … Africa needs these resources more than any other region,” Ncube said, adding, “There is a lot to lose if nothing is done.”

Reducing Corruption in African Developing Countries: The Relevance of E- Governance

From: Yona Maro

This paper presents a review on reducing corruption in African developing countries, to lessen the discretion of officials, and increase transparency. While it is true that ICT eliminates many opportunities for corruption for those who do not understand the new technology fully, however, it opens up new corruption vistas for those who understand the new systems well enough to manipulate them. Therefore proper safeguards are needed. ICT can support actors wishing to improve governance capacity and fight corruption, but the surrounding political, social and infrastructural environment will decide if the technology is to be used to its fullest potentials. Automating existing bureaucratic processes that are defective will not yield good results. In this paper, the authors propose a methodology to combat corruption using information and communication technologies (ICT) that entails process restructuring. Most developing countries are not fully ready to embrace a comprehensive program of e-government, thus transparency is not holistic in all the sectors. Rather than wait for total readiness, an approach of learning by trial and consolidating small gains are recommended. While e-Governance holds great promise in many developing countries however, substantial challenges are to be tackled. Many ICT projects fail because of insufficient planning capacity and political instability.
Link:
http://www.gjournals.org/GJSC/GJSC%20PDF/2013/January/Oye.pdf


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Kenya: Chemelil Sugar Company is insolvent and on the verge of total collapse exposing its 850 workers to extreme danger of hunger and starvation

Writes Leo Odera Omolo In Kisumu City.

CHEMELIL Sugar Company Limited, the wholly state owned sugar manufacturing company based in Muhoroni district within the Kisumu County has ground its production to a halt.

The company owed its suppliers cane farmers, worker and other stakeholders close to Kshs 2 billion.

Its employees estimated to be numbering about 850 have yet to be paid their salaries since December,2012 last year. This has exposed these workers to extreme suffering starvation and diseases as the can no longer afford to cater for themselves and their families or pay for their medical bills due to lack of money.

Unconfirmed reports say one worker had died of what his workmates have described as caused by extreme starvation and hunger. The body of the deceased whose name was given as Walter Marega is still lying at the morgue in hospital.

The facility, which for many years ever since its inception was the centre of excellence, and the mainstay of sugar production within the Nyanza sugar belt has been run-down owing to what an insider has described as “gross political interference” into its day-to-day management, corruption, and “pilferage with impunity.”.

Although aware of the tremendous suffering of the employees of the facility the political leadership in the region couldn’t care less and made no effort to install the sanity in the once vibrant and prosperous sugar industry management.

Human Rights groups and NGOs operating in the area have raised an alarm about the pathetic state of affairs at the Chemelil sugar company to no avail.

The current managing director of the Chemelil sugar Company is Charles Owelle, a man who has for many years been involved in its previous management team, which were discredited with numerous allegations of looting and excessive pilferage and vandalism of the firm’s resources.

Owelle, a Luo, took over from Eng. Edwin Otieno Musebe, a Luhyia, whose concerted effort had turned the facility around from being run-down to a vibrant profit making firm. His removal was viewed as having been instigated by excessive tribalism. Owelle by then was the company’s agricultural manager and had even twice before acted as an interim MD.

The company’s debts have increase to about Kshs 2 billion The most affected groups are the suppliers, cane farmers and the 850 workers who have not been paid their salaries since August 2012 and are still living in squalid conditions in their dilapidated houses while penniless and suffering not to be able to cater for their basic needs such as food and school fees for their school going children.

Sugar can farmers and other stakeholders have also not been paid their dues since last year either the Kenya Sugar Board doing the reportedly never ending annual mechanical maintenance since last year has also been informed of the extreme difficulties the stakeholders were undergoing, but has done nothing.

Other reports emerging from the facility says that on the night of Friday March 15, 2013 an employee of the company by the name Walter Marega had complained to his neighbor about extreme hunger and starvation he was experiencing.

A generous neighbor sympathized with Mr Marega voluntarily offered to take him to a food kiosk in the nearby market so that he could get some porridge. The deceased then went to the estates shop to look for some eggs, but he got nothing because he had exhausted all his credit facilities. All this happened while the late Mr. Marega’s wife had given birth to a new born baby at Nambale hospital. A neighbor offered him 500/- loan to enable him to travel to Nambale, but the same night Marega died lonely inside his company estate house even before seeing his new born baby.

The recent change in political patronage of Muhoroni in which the former immediate MP or the are Prof.Ayiecho Olueny was voted out an a new MP elect James Onyango Koyoo voted in has given the residents, especially members of the farming community the ray of hope that things could change to the better.

Ends

Kenya: Chaos after varsity students discover IEBC ballot materials

From: mngonge
Date: Sat, Mar 16, 2013 at 3:29 AM
Subject: Re: [wanabidii] Chaos after varsity students discover IEBC ballot materials
To: wanabidii@googlegroups.com

From: mngonge

African countries have a long way to go towards democracy

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

On Sat, Mar 16, 2013 at 9:08 AM, Yona Maro wrote:


www.wejobs.blogspot.com Jobs in Africa
www.jobsunited.blogspot.com International Job Opportunities
www.naombakazi.blogspot.com


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International Jobs – www.jobsunited.blogspot.com

– – – –

By Jeckonia Otieno

NAIROBI; KENYA: Riots erupted at Kenyatta University’s main campus after students discovered ballot materials in one of the buildings.

Problem started earlier in the day when students allegedly discovered some unexplained business at the university’s business centre.

Before the riots could end, students had burnt a car whose owner could not be established and barricaded the Thika Superhighway forcing vehicles to resort to other routes hence a massive traffic snarl up.

According to students, the room had been marked OUT OF BOUNDS by those who were inside conducting unexplained business.

Students noted that they got suspicious after they found out that the door was marked yet there were activities associated to the currently disputed elections going on.

Inside the hall were ballot materials ranging ballot boxes, books, papers, rubber stamps, jackets and lantern lamps.

It is further alleged that the people who were inside the hall might have diffused into the crowd hence none was arrested.

National Assembly elect for Budalang’i, Ababu Namwamba, arrived at the scene and asked for investigations to be carried out speedily so that it can be established what ballot materials were doing at the university yet all the materials were supposed to be at the National Tallying Centre at Bomas of Kenya.

“This is democracy on trial,” said Namwamba adding that it is very unusual that some of the ballot materials have been used while others have not been touched which raises serious questions on the credibility o these elections.”

Namwamba further wondered why materials would be locked and barricaded inside a room with a group of people yet there was still a dispute.

“Why, the secrecy?” wondered the legislator, “I smell a big fat rat here because if IEBC received all the return forms, then what are these doing here?”

He also noted that after the materials had been discovered; neither security officers nor IEBC officials had arrived at the scene to see what was happening.

http://www.standardmedia.co.ke/?articleID=2000079405&story_title=Kenya-Chaos-after-varsity-students-discover-IEBC-ballot-materials

Kenya: The Reform Change Accord Mandate for New Constitution

From: Judy Miriga

Folks,

The Reform Change Accord mandated for New Constitution shall not be legitimate if there are conflicting views of non-compliance to the Law in such instances as:

1) Integrity examination threshold to avoid conflict of interests

2) Blocking Diasporas Right to vote and collectively engage in the electioneering process as Mandated in the New Constitution.

3) Flaws noticed in Election processes from failing to provide sufficient Educational awareness to voters in the local community to understand concepts of the New Constitutional management and public service deliver prospects so that people engage in electioneering from informed choices

4) Irregularly awarding Certificates to favor some contestants under questionable circumstances and without going through credible balanced procedure for background check and clearance under accountability and transparency

5) Failing to provide an Independent Transitional team headed by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court according to the New Constitutional mandate in honor of Reform Accord Agreement of Chapter six

6) Without resolving issues of Land Grabbing and putting those responsible to face justice

7) Failing to resettle the Internally displaced as demanded

8) The unconstitutional and irregular way Kibaki took to Gazette Land Commissioners is worrisome and is seen as an indication that Land Grabbing will continue to be a sore in Kenya for more decades to come before it can finally be resolved

9) Failing to resolve and put behind bars those involved in saga of the Goldenberg and Anglo Leasing scandals

10) Failure to effectively resolve election mishaps, flaws with rigging anomalies for example such like those found to have been engaged by Kimemia and thereby disqualifying Kimemia or demanding reasons why he should not be forced to resign for engaging in politics with intention to deliberately manipulate and confuse legitimacy of election process from being free and fair.

The second debate which just ended proved from the candidates horse’s mouth that corruption and land grabbing is real which many of them are guilty of and accepted responsibilities but denied they did any wrong and therefore, we believe these were deliberate reasons why candidates avoided Integrity Examination threshold background checks for which case clearance in awarding of certificates are suspicious shrouded with lots of doubt whether election of March 4th 2013 shall be peaceful, credible, free and fair.

It is our considered justified appeal to do the right thing the first time by suspending March 4th by a few more months in order to rectify the flaws and anomalies so that we are able to put the Transitional Team in the right perspective before we allow conflict of special interest to spoil for the Reform Change we have struggled for all these years.

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

– – – – – – – – – – –

Candidates tackle integrity, wealth gap in final debate

Updated Tuesday, February 26 2013 at 07:35 GMT+3

By Moses Njagih

Nairobi, Kenya: The second and final presidential debate took off last evening with all candidates, including Jubilee flag-bearer Uhuru Kenyatta, whose side was at first hesitant, in the BrookHouse School auditorium.

The candidates were first made to confront the contentious issues of economic woes facing Kenya, and in particular the high cost of living, the minimum wage and the huge gap between the poor and the rich.

The candidates were later to move over to the issue of land ownership, emotive and sensitive in the country because of historical inequities and disparities in distribution, particularly at Independence.

The issue generated the hottest debate as pressure piled on Jubilee flag bearer Uhuru to declare if indeed it were true if the family of Kenya’s Founding President Mzee Jomo Kenyatta indeed owns “half of the land” in Kenya.

He was also asked by one of the candidates how he would impartially and fairly address the issue of land ownership when he himself was an interested party.

But the question of the day was how many acres the Kenyatta family, which Uhuru defended, sourced every hectare it has on a willing-buyer-willing-seller basis, own. Uhuru avoided the question but later conceded in Taveta alone, the family owns 30,000 acres, of which it has donated 4,000 acres to squatters in that specific parcel.

Grabbed land

But Raila, who was also put on the spot over his family’s acquisition of former publicly-owned Kisumu Molasses Plant, brought in the fact that Uhuru’s running mate, Mr William Ruto, is facing accusations that he grabbed land from an internally displaced person in his Eldoret North constituency.

“I have never been accused of grabbing any land. The land we own as a family is acquired through willing-buyer-willing-seller. We shall ensure that land is used as a factor of production,’’ Uhuru responded while insisting, “the National Land Commission should be left to handle the emotive issue of land in this country.”

“No organisation from Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission to all other State agencies have come up with any accusations against me on land,” Uhuru went on.

Responding to accusations against him and his family Raila said: “There was money that was collected out of the deal (sale of Kisumu Molasses Plant). This plant was acquired through an auction alongside 15 other companies. The government had acquired the land compulsorily. Sh2.9 million was collected from some people. The public owns part of the shareholding and are represented in the company.’’

In response to the land issue, Amani presidential candidate Musalia Mudavadi, said: “There is no way one can hide in terms of land ownership in this country. You can use whatever names but it will be known. The constitution says there is a minimum and maximum of what one can own.”

Mudavadi, who is a Land economist, warned that the issue of minimum and maximum acreage must be handled carefully so as not to bring economic ruin by undermining production and land usage for common good.

Alliance for Real Change candidate Mohammed Abduba Dida and his Safina counterpart, as well as Raila, declared their governments would repossess stolen public land, but through constitutional means.

“People at the Coast have been treated unfairly by successive governments, land is not given to the locals. In Rift Valley the situation is the same. We now have a good Constitution and National Land Policy. What is required is to give an enabling environment for the commission to operate,’’ said Muite. Eagle Alliance candidate Peter Kenneth said: “The real issues about land is enforcement. If we don’t deal with this matter concisely, it will continue to haunt us.”

In response to Raila’s claim on frustration of State efforts to address the land issue, Kenneth asked: “Who are the vested interests stopping us from moving forward?”

Goldenberg notoriety

Dida cited complaints in Kiambu County against the Kenyatta family and asked Uhuru how he could be trusted by other parts of the country when his own people are crying about alleged injustice visited on them by the Kenyatta family and Jomo Kenyatta’s government in general.

Before going to land question the moderators — KTN’s Joe Ageyo and Royal Media’s Udwak Amimo — confronted the candidates with direct questions on issues that over the years have tended to cast a long shadow on their personal integrity.

First to take the question of integrity was Muite, who was asked about claims by businessman Kamlesh Pattni of the Goldenberg notoriety that he extorted Sh20 million from him.

Muite declared the scheme was part of the propaganda set up by the regime then against him for spearheading battle against looting public resources. He argued the Law Society, which he then chaired, instituted a private suit on the scandal.

He said that he did not receive any money as alleged, and that Justice Samuel Bosire’s judicial commission on Goldenberg upheld his position. “Individuals associated with me may have got the money but Mr Muite did not receive any,” he said in defence.

Second was Mudavadi, who was asked on the adverse claims on his handling of Goldenberg scandal while Finance minister, as well alleged role in the Nairobi City’s ‘cemetery scandal’, while Minister for Local Government.

On both accusations the Deputy Prime Minister defended himself, saying he in fact was the one who tried to stop the scandals.

On Goldenberg, Mudavadi said: “The law was changed during my tenure at the treasury and it was during the time that stopped this scandal. The Bosire Commission cleared me of any offence”.

Whistle blowing

Karua was asked questions on how she, as Justice minister, handled the Anglo Leasing matter, which claimed the life of a whistle-blower, late David Munyekei.

Karua also denied claims of demonising former anti-graft tsar John Githongo over his whistleblowing role, saying he only defended the government’s position.

“Actually it was during my tenure that the anti-corruption agencies did their work and under my recommendations, ministers named in Githongo’s dossier stepped aside for investigations and have never forgiven me,” she said.

Raila was asked about Kazi Kwa Vijana and maize scandals, and the sale of Kisumu Molasses Plant to his family. He defended himself saying the claims against him were unfounded.

On the Kazi Kwa Vijana scandal, Raila said his office was only coordinating the programme.

The debate took off after recorded pleas by the candidates to their supporters to accept the verdict of the March 4 exercise, and where there would be disputes, resort to the measures mapped out by the Constitution for appeal.

Dida was confronted with a question of how as owner of a business agency recruiting Kenyans for overseas jobs as domestic helps, where they end up underpaid and harassed, he would be expected to rule Kenya when he is not helping in job creation locally.

“I have an agency out to help the plight of Kenyans in the Middle East. This is because of the funny salaries Kenyans get here, that is why I left my job,’’ he responded.

National budget

Prof James Kiyiapi of Restore and Build Kenya party was asked about the loss of over Sh100 million in Free Primary Education programme, while he was the Permanent Secretary.

He explained he was innocent as he had just joined the Ministry of Education and asked the candidates, who were in government then, to explain why the truth had not been uncovered on the FPE funds.

Uhuru was asked about the ‘computer error’ that rocked the Ministry of Finance’s national budget when he joined the ministry and read his first Financial Statement. Uhuru denied there was any financial loss and insisted it was just an error.

After the debate, watched by millions across the World, the candidates are now left to make their final statement on the race for Kenya’s Fourth Presidency, on their final rallies over the weekend.

John Okumu26 February 2013 10:19 AM
I loved this second debate,it was more substantive and thorough.I loved Amimos tough questions on integrity and corruption which caught the candidates off guard.This is how any public contender should be questioned.It clearly emerged that even those whom we think are squeaky clean like Mudavadi may have some explaining to do after all.All in all, we Kenyans need alot of work where integrity and corruption is concerned.It is clear that it has been so entrenched that what was shocking is actually talking about it.Things are changing fast .Martha is the only one that did not seem to have alot of entreched integrity issues.So i rank Peter Kenneth,Martha Karua,Kalonzo Musyoka high on the non corruption issues.Uhuru did very well in answering the questions i have to admit.Kenneth had done his homework especially on the question of what the minimum wage should be which i think Kiyapai gave a long winded answer on this question.The candidates were very well prepared all in all and it is goog for policy formulation in Kenya.All those good ideas can be incorporated so that everyone can win

Makao26 February 2013 12:09 AM
There were fairly good responses today on questions compared to first debate. However, there were flip-flops all over where candidates failed to explicitly explain how they will in details manage economy. Further, Uhuru talked of controlling price of products meaning the government will decide how maximum a product can cost. Economically, this is wrong and can’t apply. Price ceiling is a disastrous measure that can not apply. Price of commodities are defined and determined by market forces and strength. Trying to set price limit maximum or minimum will lead to situations witnessed in 90’s like hooding of products, high demand and low supply or non at all. Slup title deeds? How and who will determine who qualifies for land title deed there for example in Kibera? Government once announced that residents were to be allocated upgraded housing by government, it was open of hell-gate of corruption. People all over rushed there claiming to residents including the wealthy and influential.

steve jakomala26 February 2013 7:29 AM
i fail to understand why the politicians were punching with gloves as far as land issues are concern. Uhuru accepted that in Taita Taveta alone they own 30,000 ha of land, Dida gave a report about complaints in Kiambu there are several thousands of other ha of land else where. the questions are: being a president who had the prerogative to dish out land and at the same time had access to the national fund is it a coincidence that he owns these huge pieces of land without either allocating them to himself irregularly or using coercion to aquire them. Uhuru wants to be the president, the chief abitrator to kenyans, how can he convince those who looted this country to return the looted property including land if he can not convince his family to do the same? the evidence againsl Rutos land case is telling, how can two top people with vested intrest in illegally aquired land preside over land injustices in this country leave alone the serious case at the hague? Kenyans let us put ourselves first not tribe not community

Sharp minded voter26 February 2013 10:25 AM
Politicians are such lairs when they are conducting campaigns. The opponents of Uhuru keeps attack him about the lands he and his family own, Martha accepted that what she said that Uhuru owns half of Kenya is an outright exaggeration, Raila “my brother Uhuru is just an innocent inheritor”. Marha was further put to stop because when she was a minister the report of who has big tracks of land was produced and Uhuru and his family was not even on the list. Uhuru categorically stated that he has not been accused of impropriety or fraudulent acquisition of land and has no court cases pertaining to land and put Raila at task to state which court matters he has. We may conclude that this land issue is emotive and an imaginative creation of politicians just as acampaign gimmick that there politicians pull to discredit their Uhuru and a plot to smear mud and taint his name. He is free from corruption. The debate set matters straight and it is very wrong to use lies and propaganda on campaign platform to cheat Kenyans

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Corruption is rampant in rural areas as APs are said to be running illegal “Kangaroo Courts”s

INVESTIGATIVE Report By Our Special Correspondent

CAN anyone in the higher authorities either in the Office of the President, the police and the Administration Police authorities make a move with speed with the view of bringing sanity in the services of the Administration, which is denting the image of the country.

The image of the Kenya government which needs cleansing has been soiled and defaced by rampant corruption practiced by traffic police and administration police officers.

It has been established beyond any reasonable doubt that the administration Police officers posted to work in the outlaying district, divisions and rural administrative locations have shamelessly and corruptive established illegal “Kangaroo Courts”

These ‘Kangaroo Courts are only there and meant for the purpose of minting money earned illegally from unsuspecting members of the public..

A case in point is an ugly incident which occurred at Rapogi Trading Center in Uriri district,within Migori County.

The head f the Administration police unit posted at the nearby District Officers Divisional office in the company of several other APs made a surprise visit to a local bar located in Rapogi Market. There were several revelers as the raid took place during the wee hours of the night. After the exchange of harsh words with the revelers, the visit by policemen degenerated into a brawl.

The brawl resulted in the head of the AP sustaining minor injuries on his arm. THe revelers took to their heels scampering for safety in all directions.

THe next morning the head of the AP fook a P3 form, arrested one of the patrons of the bar, a young trader at the market who is running a butchery shop and locked him into police custody at the DO’s office. Acting on the fake P3 form which was later to emerged had not been filled and signed by a competent medic to warrant the suspect to be charged with the assault case.

The mother of the suspect who had by then spent two night in police custody struggled to raised Kshs 30,000 and paid the money to the head of the AP for the release of her son. No criminal charge was preferred against the young man.

A few days later the no nonsense Uriri D.C George Lagat got a wind of the matter. The D.C.immediately summoned both parties and the head of the AP to appear before the district security committee for interrogation. It was during this exercise when the P2 Form was established to have been a fake one. And the D.C’s team found that no criminal offence had been committed by the suspect and ordered the AP boss to refund the money which he had taken from the suspect’s mother immediately. The AP boss admitted having received the bribe money. To-date no money has been refunded to the family and the matter has since degenerated to hide and seek.

Similar cases are so common with the APs posted to work in the rural locations and divisional headquarters in the remote part of the country far away from towns. People apprehended by the AP for the allegedly committing petty criminal offence have always bought their freedom after parting with colossal amount of money. The money is pocketed by the AP and never get into the government coffers via the established courts of laws and other government coffers such as the KRA

Brewers and consumers of the illicit ”Chang’aa” are more prone to abuse by the APs. Some of them are forced to part with large sums of money on weekly basis as ‘Protection Fees”.

It is not uncommon for the culprits suspected for having committed serious criminal offences to escape punishment so long as they could raise bribe money, such criminals go scot’s free.

Another category of the Wananchi targeted by both APs and Traffic Police officers are the Boda Boda motorbike riders, particularly those rising on rural access and feeder roads. It is no longer secret that traffic police officers are always demanding the bribe money with menace. Some of the Inter-regional highways linking Kenya with the neighboring Tanzania and Uganda are commonly used by foreigners from those countries who come here for businesses while using country buses and matatus of the country. These foreigners sit inside these vehicles and witness the illicit transactions. The exchange of bribe money is done in full view of these foreigners, who when they get back home started soiling Kenya’s good name and question the sanity to our roads.

Ends

KENYA: BRIBERY, NEPOTISM MANIPULATION OF VOTERS WHILE THE HIRED POLITICAL GOONS REIN SUPREME EVERYWHERE FEATURED PREEMINENTLY DURING THE MUCH FLAWED ODM PRIMARIES IN LUO-NYANZA.

News Analysis By Leo Odera Omolo In Kisumu City.

MASSIVE bribery of voters, political manipulation, nepotism and undercutting were the order of the day during the two days of the much flawed ODM primaries conducted inside Luo-Nyanza.

The outcome of the poorly conducted nomination primaries could spell doom to the presidential ambition of the ODM leader Raila Odinga, and perhaps ruins his chances of clinching the presidency come March 2013.

Failure to conduct credible and fair nomination primaries in many parts of the region has left many wounds in the hearts of the electorate who are left nursing the feeling that the Orange Democratic Movement {ODM} and its enlarged CORD alliance lacked disciplinary of making credible nomination in its own.

According to the chairman of the ODM election board, Mr Franklin Kipng’etich Arap Bett, who is also the Roads Minister all the nomination exercise should have come to an end by |Midnight on Friday. However, by Saturday morning, the voting was still going on in some places, like Homa-Bay, Ndhiwa, Mbita Awendo, Nyando and Muhoroni in total defiance of the IEBC rules.

What is most interesting is that one of the newly created parliamentary constituency in Migori, Awendo never received even one single election materials include ballot papers and voting boxes.

Awendo had ten aspirants, each of the paid a nomination fees of Kshs 100,000 bringing it to a total of Kshs One Million. But the aspirants had waited from Day one, Day two, up to Day three, in vain without receiving any election materials.

In places where the voting took places, the polling stations were marred with acts of lawlessness such as stone throwing and destruction of the election papers. In some places the coordinators and returning and presiding officers were forced to flee the polling station as drunken bands of hired goon emerged from the nearby “Chang’aa drinking dens, settled on the election materials with kicks and destroyed even ballot boxes.

A number of Raila’s loyalists were floored and forced into exit. Other who survived did so narrowly, but with flurry of complaints from their rivals claiming they were shameless rigged in.

Raila’s own older brother Dr Oburu Oginga suffered heaviest defeat in his ambition to become the first governor of Siaya County, forcing the election coordinator a Ms Monica Amolo, a perennial parliamentary election loser in Ndhiwa to use mobile tallyng centers, which the voters in Siaya violently disputed as not “ very credible’.

Citing insecurity and safety of her team, Ms Amolo shifted from Siaya Town where she was supposed to announce the outcome of the governorship contest between Dr Oburu Oginga and the populist Paul Oduol and moved to Bondo,.The voters were, however, not amused and saw the move as one way of rigging Mr Oduoo votes. It actually happened, when the figures were turned upside down with new figures reading that Dr.Oburu Ogingsa had [polled 62,000 votes against Oduol’s 35,000 sparking off the strongest protest.

Fears now persist that with thousands of voters in the region dissenting the outcome of the ODM primary nomination, the likelihood massive fallout cannot be ruled out. Those voters who feel offended after being denied the right to choose their own representative could turn into a major rebellion and cast their voters to Raila Odinga’s rivals in the presidential race.

In Homa-Bay County, things were so bad that marauding political goons destroyed or burnt most of the election materials meant for the various constituencies in the region. These included ballot boxes and voting materials meant for Kabodo-Kasipul, Kasipul, Homa-Bay Town, Ndhiwa and Mbita.

In some places the goons beat up election officials and party leaders sensilessly. In Muhoroni within Kisumu County one man suffered serious knife stab and had to be rushed to Ombei Dispensary in Nyando district.

In Kisumu Town East, the outgoing Shakeel Ahmed Shabir had won his primary, But the rumor went round that the party bosses were in the process of issuing Shabbir’s rival a Mr. Micholas Oricho with the nomination certificate. This deadly rumor immediately raised political temperature in the violence prone Kisumu City.

In the contest for the lucrative and powerful position of the Kisumu County governor, the excessively arrogant Raila Odinga’s sister Ruth Adhiambo Odinga became another casualities within the Odinga family She lost the governorship to the former senior accountant with the KRA Jack Ranguma who beat close to six other aspirant.

Ruth Odinga is the managing director of the Kisumu based Odinga family business flagship The Spectre International, which is managing the Kisumu Molasses.

This particular position was contested by among other aspirants Mrs Rhoda Ahonnobadha, former AFC regional manager for Nyanza and Western Provinces, the former cabinet Minister Ojwang’ K’Ombudo, Prof.Menya Kariaga, a senior lecturer in one of the US universities Dr. Barrack Abonyo, a Nairobi based business woman –cum-lawyer Atieno Otieno.

The outspoken Raila ‘s sister Ruth Adhiambo Odinga had been advised to abandon her ambition for the governorship by close friends and relatives, but she defiantly went on and contested the position fairing badly.

Other Raila casualties included the abrasive Nyatike MP Edick Omodi Anyanga, Uriri MP Cyprian Ojwang’ Omolo who lost to a former Principal of the Kenya Railways Training School Eng. Kobado. Nyakach Mp Ochieng;’ Daima,Eng Philip Okundi, who contested Homa-Bay County governor, Raila’s cousing Jakoyo Midiwo, the gem MP

Other whose position remain unclear by late last night included Muhuroni Mp Patrick Ayiecho Olueny, Nyando MP Fred Outa who is married to Raila Oding’a cousin.

In Karachuonyo constituency also withinHoma-Bay County, the election loser ganged up hired drunken goons ws were heard singing derogatory songs saying No Adipo Okuome No Raila or Rege Must Go.

The song implying that without Adipo Okuome they voter would not votefor raila in his presidential bid on March 4, 2013.

This was so despite of the fact tat the outgoing MP Eng. James Rege had beaten his rivals hands down with a big margin.

ODM need to out its hoiu8se in order, and instill high discipline among the party youths.

Ends

Kenya: Politically Correct with Collaborators are the Cancer needing Urgent Medical Fix from Ch. 6.

From: Judy Miriga

Dear People of Good Conscious,

Politically Correct with Cohorts, Networks and Collaborators are the Cancer needing Urgent Fix so Reform Change can begin to take shape in Kenya, Africa and the greater region of the world.

Politically Correct Engineered Corruption Created Poverty and destroyed conventional job creation in Kenya that Poisoned the Rest of Africa and Ultimately Spread the Cancer to the whole World Affecting the Greater Global Region with Human Sufferings and Economic Collapse

Millions of people today live in extreme engineered poverty in Kenya and the same have spread to the whole of Africa.

There is need for urgency to call for order to seriously discuss political and economic fix, which in my opinion, was carefully crafted to fail Kenya/Africa but instead enriched the Corporate Special Business Interest selfish greed and without considering or weighing consequences of poverty in the long run. This trend has caused disparity gap between the poor and the rich.

This silent and lethal engineered poverty got escalated when politically correct in partnership agree to steal from public wealth and resources and by all means plunder, kill and exploit public finances, livelihood and survival without caring. It does not matter the level of crime, abuse or violation they commit against humanity; what is crucially unfair is that, they profit from pushing people into extreme poverty, disorganizing naturally established communities by engineering organized gang attacks with trivial land conflicts and causing legal confusions from dragging and making land cases go on in the court indefinitely while rewarding wrong doers including spurring of injustices and crimes thus opening doors to unsustained and unfavorable illicit jobs that are full of crimes and disorders; where they engage in injustices and avoid paying Tax Revenues thus threatening peace, unity, Government system collapse and consequently these actions put together, disorients economic stability and breaks the backbone of a Nationhood to an extend it fuels extra-judicial killings with systematic organized assassinations as well as slow deaths of people in this politically influenced and engineered silent and lethal corruption. If peace, love and unity are our aim for improved survival and cornerstone for stability for better livelihood future, then this trend of business imposed on us by the selfish and greedy, is not feasible or sustainable and it must be rejected by all responsible and sensible good people of the world; it is destructive and a death knell aimed at destroying environmental nature and shortening human survival and livelihood into extinction. We will have allowed events that destroy life instead of nurturing for purposes of sharing, caring and making it better; so when we leave this world, we leave it better than we found it.

This quiet engineered corruption involves two ways exchange,…….the local politicians collude in a conspiracy with the unscrupulous International Corporate Special Business Interest who are after making easy quick money for their selfish greed and instead of following Government regulatory system that are for checks and balances, they evade paying taxes. The target is to fail the Government from public service delivery at which the Government operators and political leadership took oath to protect and preserve. They utilize public facilities in the Government and bribe their way through to accomplish their thieving mission. The repercussion is the Global Economic Crisis and Collapse, which subsequently have seriously undermined and eroded fundamental fabric sustenance of Kenya with the rest of Africa to fail in their Development Efforts from achieving meaningful economic progress and be partners in the Global Market Region to bargain for fair value, yet Africa’s wealth is the backbone of the World’s Economic progress and stability.

Petty Corruption Under The Table

Petty corruption under the table in extension permeates the whole Government system and it is the order of the day for the Executives and public personnel workers in Kenya. Passing through the hands of Political Leaders, it gave birth to drug trafficking; illegal arm-sale; child sex trade with child pornography; organized gangs that goes around to intimidate and terrorize unsuspecting innocent citizens; Pirating as terrorists in the high seas doing illicit business of stealing and trafficking illegal goods; trading on foreign exchange and from evading paying taxes for goods; organizing gang groups as mercenaries and private armed guards who equally raid and steal from local banks huge sums of money to maintain and keep their business afloat; going wild into the streets involving small money transactions and exchanges by agents and facilitators of the network and at every stage, public servants employees involving the local Chiefs, engage in full blown corruption, letting the cancer spread deeper into the community’s local villages where the poor have their cows, cattle’s, chickens and farm produce stolen from them and sometimes taken at throw away price……..what is left is extreme poverty and hunger………and to be precise, Government system collapsed in Kenya long ago…..

Corruption is deeply rooted in the economy of Kenya including the whole of Africa. Something drastic must be done, and without serious transformation, nothing good will be realized from Kenya’s Reform Accord Agenda……..but if something must be done, the tendrils and roots of corruption must be uprooted.

In Kenya, we had put corruption on notice and Reform Accord established; it is time to put it on checks, and there is no wishy-washy about this…….

Progressive development can be successful when there is a balance amongst the people and the balance can only be regulated by a functioning Government. The process of regulations are formulated by Legislative Policies in the Constitution to provide a balance in a fair-play for public service delivery, which is why people vote to chose leaders who are Responsible and are with Integrity to manage Public Affairs in rendering Public Mandate according to Oath of Office. Any Injustices, irregularities or mis-trust are ironed and streamlined at the Court of Law in the Judiciary’s Code of Rules for Governance.

The Elected Political Leaders and the Executives are mandated to orderly organize sound accessibility of Government facilities and utilities to provide opportunity for progress and to use and utilize skills, talents of people for new ideas and innovation to spur technology in a diversity away from monopoly……….so to benefit public in an open competition faced with progressive challenges to perform and produce quality goods and services.

In Kenya, we were on the process of reforming the political process from the serious Corruption that almost destroyed Kenya during the election fall out in 2007/8 and where the election was stolen and the Country turned bloody.

The Progressives who want Change saw the unchecked corruption of big International Corporate businesses terrorize and exploit workers, children and women, drive health situation into disgrace, frustrate the local land owners and basically the local community became the target and primary enemy who must be forcefully be driven out of their land to the streets by force and the politicians and government workers turn a blind eye. This behavior made life totally unbearable and we cannot continue to maintain corrupt political leaders without going through a process of checks and balances during this period of Reform Change we have struggled for this far.

The Unscrupulous International Corporate Special Business Interest Scramble to Africa

It cannot therefore be denied that the reason for scramble to Africa by the International Corporate Special Business Interest network and collaborators are meant to engage in business acts that are unfavorable, irregular, unfair, illicit and unjustified job creation for our youth, children with the larger community through the pretence of Business investments to Africa, yet they basically engineered to invade Africa through schemed quiet attacks then take ownership and control of Africa’s wealth, land, water towers and resources including human organs harvesting and decay for their gainful end. If logics make sense, this must stop and it must stop instantaneously. Things must change for better, things that unite, brings peace and generate love. We must engage in things that make sense and are meaningful to a larger population of the world; so in sharing we are fair and are able to care for each other in love. It is because we were created to love and care for one another, and not to destroy each other. What did the poor of Africa do to deserve such a destructive prejudiced conspiracy in their livelihood and survival and ultimately are driven away from their homes and land to a meaningless life on the streets for which they are expected to die hopelessly without dignity or value like wild animals, is this what the conspirators of corporate special business interest target for their wealth creation and is it fair ?????

Proposed Solutions

Where there is Law and Order, discipline becomes the Rule where all play by the same sets of rule. It is the determination of the people to instill the Rule of Law and it cannot be set at a distant future when the Reform Change we want is now.

Reform Change in Kenya is a Must and chapter 6 of the Constitution must be applied by the Judiciary to comply as it is the law. There is no short-cut to this and no lawyer is an angel who think they can twist and cook common sense according to their delicacy.

It is about time good people of the world unite and speak with one voice that Change cannot wait; it must be now.

There are a range of opinion and ideas that could be put to work in order to tackle the eminent corruption and poverty problem so life can be of meaning again:

a) A well meaning Government in Kenya with the rest of Africa to enact proper facilitating regulations and the Government system must be made feasible and functional by responsible and committed elected politicians of integrity. This means, the Reform Accord Agenda must play their part in the vetting of the political aspirants as mandated.

b) Overhauling of personnel must be replaced and transfers of the same in order for the change to take roots putting New Responsible Leadership with integrity to perform public service delivery with checks and balances and where Transparency and accountability becomes the order of the day.

c) Reform Educational programs and upgrade training in a devolved system.

d) International Treaty to monitor that Rights of Land owners and users are respected and business is fairly shared favorably e.g. under Private-Public Partnership or Cooperative undertaking

e) World Bank, IMF with other United Nations Financial Institutions must recognize their pivotal role as advisors in reforming laws favorable to all, where in the past they have failed because they supported corruption, favored the rich against the poor and they are the reason for Global economic crisis and collapse. The rich without shame continue to demand the lion share while the poor are dying.

Things must begin to change for better. The Corruption has spread like bush fire…..it is humongous. This corruption mess is not for Kenya or Africa alone. We must join hands and all people of the world are in this mess irrespectively and we cannot ran away from it but we must agree to fix it once and for all.

f) Government Administration services to public, support and development programs must clearly be accessible with ease providing details and time frame for processes, tools used and report results in a timely manner conforming to actual activities as is on the ground.

g) Census Report for population count must be publicized before election is done and if IEBC is un-informed about this, the public know their rights. If election is done without it, that election will not be legitimate.

h) The unscrupulous International Corporate Special Business Interest must pay their share of Remedy to repair the damage they inflicted to victims of circumstances and they too must be answerable to the United Nations for charges of crime, violation and abuse of Human Rights.

If good people of the world will remain united working in partnership and in Allies team up to do the above, the world will be too small for the unscrupulous International Corporate selfish and greedy to continue in their corrupt ways and corruption will not have room to survive. We will have found remedy to the worlds cancerous corruption ailment and begun to apply remedial medicine to secure healthy livelihood and survival fair to all and will be on the right road to our destination where pain and sufferings will be no more and Peace, Unity and Love will be found in abundance from any corner of the world under shared sacrifice common to all. Unity is strength people!!!……Unity for good cause is worth the while and we must not wait but get going……but, one thing we must not do, we must not sit and let the world be destroyed and be unmanageable. We are better than this and it is the reason God gave us brain and reward us with wisdom to do good to one another and not engage in evil……

It Must Be Deal or No Deal

MPs have no powers or authority to suspend Integrity and Responsibility test. They cannot have their cake and eat it too………Are we the people the Politicians’ bosses (we the people are their employers) or are the Politicians our bosses (we the people their employees) ???? ….. The Line Must Be Drawn……..People have powers and we must use it for our advantages, to make the world a better place to live on at peace with each other. There is no reason for war or engage in conflicts if we have brains to negotiate and be fair to everyone.

In Kenya, the Reform Accord automatically formed part of Kenya’s constitution and consequently became Ch. 6 in the Constitutional policy. Political Leadership of the Coalition Government took oath and swore to uphold the constitution and it was not in any way their preserve to demolish, restructure nor was the Reform Accord Agenda to be doctored in ways or form to suit Politicians’ special interest. It stands as a Legislated policy as it automatically become part of the Constitution the Coalition Government was based and it must take precedence to apply Legal Jurisdiction appropriately to feature the purpose for which it was formulated……….Deal or No Deal………

It does not matter what IEBC specification frame-work will do for listing for electioneering of candidates and IEBC cannot be the mouth of the Judiciary. The Judiciary is supreme and it has its fundamental obligation to have the Court Panel to vet and certify giving politicians a Clean Bill of record allowing them to stand or not to stand and whether the Independent Electoral Commission will oblige and comply with the Judiciary is totally irrelevant. We must play by the rule people………again it was not for parliament to set mechanism for vetting political aspirants it is the Judiciary to set the Court Panel to do that……..

Public Finances

1) What must be done by the start of February, public demands that Budget Report be released for public to view Monitory Transactions Expenditure Report to show how funds were used and ascertain how public funds, loans, utilities, facilities and public resources were dished out comparatively against the returns……

2) Police Report Explain why there are too much extra-judicial and thuggery

3) Land Reform Report …….What happened to people who were forcefully migrated and driven out of their lands to pave ways for investors…….were they compensated, if yes, where is the report……

The result which will provide gateway authorization to issuance of the Certificate for clean bill of records to prospective vying candidates. To those who fail the Integrity and Responsibility test, the law is clear and it must show why they should not be prosecuted in a broader range of misconducts which will have been unearthed.

Politicians who were mandated responsibility over Public Wealth and Resources must give account under transparency and accountability and for checks and balances must prove worthy and people must be satisfied before they can be re-considered to continue working in public office rendering public service delivery. It is and it must be…..Deal or No Deal people……!!!

It is Deal or No Deal and the Law Must Prevail people……..Cheers !!!

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

– – – – – – – – – – –

MPs suspend integrity and academic laws in March poll

Updated Tuesday, January 08 2013 at 08:43 GMT+3

By Geoffrey Mosoku and Peter Opiyo

NAIROBI, KENYA: Enforcement of strident integrity laws and academic qualification as a precondition for running in elections will not apply for the March 4 exercise as had been expected.

This is because it now turns out that Members of Parliament connived to suspend parts of the Elections Act that provided for the academic qualification, and watered down legislation meant to operationalise Chapter Six of the Constitution on leadership and integrity.

The changes MPs made were buried in the raft of alterations they passed as a package under what in parliamentary parlance is called an ‘Omnibus Bill’.

Consequently, the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) will not vet aspirants on integrity issues as Kenyans had demanded in the current Constitution, including delving into their past.

The commission will also not ask nominees gunning to be MPs, senators and women and county representatives for their academic qualifications. The demand that you must be armed with a university degree now only applies to those seeking to be governors.

Political parties were informed on Monday that persons seeking positions in the National and County Assemblies would not be required to provide any academic papers before being cleared to contest in the elections.

Section 22 (1) (b) of the Act stated that a person may be nominated as a candidate in an election if he or she holds a post-secondary school qualification recognised in Kenya.

The requirement has been put on hold until the next elections under the Miscellaneous Amendment Act of 2012, with the exception of the candidates for the presidency, governors and their running mates who must have degrees from local universities recognized by the Government.

Attach papers

“No one will be asked to provide post-secondary school education and consequently, IEBC is in the process of receiving the nomination rules once these amendments are gazetted,” Registrar of Political Parties Lucy Ndung’u told the parties.

National Commission on Gender and Equality chairperson Ms Winnie Lichuma said by suspending the law, the IEBC will not require any person to attach academic papers while presenting his or her nomination papers.

The two were speaking on Monday at the Kenyatta International Conference Centre, Nairobi while addressing representatives of various political parties at a forum organised by the Kenya National Human Rights Commission (KNHRC) to explain how it will monitor their nominations to be held before January18th.

Ndung’u also revealed that IEBC would have a limited role, if any, in vetting the aspirants to ascertain if they meet the integrity test as set out under Chapter Six.

Integrity queries

According to the Registrar, individual candidates and their parties will fill and sign a form from the IEBC and must state that they are not disqualified under any law to contest.

“Once IEBC has received all nominations, then it shall publish all the names of contestants for various seats and it is at this stage that any Kenyan who has integrity queries on a person nominated may petition the commission,” she explained.

It is only when a complaint has been lodged that IEBC would move to investigate the claims made against a candidate. Unlike in past elections the integrity bar for those seeking elective posts in March had been raised, thanks to the provisions in the new Constitution.

Consequently, hundreds of aspirants have been flocking various bodies to seek clearance to vie in the elections.

The bodies are digging into the aspirants’ past to see whether they have criminal records, non-serviced university loans or have been involved in some form of professional misconduct.

But even as the bodies continue with the exercise, concerns are being raised over the ambiguity in law regarding the vetting process.

This follows the watering down of key legislation meant to implement Chapter Six of the Constitution by MPs in the last two years.

Though Chapter Six requires that public officers be people of high integrity, a detailed mechanism that was enacted by Parliament failed to confer legal mandate to relevant bodies to vet aspirants.

Legal backing

This, experts argue, presents a grey area that can be challenged in court, and whose application has been continuously blocked by Parliament.

Already IEBC has asked political parties to ensure their candidates get clearance from relevant bodies. These include the Police, Kenya Revenue Authority, Credit Reference Bureau, Higher Education Loans Board and the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission.

An initial provision in the leadership and integrity law gave the bodies the legal backing to clear the aspirants, but was removed by the Cabinet.

Parliament also failed to reinstate the requirement when the law came before it for enactment.

The Law Society of Kenya says this ambiguity may open up legal challenges because IEBC, for instance, would lack the legal authority to bar a candidate because he or she lacks a clearance certificate from HELB.

LSK Chairman Eric Mutua argues that political parties are asking their candidates to get clearance from these bodies out of fear, because other bodies that interviewed public officers set a precedent, and the electoral body might use this to block them.

Messed up

He, however, says there is no clear legal framework to vet the candidates after the Cabinet and Parliament shredded such provisions from the Leadership and Integrity Act.

There is no clear legal framework on vetting because the Cabinet and Parliament messed up the integrity law,’’ he explained.

Parliament failed to outline a framework to guide the public and the candidates on how to conduct vetting, so the specific legal framework is wanting,” adds Mutua.

He says parties were relying on precedents set by bodies such as the Judicial Service Commission when interviewing judges, and various panels that have interviewed various commissioners.

“Political parties are just being guided by certain trends set by some institutions that vetted candidates for public office such as JSC.

So political parties just borrow from these panels because they fear IEBC may use this to block them,” says the lawyer.

LSK chief executive Apollo Mboya says should any aspirant be blocked, any one could go to court and seek interpretation, and that IEBC might ask for information on candidates from any institution, including professional bodies.

Legal teeth

But he concurs there is no clear framework for vetting.

“Everybody is looking at Chapter Six of the Constitution, but there is no way you are going to get a clear way to do it,” says Mboya.

The chairman of the Parliamentary Committee on Justice and Legal Affairs, Njoroge Baiya says the Committee’s attempt to give legal teeth to these bodies were thwarted when Parliament rejected the move, opening up room for ambiguity.

“There is an ambiguity because one can say there is no law giving IEBC powers to bar an individual from vying because he or she has not been cleared by another body,” argues the Githunguri MP.

Last October three constitutional bodies said they would jointly vet those seeking elective positions. The Commission on Administrative Justice, The Ethics and Anti-Corruption, the Commission and the Director of Public Prosecutions were to carry out the exercise.

Commission for the Implementation of the Constitution filed a case in Court challenging the Leadership and Integrity Act as passed by Parliament.

CRA accuses Treasury of frustrating devolution

By ALPHONCE SHIUNDU ashiundu@ke.nationmedia.com

Posted Tuesday, January 8 2013 at 16:03

The Treasury is out to scuttle the devolution of power and resources to county governments, the Commission on Revenue Allocation (CRA) has said.

Speaking at a meeting with the House Budget Committee, which was also attended by Finance minister Njeru Githae and his technocrats, CRA chairman Micah Cheserem said the Treasury had failed to take on board a formula approved by Parliament in making allocations to each of the 47 counties.

“If the Treasury behaves the way it is behaving now, we’ll not have county governments,” Mr Cheserem told the MPs on Tuesday.

He said Mr Githae “was not an accountant” and was therefore at the mercy of the mandarins at the Treasury who had often “misled him” on the devolution of resources. Mr Cheserem added that the Treasury often “lectures” the CRA on how to do its job.

Mr Cheserem told Mr Githae to his face that he had not used the formula on revenue sharing to allocate money to the specific counties. He said all the counties should be allocated Sh30 billion to do their jobs. The Sh6.8 billion that the Treasury had allocated, Mr Cheserem said, and MPs agreed, had no basis in law.

“The danger is that if we don’t do this well, we’ll have lots of contestations when the governors come into office,” said Mr Cheserem.

“It is not true that the minister has used the formula. He has not! We told the Treasury that they have to apply the formula, and allocate Sh30 billion to the counties as a minimum for the last four months of the financial year. If that doesn’t happen, wait for a crisis,” the CRA chairman said.

Mr Githae said the Treasury had settled on the Sh6.8 billion “on the advice of the Transitional Authority”.

But an officer from the Transitional Authority, who had attended the meeting, later said the authority had not given the Treasury any figures. The committee, however, refused to accommodate the sentiments of the officer, because the Transitional Authority had not been invited to the meeting.

Skip meetings

The told the minister that he had skipped three meetings to discuss the Bills on devolution a week ago.

“We’ve got a feeling that if you had your way, you’d not have had a meeting with us to discuss these Bills,” said Elias Mbau, the chairman of the Budget Committee.

The legislators said they saw mischief in the way the Treasury had handled the issue on devolution.

“Those of us with a political background know that devolution was killed at independence, when the Senate was killed. So we look at any move by the Treasury that is likely to scuttle the process, as suspect,” said Ekwee Ethuro (Turkana Central).

But Mr Githae defended the Treasury. He said he was committed to making sure that the devolution succeeds as envisaged in the Constitution.

“Sometimes, we may not do what is ideal because of other considerations, such as inadequate time,” said the Finance minister.

“We’ve not short changed any county.”

MPs approve Sh58b supplementary budget

By Peter Opiyo

Parliament finally approved Sh58.8 billion Supplementary Budget to enable the government fund its operations until the end of the financial year.

MPs endorsed the mini-budget even after they frustrated the move last week on account that Finance Minister Njeru Githae had not presented to the House County Bills that would determine revenue allocation and division to the devolved units.

Deputy Speaker Farah Maalim had warned that failure to endorse the motion would shut down government operations and put the country into ‘a fiscal cliff’, an American situation that is characterized by increased tax among workers and a cut in public spending.

“By shooting down the motion, we would shut down the operations of the government…we would experience some sort of ‘fiscal cliff’ and we don’t need to use unorthodox means to frustrate the motion,” Farah had warned MPs.

Factored in the supplementary budget is the additional allocation to the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) to help it conduct upcoming polls. Salaries for nurses, police officers and increased spending in other government projects are also factored in the mini budget. The money would also go towards administrative costs and operationalization of county offices.

Other expenditure are for security and other operational expenses related to the elections as well as funding for implementation of constitutional reforms.

The budget includes Sh50.7 billion as recurrent expenditure and Sh7.9 billion as development expenditure.

The Bills that the MPs demanded that the minister present were the Transition County Allocation of Revenue Bill, the Division of Revenue Bill, the County Allocation of Revenue Bill and The Transition County Appropriation Bill.

Githae tabled the Bills last week and they have now been set for debate but MPs again protested at the contents of the Bill saying they do not factor in the formula for allocation of revenue to the counties as passed by Parliament.

Dujis MP, Aden Duale argued the Bills were unconstitutional as they did not depict the 15 percent that should be allocated to the counties. The Constitution requires that at least 15 percent of the national budget should go to the counties.

He said instead of providing Sh30.4 billion to cover for four months the minister only factored in Sh6.8 billion, representing 3.3 per cent of the national revenue.

“The Bills presented by the minister do not provide money to cover the next four months. This House should not rubberstamp them because the minister is contravening the Constitution,” said Duale.

MPs amend CDF bill, grant themselves more powers

By PETER OPIYO

Members of Parliament would have more control in the management of the Constituencies Development Fund (CDF).

This is after the law makers amended the CDF Bill at the Committee of the Whole House to allow MPs to sit in the Constituency Fund Development Committees as ex-officio members.

The amendment to the Bill was floated by Rarieda MP Nicholas Gumbo and was supported by the legislators. But Yatta MP Charles Kilonzo warned against the move saying the presence of the MPs in the Committees would intimidate other Committee members.

“It is very difficult when an MP sits in these committees because their presence intimidates other committee members, so please think twice,” Kilonzo warned.

CDF Committees play a critical role in prioritising the projects to be funded by the Fund and MPs have not been members but just patrons. Having MPs as patrons was meant to minimise their influence in the management of the kitty.

Projects funded by the Constituency Development Fund would also be cautioned from any expenses arising from its administration.

Another amendment by Gumbo would see five per cent of the total allocation for a project go towards catering for the administration expenses of the project. The Project Management Committee shall set aside this sum.

The MPs also edged out the Senate from oversight of the Fund by giving a Committee of the National Assembly to check the management of the Fund. There had been a proposal to have a joint Committee, which constitutes members of the Senate and from the National Assembly to oversight the Fund. But they voted against this provision saying the function should fall within the National Assembly.

“This is a Constituency Fund and I don’t see where the Senate is coming in,” said Sports Minister Ababu Namwamba.

School children would ,however, have a reason to smile for the Bill now recognises education bursary scheme, mocks and continuous assessment tests as development projects so long as they shall not exceed 15 per cent of the total funds allocated to the kitty each financial year.

An attempt to have the Fund used to fund religious activities and religious bodies was shot down by the MPs during the verbal vote at the Committee. The amendment had been introduced by nominated MP Millie Odhiambo-Mabona.

“We are criminalising religious activities… I want to take CDF and use it to support my church, “said Ms Odhiambo Mabona.

But Turkana Central MP Ekwee Ethuro, who is also the Chairman of the Parliamentary Committee on CDF, said such a provision would undermine the purpose of the Fund.

“We’ll be undermining the purpose of CDF. The Fund is meant for poverty alleviation not for evangelisation,” said Mr Ethuro. His view was supported by Mr Gumbo.

A provision to have at least 30 per cent of the development projects funded by the kitty be reserved for the youth also failed to sail through as MPs said it was tricky to implement. The proposal was floated by Mr Gumbo.

But Planning Minister Wycliffe Oparanya said there is already a government circular that gives the youth ten per cent in business opportunities and it would not be necessary to legislate on the matter.

Ekwee, Migori MP, John Pesa, Mosop MP, David Koech and Education Assistant Minister Ayiecho Olweny warned that implementing the requirement would not be practicable. But Ndhiwa MP Augustino Neto said the provision was good for affirmative action.

Police link impostor to Baragoi killings

By Moses Michira

KENYA: An internal secret investigation by high-ranking officers picked by retired Police Commissioner Mathew Iteere has concluded that the bungled Baragoi mission could have backfired following leakage by the impostor now in custody.

Pointing fingers at Joshua Waiganjo who infiltrated police force with claims he was an Assistant Commissioner of police when he was in fact just a Standard Eight dropout, the team also questioned why a Nakuru bank manager was incorporated in a police flight to Baragoi before the bungled raid.

Led by a Senior Deputy Commissioner of Police in charge of reforms, Mr Jonathan Kosgei, The Standard the team found out that the operation that led to killings of police officers and reservists was carried out against the advice of the police officers on the ground.

It also revealed how badly planned the doomed mission was, with no records kept either of the officers deployed or the manouvres they were required to engage in, and lacked even basic things like water, and when they were attacked, even the available helicopter wasn’t sent to their rescue.

Interestingly, the 132 officers and reservists had been forced to walk for 10 kilometres in a single-file, and having been told they were pursuing only 35 bandits when they were, in fact, 1000, they were ambushed inside a valley where the enemy had shooting advantage and massacred.

All that time, as they fought for dear life in Suguta Valley, with the new police officers having not been paid their September and October pay while almost all had no competence in field combat, their commander was killing time in his hotel room in Baragoi, the report says.

Initial draft by the committee appointed by Iteere, sources reveal, was initially edited to keep Waiganjo’s name off on what insiders called ‘orders from above’.

However, when the new Inspector General of Police David Kimaiyo reported to office, he asked for full disclosure on the investigations and that is when the cover was reportedly blown off the faces of Waiganjo and a Nakuru bank manager who we cannot name at this stage for legal reasons.

Security meetings

“The conduct and the role of the alleged KPR (Kenya Police Reservist) commander – Mr Waiganjo “ACP” and…Nakuru Branch Manager to be thoroughly investigated particularly on suspicion of having betrayed the operation as they are reported to have attended various security meetings,” reads part of the report by Koskei’s team.

The committee found out Mr Waiganjo and the banker had attended several planning meetings in the build-up to the failed operation, raising the possibility that they were moles for the raiders planted to leak sensitive information that could help in the recovery of the stolen animals.

The possibility that Mr Waiganjo betrayed the security operation adds a new dimension to the web of cattle rustling which has led to thousands of fatalities among the security personel, and members of the Turkana and Samburu communities.

In the unfolding saga surrounding Waiganjo who is pictured variously in senior police uniform and rank, which was first exclusively reported by The Standard, last Friday, President Kibaki has ordered a ten-day probe even as local police officials deny colluding with or overlooking this gross violation of national security and professional code of conduct.

A more worrying link to possible betrayal contained in the report is that the Provincial Police Officer John M’mbijiwe ignored counsel of his juniors, who are based in the hostile Baragoi District, about the launching the operation without sufficient preparation and arming.

Recent claims have been made that Waiganjo could have been a dangerous criminal involved in robberies and extortion in several places, possible crimes for which he is now facing charges in court. The latest claims further reinforce the fears that he may have been an informer promoting the fraudulent cattle trade.

The damaging report points out loopholes in the planning of the operation to recover over 500 cattle stolen by the warriors from the Samburu, including relying on a Turkana moran in execution, and was likely to have misinformed the police.

“Planning of the operation was dependant on a Turkana tribesman whom under normal circumstances cannot divulge any information concerning his fellow Turkanas,” the report read further.

Bad terrain

The district police bosses were opposed to the operation, saying the officers involved were too few, considering that the raiders were ‘over 1,000’ and that they had the advantage of knowing the terrain better.

The senior officers at Baragoi said they knew about the number of raiders and their firepower because two operations they had led in trying to recover the lost animals had failed as the officers were overpowered and repulsed.

It was puzzling for the committee that the operation commander, who was opposed the operation from the start, did not go to the battleground even when he was mandated to lead the recovery mission.

The report cites the opposition from the commander and the Samburu County intelligence officers had contributed to the poor planning of the operation, as there was no prior study of the terrain to determine the scope of the duty.

“The operation commander appears to have had no role as he remained in his hotel room in Baragoi town as the four sectors proceeded to the battle ground.”

In what seems to confirm his involvement as a mole, Mr Waiganjo who had introduced himself as the commander for the Anti-Stock theft Unit in the Rift Valley did not attend the early morning recovery mission that ended horribly.

About 107 police officers were sent on the mission that started at about 1am, but were dropped more than 10 kilometres from the battlefront in Lomelok village, owing to poor road network. It is also regrettable that several security meetings were held in Baragoi, but no minutes were taken, Kosgei’s team added.

“It also appears that the Provincial Security Intelligence Committee left the entire problem solving to the PPO and the Provincial Criminal Investigations Officers as no mention has been sighted on the Provincial Commissioner and the regional National Intelligence Service Coordinator having attended any meeting in Baragoi even after the incident,’’ the report went on.

Kenya: Corrupt Presidents’ vacating their Comfort Zone Create Buffer for Cushion which later live to haunt them

From: Judy Miriga

My fellow Friends,

It has been observed that, corrupt outgoing Presidents leaving after the end of their term of Office, in most cases, would make outrageous appointments to secure both their immediate and future interests. It is because of fear of unknown when they have to leave their comfort zones being authority. This was clearly noted where in a show-case, President Kibaki unscrupulously used the current loopholes in the Judicial Service Commission, inclusively he did the same with the Electoral Commission, where he rushed to fill the vacancies in the High Court as well as the Court of Appeal, with his friends?

It must be noted that Public Opinion is fundamentally important for the success of any Democratic Society.

The fact remain that the Reform Accord Agenda was therefore not complied according to Oath of Office. In which case, the Coalition Leadership did not uphold their Oath of Office. The New constitution has been made toothless and inactive and it is the reason why there are extreme insecurity, mushrooming of explosive corruption with extreme poverty eating away the fabric of the society. In the absence of proper Legislative Bills for Land Reform, Devolution Reform Bill, The Finance Reform Bill, The Police Reform Bill and the Civil Society Bill which are the core value for the Reform Accord Agenda, little has been achieved in the Kibaki’s Regime. Kibaki is therefore leaving Kenya Government dysfunctional with the excesses and failures of why Kenya disintegrated to Civil Clashes of 2007/8 with an exception of the Supreme Court under Chief Justice Willy Mutunga who was nominated according to the Reform Accord.

Although the Judicial under Chief Justice Willy Mutunga was formed according to the Reform Accord Agenda, there are evidence that the Legislature with the Executives continuously intimidated and manipulated Judicial operations sending fears in the Judicial leadership from acting independently as it should, for which it has failed to assert its independence as a result.

Engaging in Free Business Trading

Trading in a Free Business Trading without bordering regulation in actual sense is robbing and infringing the public off from Revenues, Wealth and Resources and is unfair way to balance the economy. In reality it is a way to bankrupt the Country’s economy to favor the rich who avoid paying their fair share in Taxes that supplement Revenues for Government Budgeting. It is a wrong notion to think that Business can provides a trickle down for people’s livelihood and survival without a Government. If this is allowed to continue, then the unscrupulous business community takes advantage to create private organized security that they expect to protect their Special Interest but which eventually turn to become a terror gang when it gets out of control from growing interests superseding those who engage them and forcing them to break away from the business control to become independent. This Private Security in time grow in size and interest, proceed to connect with other international organized security companies with mercenaries, organized terror rebel groups and finally joins with drug and money exchange laundering with traffickers and pirates.

Organized Terror Gangs (The Notorious Educated and Professional Terrorist Grouping Networking for Special Interest Power Control)

Organized Terror Gang are successful in their Mission because they are Politically Correct aided Group by Politicians in collaboration with the Unscrupulous Free Trading Business Enterprises with NGOs both local and International but who collaborate to do business without complying with business Rules and Regulations as well as avoid paying Tax Revenues that support Government Function-ability to sustain Public mandated welfare. This is a conspiracy to fail the reliable Government facility system from delivering public services effectively and efficiently so they are able to frustrate, assume and command the Authority of Government activities through Terrorism, manipulating, meandering and by intimidation, making the Government weaker from being able to be active in what it is suppose to facilitate.

Show-Case Creating Jobs the Wrong Way – Special Interest Idiology that Expound Corruption and Poverty

It has become a common knowledge and information is all around the villages that the educated terror gangs of politically correct special interest aided by the Local Government Administration Representatives are targeting the local village community; stealing their cows and loading them into Government police Lorries who are given police escort to Kenya Meat Commission in Athi River. The Villagers Land are grabbed by force and Agricultural food are loaded into lorries and taken to Nairobi. Woods are cut and taken to Nairobi. I am a victim of circumstance and both my father’s home and my home is a target where my mother’s life with that of my brother is in serious danger as I speak.

Creating jobs the wrong way is unacceptable. The Elite Terror group come in shapes and design and are approaching victims as Civil Rights Groups or as volunteer NGOs providing free services. When cornered they claim they have created job opportunities and are hiring jobless people to earn a living. This idea in real sense is robbing public Wealth and Resources sinking the economy into serious economic instability and are advancing poverty to a dangerous level.

Creating jobs the wrong way in the guest of Free Trading is definitely not balancing the economy in any way. There is no GDP recorded in this manner nor the Tax Revenue is paid to the Government to be able to facilitate public programs. In return it sinks the community and the general public into deeper poverty, joblessness and no record is left behind to track their wrong doings. It is hurting the economy because there is no balance nor regulating legal procedure that moderates business activities. Law subjects have also joined the frey and they act as legal advisors to the educated, organized and informed elite terror groups. They are sophisticated with the International connection with whom they engage and collaborate their business. To curb this theory of conspiracy, there must be a Consumer Welfare Commission that must investigate these groupings, Kenya Meat Commission in Athi River to ascertain their source of Cow supply including their market of supply.

Bad method of job creation have resulted in Government aided or Government shielded thieving from the Community which in addition involves organized stealing of cows from the local community assisted by Chiefs in the local community; forcing the community in an awkward way to release of their land to be used by these Politically Correct Special Agents to Trade with Communities local land for their special interest and this is forcing the Community into extreme poverty.

Private and Government lorries found carrying cows with Agricultural commodities from the villages used by these organized gangs must be eliminated and charged. Proper Cooperative Organizations must be established to create genuine jobs for the local peasant agricultural local farmers, where there will be a balance to provide food left over to eliminate poverty and sustain livelihood from falling down to poverty situation. There must be laws protecting tree cutting and anyone found cutting trees without proper authorization must be charged.

Extreme poverty is more imminent from activities of organized groups of Special Interest who are politically correct educated gangsters who network to rob the community off meaningful and dignified livelihood and as a result, we have lost many prominent straight forward business men including many fishermen from Migingo and this behavior must be put to a stop. This collaboration involved Uganda political networking with Rwanda and is expanding from the COMESA to other UN NGOs from North to South of Africa.

This is unacceptable commercial terrorism that should face common law legal justice against Human Rights as they have committed crime of driving people off their homes and making them homeless, they intimidate, obstruct and terrorize the local community from living a decent dignified livelihood and survival and are manipulating, oppressing, intimidating and terrorizing local from advancing development agenda for progressive development. This is the reason why Millennium Development Agenda for meaningful survival and livelihood has failed to take off. These groups are in collaboration networking with organized securities of mercinaries, rebels from the bushes spreading from the North of Africa, East, Central and South of Africa. This behavior must end now……

Kindly connect the dots to understand what is at stake……….

Why it is wrong to commercialize Public Infrastructure (Non-Profit Making undertaking for Public Service) transferred to Commercial Business for Profit-Making

This idea goes towards a defeatist philosophy of the Unscrupulous Special Interest selfishness for Greed which does not provide the needed fair balance for Public Utility and Facility sharing platform……and is therefore failing the original purpose meant for progressive expansion of PPP i.e. (Public-Private Partnership). There is need to restructure and regulate the PPP program to provide sustained feasibility for public service mandate without conflicting destructive interest from the Unscrupulous Special Interest networking with Organized Terror Gangs which is now tearing apart well meaning fabric for Political, Social and Economic establishment and is failing and contradicting public mandated needs for Reform where Millennium Development Goals program is able eradicate corruption and poverty.

I am a victim of these sad and sorry soaring landscaping circumstances and with other voiceless who fear for dear life, it is our joint desire that we bring these terrorist behaviors that are dangerously expounding corruption and poverty to end. These behaviors’ are unacceptable and cannot be tolerated; they must be put to a stop. These activities from Special Interest collaborative Networking of International connection are engaged in Crimes, Violation and Abuse of Human Rights; they are killing human livelihood and survival and are terrorizing peaceful community from enjoying Peace, Unity and Love……..They force everyone to bend and give in to serve their way of interest with oppressive pressure instead of working towards Reforming for progressive development agenda.

These groupings must be investigated and prosecuted in the Just Rule of Law in a Functioning Government establishment or under a Transitional Caretaker Committee set up to prepare road for an improved Government Establishment.

Structures that support Progressive Development Agenda in a society include good roads, Clean water supply, well functioning sewers, Electricity energy and telecommunications. They can be defined as “physical systems providing commodities and services that are fundamentally essential to enable, sustain, or enhance societal living conditions.

The private sector is playing increasingly important roles in producing goods and providing services that were once considered “public” and therefore exclusively the responsibility of governments.

Public-private partnerships (PPPs) and other forms of business cooperation between the Public & private sector and local and national governments have now common amongs people in business around the world. It is clear the business community engage in the scrambling to own Welfare Community Program & Public Corporations including Public Infrastructure and instead of being independently creative or engage in building their own business from ground up, they involve in monopolizing and controlling Government facilities, utilities and operations for Special Interest. Their purpose is to diversify through Organized Terror Groups to protect and expand their business to International ties amongst the illicit Unscrupulous NGOs of Special business interests for the control of Public-Private Partnerships Initiatives. This is ultimately failing the purpose of PPP intended to improve efficiency to Government service delivery in all sectors of Government Departments including energy, Water, Environmental, Health, School,
Police Security, Public Community Land Ownership and also, including Public utility for Financial services, improve telecommunications and transportation systems, construct and operate water, sewer, and waste treatment facilities, and provide health service needed effectively within a minimum time-frame.

The True Civil Society must embrace and protect Public Mandate to Reform

Justified and True Civil Society groups must conform to Reform Accord reality and those whose dealings are contrary and are against public mandate, the reality to Reform Accord must face people’s threshold and rejection.

Responsibility with Integrity through Accountability with Transparency

Good people, connect the Dots and let us stand together to demand for leadership of Responsibility with Integrity and all contenders who are vying for public office must pass the test of Accountability with Transparency. This is the only way we can reform and achieve the Reform we struggled to bring this far.

Casualties of judiciary reforms

Kenya’s top judges fail vetting and were forced back to serve the Status Quo of Special Interest and this is worrisome as conspiracy wheel to excel Corruption and expound poverty will get a ticket to dangerous incorrigible level. This is unacceptable.

Four sacked judges fought hard and appealed ruling that allowed them to keep their jobs after failing the vetting test. The same judges will protect interests of the outgoing president Kibaki with its collaborative network terrorist gang of unscrupulous Special Business Interest while on the other side, Kenyans will continue to brave for a tag of war to put things right before the next Government is formed.

Casualties from Crime Against Human Rights, Abuse and Violation that affect People’s Dignity, Livelihood and Survival by the Elite Well Informed Organized Thugs

Over 40 Police were brutally killed and bodies left to rot. Extrajudicial killings of innocent people from Tana River, Isiolo, Madera, Garrisa, Turkana, Rift Valley, The Greater Nyanza, Migori and Siaya District; Trans Nzoia, fisher men from Lake Victoria and the Migingo island; Thuggery from Organized gangs; land grabbing by force with other sneaky illegal maneuvers from evicting people off their land and destroying hopes to their livelihood and survival; the destruction and pollution of the environment; push to excessive poverty with destruction of social fabric to responsible livelihood and survival has become a sore in everyone’s mind except those connected in the corrupt deals of the selfish and greedy leaders.

Lesson Leaned

The election gone wrong in 2007/8 taught us a big lesson and we are not about to take any political chances or situation that will challenge and destroy our Reform gains for granted. We must stand for our rights and Embracing Common Law advocacy for Human Rights with Chief Justice Willy Mugunga and as a Show-Case, will help Transform our Legislative policies requirement for Reform we have struggled for this far.

There is a sense of urgency to put Leaders to task and to account for Mandated Responsibilities with Integrity; in checks and balances, determine their participation on corruption, poverty with efforts they engaged to improve Environmental pollution.

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

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Attachments

Kenya’s Corruption breading Economic looming Crisis with extreme poverty

Corruption can refer to many different types of illegal acts, though they will usually all involve a person abusing their authority for their own benefit, or for the benefit of family and (political) friends. This can be government officials using public money for their own personal use, or corporate executives improperly awarding contracts or taking other decisions in exchange for bribes.

Incidents of corruption in Kenya are not limited to large corporations or government agencies. Bribe-taking is common among many lower-level officials, with the average city-dwelling Kenyan having to pay as many as 16 bribes each month just in the course of everyday life.

Africa’s development agenda remained a high priority business interest in the world. The group of Twenty (G20) reporting on African Development Bank (AfDB) does not present African Financial situation as is on the Ground. Action plan intended for consultations by African leadership benefit their politically correct network of the selfish greedy the benefit that does not fizzle down to the grassroots; instead the urban poor with grassroots community are robbed through tax evasion by the unscrupulous Special Interest collaborative networks to extreme poverty and extermination.; thereby failing and handicapping advancements of Africa’s progressive development Agenda.

African Development Bank initiatives, Equity etc., have gained and benefited from public funding through NEPAD the results to improve Millennium Development Agenda of people have not been realized because of the growing sophisticated corruption by the educated agents of the politically correct networking groups. The Infrastructure Consortium for Africa, through the PPP program (the Public-Private Partnership) will not succeed as intended from United Nations facilitation funds to replenishment Infrastructure for the New Partnership for African Development (NEPAD), which involves Sokoni interactive platform for financing African infrastructure projects.

Africa’s Showcased at the G20 as exemplary are secretly under-cover by politically correct and the information have not been made available as International Policy demands or put to public information to inform people of Africa the going ons. One such of these was the Inga dam hydropower project in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Hela Cheikhrouhou, the African Development Bank’s director for energy, the environment and climate change, which outlined what the AfDB is doing in helping to prepare this project.

With wrong ways to creating job opportunities fostering employment and social protection, building a more stable resilient international monetary system, in order to address food price and shortage instead is increasing Poverty, joblessness with organized terrorism and assassinations. This is not a legalized way to fostering green growth and sustain development. This is not the success story to open Free Trade for Africa in the Globalisation Free Trading Market for Africa people of Africa want for their Development Agenda.

In the absence of fair and just global Regulations and Rules, globalisation for Free Trading will cause worst-case-scenario the world will live to regret.

The major multilateral institutions, the UN Agenda for Democracy and Millenium development to eradicate poverty, extra judicial killings with corruption will never realize its goals and heavy casualties of economic collapse will follow. The World Bank, IMF and the WTO, have become major objects of attack by Reformist with other concerned International public interest Civil Society groups. They have instead perpetuation high rise of corruption with poverty on an unprecedented scale and they must begin to re-structure their activities to conform with the majority public mandate and needs.

The Seattle meeting of the WTO was disrupted in December 1999, followed by that of Quebec in Canada, Gotenborg in Sweden, and the latest was the mass rally, organized against a World Bank conference in Oslo, Norway, in June 2002. What ordinarily was an academic gathering of development experts to an annual development conference of the World Bank attracted the wrath of the Norwegian and other European civil society groups. A coalition group by the name ATTAC organized an unprecedented rally of twelve thousand people in the city of Oslo against the World Bank conference. In addition, ATTAC also organised a counter or alternative conference at the University of Oslo on the theme, “The World Bank: Reform, Revolution or Cosmetic Change?”

Growing anger against the World Bank with partners continue to build unfavorable disagreement and concerns with the World Bank, IMF, UN NGO Agencies because Economic crisis affecting the world is fueled by these International World Financial Institutions putting Africa on cross-roads and Africa’s livelihood and survival are on the verge of extinction with regard to unregulated Free Trading initiative for global development; more specifically considering specific areas of Free trade, unscrupulous investment, Equity Banking in finance trading, Hedge Funding etc., affecting Africa’s agenda to Millennium Development progress.

We have observed dismal performance of the African continent progressive development and we must engage to resolve the problems.

African leaders have put forward various development agendas in the last four decades of the continent’s post-colonial history with no good results and things must begin to change for better. The latest of it is the New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD) we must urgently resolve.

People, what this paper seeks to do is to underscore unscrupulous corrupt politics of the international Free trading that evade paying Tax Revenues as element to progress globalization trading with is unfair and has put Europe to economic collapse. It unravels the linkage collaborative special business interest network between the international Free trading but avoid paying Tax Revenues at any form of regulating institutions (General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)/ the WTO). This must be put to end because this political science killing the Third World countries development agenda as the invasion of scramble to Africa by the illicit unregulated and unscrupulous special interest is crazy for Africa’s shoddy investments.

In conjuction to economic instability, political special interest and socio-cultural erosion, it has been realized that Africa’s dignity, value and virtue is under threat and the conspiracy is destroying Africa cultural values including Africa’s survival and livelihood and things must begin to be done differently to protect ways we know will work favorably in the right direction engaging public interest since peoples priorities have gone far out of order and we must engage Reform and be able to make this world a better place than we found it .…….which is why, things must change for the better.

Political class who are real to public mandate and peoples needs to balance must stand with us to protect the Reform Accord agenda. The reform will give us the change we have been struggling for. It is time that we join hands to improve our livelihood and survival to make life worth living with Responsibility and Dignity for the sake of Peace to thrive again under unity for common good of all which will be preserved under the generated Trust in love.

Before Kenya goes for election, let us make it our concern and make sure elections will be made free and fair, that the Reform Accord Agenda is complied with and that we must embrace ethics that underline reality for checks and balances that offer and determine threshold for Responsibility and integrity to those who wish to undertake public office service delivery.

Corruption and Kenya’s Presidents

Unfortunately, corruption played a role with all 3 Kenyan presidents up to now.

•Jomo Kenyatta

He was the first president of Kenya after independence in 1963. During colonialism, the European colonizers had stolen fertile lands from, among others, the Kalenjin tribe. After the independence (in 1963), Kenyatta did not return those lands to the former owners, but handed it over to members of his own clan and tribe (the Kikuyu). Kenyatta himself became one of the largest private land owners in the country.

•Daniel arap Moi

During Daniel arap Moi’s presidency – Kenya’s second president – corruption was widespread and involved Moi himself on many occasions. In the 1990s, he was part of the Goldenberg scandal, where smuggled gold was exported out of Kenya in exchange for high government subsidies. It’s one of the largest corruption scandals to date in Kenya, which involved nearly the entire Moi government. Many officials from the Central Bank, and more than 20 senior judges have also been implicated. As of 2008, only a small handful small people have been charged with related criminal offense leaving out the masters who financed, organized and engineered the crime, which some see as an example of the continuing problem of corruption and favoritism that has carried on till today.

•Mwai Kibaki

The third president, Mwai Kibaki, was elected in 2002 mainly on the promise to end corruption in Kenya once and for all. Admittedly, there have been quite some improvements in the country (among them press freedom, return of elections and introduction of free and compulsory primary education for all) but corruption had remained a big issue. To start with, his administration consists largely of Kikuyu, while this tribe is only 22 percent of the Kenyan population. From 2003 to 2006, Kibaki’s cabinet spent 14 million dollars on new Mercedes cars for themselves. In late 2008, several members of Kibaki’s parliament were found to have taken large “allowances”, which were not legally part of their official compensation. Kibaki is believed and suspected to have falsified the results of the 2007 election, leading to riots organized crimes who performed heinous act of extra-judicial killings.

The Kenya Anti-Corruption Commission

Though legislation against corruption in Kenya has existed since 1956, with the Prevention of Corruption Act, the current anti-corruption agency has only been operating since 2003.

Under the Anti-Corruption and Economic Crimes act, the KACC is mandated to fight and prevent corruption though all levels of government and industry. They publish a number of regular reports and newsletters, with the aim of promoting fair business practices and to expose those who engage in questionable operations.

Causes Of Poverty In Kenya

Despite some positive developments, poverty in Kenya has continued to be a huge problem. Even hunger in Kenya continues to rear it’s head from time to time. This page looks at the facts, the causes and the remedies.

Extent of Poverty in Kenya

The dry poverty statistics in Kenya sum it all up. Somewhere between one quarter and half of the population earn less than $1 US each day (the annual GDP per capita is around $360 US). It was estimated in 1992 that half of all rural Kenyans were living below the poverty line. That represents approximately 9 million people. The situation is not quite as bad in the urban centers, where such poverty only effects a third of the population.

Kenya’s World Ranking Regarding Poverty

A 2005 report by the United Nations ranked Kenya as 154th out of a list of 177 countries, in terms of life expectancy, literacy levels and overall gross domestic product. Just three years earlier, the country had ranked 134th. For comparison, Uganda was ranked at 144th, and Tanzania was 164th. Both are immediate neighbors of Kenya.

There are several factors contributing to the ongoing problem of poverty in Kenya, though the issue of Kenya’s economic state is far more complex than a simple list of causes.

Limited Economic Diversity

Around three quarters of Kenya’s population is dependent on the agriculture industry, but with its erratic weather patterns and vast regions of arid desert, it is a very unstable sector. Periods of drought can be crippling, not only in terms of food supply, but in jobs as well.

Even when crops have been sufficient, poor government policies and international trade terms hampered agricultural growth, leading to further declines in the industry through the 70s and 80s. Starting in 1991, further serious problems in the country’s GDP became evident, leading to extended government action which has not proven to be successful at stemming the tide of poverty in Kenya.

Lack of Opportunity

Weak overall infrastructure for the country means that nearly all the rural population are forced to rely on their own subsistence farming for their own food as well as monetary income. Jobs are scarce, leaving people with little opportunity for employment. There are considerable obstacles for starting a small business yourself in Kenya as well. Micro credits may be one way to foster small entrepeneurs. They will be important when eradicating poverty in Kenya.

Another factor is education. School fees are often out of reach for poor families, leaving each generation to continue trying to find work while lacking the education to advance. Cultural biases towards women create further limitations for the growing number of female-led households.

Government Corruption

According to Transparency International, Kenya is one of the most corrupt nations in the world. It is difficult for the majority of the population to escape the poverty in Kenya, when government money is used improperly.

Bribes, fraud and tribal favoritism are common within the all levels of government, which hampers any attempt to improve conditions across the country. In the early 2000s, the Kenyan government began taking steps to reduce the rampant corruption. These reforms have inspired some confidence, and brought additional foreign investment back to Kenya, but at the core of the system corruption remains.

Unfair Tariff Walls By Rich Countries

Protection of their own economies through tariff walls poses another problem. An increase of international trade has proven beneficial for many developing countries – look at China, India and countries in South America. But often, it’s useless for developing countries to export to rich countries because the latter have installed tariff walls. This way, products from developing countries are artificially made expensive for Western buyers. Rich countries (actually their governments) want to protect their own industries against competition this way.

For example, Kenya has a blossoming flower industry that’s exporting to Europe, but recently a number of European countries have installed high new tariffs. It’s obvious that they want to protect their own industries. Their citizens pay the price.

Often, progressive groups don’t mention this as a cause of Kenyan poverty, because they are ideologically opposed to free trade and free markets.

Kenya’s Notable Corruption

The longest-running is the Goldenberg scandal [2], where the Kenyan government subsidized exports of gold, paying exporters in Kenyan Shillings (Sh) 35% over their foreign currency earnings. In this case, the gold was smuggled from Congo. The Goldenberg scandal cost Kenya the equivalent of more than 10% of the country’s annual GDP.

In 1998, political scientist Mutahi Ngunyi’s NGO – Series for Alternative Research in East Africa (SAREAT) engaged John Githongo to edit a regional political economy magazine, East African Alternatives[3]. The magazine folded after an audit instigated by the lead donor Ford Foundation found suspected misappropriation and collusion on the part of Ngunyi, who was executive director of SAREAT and Dr Jonathan Moyo, who was the programme officer at the Ford Foundation in charge of disbursing the resources to the NGO. They have both been sued and the matter is still in court. It is known that the Ford Foundation has accepted Githongo’s offer to be a prosecution witness in the case.

A Sh360 million helicopter servicing contract in South Africa[4]. Military officers had argued that the contract was too extravagant and servicing the helicopters could be done locally. Kenya Air Force (KAF) went ahead to spend Sh108 million as a down payment for servicing the Puma helicopters, whose tail number is logged as 418 at Denel Aviation, a South African firm.

In 2003, the military was split over plans to buy new Czech fighter jets[4]. The plan to buy the jet fighters would have cost taxpayers Sh12.3 billion.

A Sh4.1 billion Navy ship deal [4]. A Navy project was given to Euromarine, a company associated with Anura Pereira, the tender awarded in a process that has been criticised as irregular. The tender was worth Sh4.1 billion. Military analysts say a similar vessel could have been built for Sh1.8 billion.

Chamanlal Kamani had been involved in a supply contract, as Kamsons Motors. [5] Kampsons tendered for the supply of Mahindra Jeeps to the Police Department in the mid 1990s for close to Sh1 million (US$13,000) each, at a time when showrooms would have charged customers a sixth of the price. Moreover, the vehicles were being bought for a government department and were therefore imported duty free. Few of the more than 1,000 units that were imported over several years are in service today.

The Kamanis were also involved in a deal to build a CID forensic laboratory. On June 7, 2004 an amount of $4.7 million was wired back. The payment was a refund against the money paid for the Criminal Investigations Department forensic laboratory. [6]. Another euro 5.2 million was paid back in respect of the E-cop project, which involved computerisation of the police force and the installation of spy cameras in Nairobi by Infotalent Systems Private Limited. [6]

The Prisons department lost $3 million after contracting Hallmark International, a company associated with Deepak Kamani of Kamsons Motors, for the supply of 30 boilers. [5] Only half of the boilers were delivered – from India and not the United States as had been agreed.

The construction of Nexus, a secret military communication centre in Karen, Nairobi [4]. The Government spent Sh2.6 billion (US$36.9 million) to construct the complex. Three years later, military personnel have not moved into the centre. A phantom company, Nedermar BV Technologies, which is said to have its headquarters in Holland, implemented the secret project situated along Karen South Road. Nedermar is linked to businessman Anura Pereira. However, Pereira has denied this. The tendering process for the Nexus project was circumvented as DoD’s Departmental Tender Committee. Funding for the project was made through the Ministry of Transport and Communications. The complex is currently headed by Colonel Philip Kameru. Nexus was first meant to be an ammunition dumpsite before it was turned into a military communication and operations centre. Construction continued without any site visits by either the DoD staff or Ministry of Public Works officials. The Nexus project was implemented during the tenure of General Joseph Kibwana.

In 2005 plans to buy a sophisticated £20 million passport equipment system from France [7] [8]. Here government wanted to replace its passport printing system. The transaction was originally quoted at 6 million euros from François Charles Oberthur of Paris – the world’s leading supplier of Visa and MasterCards, but was awarded to a British firm, the Anglo-Leasing and Finance Company Limited, at 30 million euros, who would have sub-contracted the same French firm to do the work. Despite the lack of competitive tendering Anglo Leasing was paid a “commitment fee” of more than £600,000. Anglo Leasing’s agent is a Liverpool-based firm, Saagar Associates, owned by a woman whose family has enjoyed close links with senior officials in the Moi regime. Company records show Saagar Associates is owned by Mrs Sudha Ruparell, a 47-year-old Kenyan woman. Ruparell is the daughter of Chamanlal Kamani, the multimillionaire patriarch of a business family that enjoyed close links with senior officials in the Moi regime. Anglo Leasing made a repayment of euro 956,700 through a telegraphic transfer from Schroeder & Co Bank AG, Switzerland on May 17, 2004.[6]

The local chapter of Transparency International and the Kenya National Commission on Human Rights (KNCHR), a government body released a report in February, 2006, stating that between January 2003 and September 2004, the National Rainbow Coalition government spent about $12-million on cars that were mostly for the personal use of senior government officials.[9] The vehicles included 57 Mercedes-Benz, as well as Land Cruisers, Mitsubishi Pajeros, Range Rovers, Nissan Terranos and Nissan Patrols. The $12-million substantially exceeded what the government spent over the 2003/04 financial year on controlling malaria — “the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in Kenya”, says the report.

In late February 2006, the leading newspaper The Standard ran a story claiming that president Mwai Kibaki and senior opposition figure Kalonzo Musyoka had been holding secret meetings. On March 2 at 1:00am local time (2200 UTC on the 1st), masked gunmen carrying AK-47s raided multiple editorial offices of The Standard, and of its television station KTN. They kicked and beat staff members, forcibly took computers and transmission equipment, burned all the copies of the March 2nd edition of the newspaper, and damaged the presses. At KTN, they shut down the power, putting the station off the air. Initially, the Kenyan information minister claimed no knowledge of the raid, but it has since revealed that Kenyan police were responsible. The Ministry of the Internal Security later stated that the incident was to safeguard state security. “If you rattle a snake you must be prepared to be bitten by it,” John Michuki said. Three journalists at The Standard, arrested after the critical story was printed, are still being held without charge. [10] [11] The story now also features the bizarre case of two Armenian businessmen, mocked in the press for their taste for heavy gold chains, watches and rings, referred to as Mercenaries, who the opposition says led the raid and had shady dealings with Kibaki’s government.[12] [13][14]

In November 2006, the government was accused of failing to act on a banking fraud scam worth $1.5bn involving money laundering and tax evasion, reported by whistle-blowers as early as 2004. Investigators believe sums worth 10% of Kenya’s national income are involved. A recent auditor’s report says the scale of the operations “threatens the stability of the Kenyan economy”.[15]

In November 2006, British Foreign Office minister Kim Howells warned, that corruption in Kenya is increasing the UK’s exposure to drug trafficking and terrorism. “People can be bought, right from the person who works at the docks in Mombasa up to the government. (…) This weakness has been recognised by drug-traffickers and probably by terrorists too.” Said Howells for the BBC.[16]

On 31 August 2007, The Guardian newspaper featured on its front page a story about more than GBP 1 billion transferred out of Kenya by the family and associates of former Kenyan leader Daniel arap Moi. The Guardian sourced the information from the Wikileaks article The looting of Kenya under President Moi and its analysis of a leaked investigative document (“the Kroll report”) prepared for the Kibaki government in 2004 in order to try to recover money stolen during Moi’s rule.[17]

On 2007-09-06 parliament passed the Statute Law (Miscellaneous Amendments) Bill, restricting investigations by the Kenya Anti-Corruption Commission to offenses committed prior to May 2003, excluding the Goldenberg and Anglo-Leasing scandals and other major cases. The move was condemned by anti-corruption campaigners; Mwalimu Mati, former chief executive of the Transparency International Kenya Chapter, declared that “grand corruption has swallowed the government and parliament that Kenyans elected to fight it in 2002”. [18]. In response to public outrage generated by the move, President Kibaki announced that he would veto the bill.

In September 2007, Wikileaks released documents exposing a 500 million Kenyan shilling payroll fraud at Egerton University] and subsequent cover up, now the subject of ongoing legal dispute in the High Court.[citation needed]

On the 28th of September 2007, Wikileaks released 28 investigative documents] exposing a US$1.5 billion dollar money laundering fraud by Charter House Bank Ltd. Re-reported in the Kenyan Standard newspaper.[citation needed]

In June 2008, the Grand Regency Scandal broke, wherein the Central Bank of Kenya is alleged to have secretly sold a luxury hotel in Nairobi to an unidentified group of Libyan investors for more than 4 billion Kenyan Shillings (approx US $60 million) below the appraised market value. Finance Minister Amos Kimunya negotiated the sale, and was censured in a near-unanimous motion by the Kenyan Parliament, though he vehemently denies the charges. This follows on the heels of the Safaricom IPO, overseen by Kimunya, which has been alternatively praised and questioned for possible corruption in the execution of the sale. Safaricom is the largest mobile phone service provider in Kenya, having operated with a near-government monopoly for many years. The government of Kenya sold its 50% stake in Safaricom in the IPO.

Kenya’s Wealth in a Conspiracy Threat

Most Counties to the west of the Rift Valley fall under an expansive Gold Belt that stretches from Turkana to Kuria. In most of these areas, medieval mining methods, especially along river beds, have been going on for decades.

Most of these efforts are, however, exploited by middlemen who snap up the gold at throwaway prices and end up making super profits in the international market.

The global decline of stock markets has pushed the price of gold to record levels as investors turn to the precious stone to hedge their wealth.

An ounce of gold is presently retailing at $1,586 (about Sh134,000) up from $972 (Sh82,000) in 2009. Financial analyst Aly Khan Satchu says the price of gold has been on an 11-year rally, turning the commodity into an international currency.

And with neighbouring Tanzania continuing to rake in billions of shillings by commercialising its gold resources, Nandi, Siaya, Kakamega, Vihiga, Migori, Trans-Mara, Turkana, Kuria and Bondo are among the areas that await a major economic transformation when the government moves to create a framework for such activity to thrive locally.

Coal

Only a few years ago, a 500 square kilometre region cutting through Kitui and Mutito called the Mui Basin was declared one of Africa’s most coal-rich areas.

Coal is a key component for the smelting of other minerals and is also used for generating power in most countries. Already, the Chinese have set base in Kitui, ready to extract the mineral whose quality has been passed as excellent.

As coal is a mass mineral, logistical arrangements are being sought to transport the product either to local ports or to areas where it can be used either in the mining of other minerals or for local power production.

While concerns have been raised over its environmental impact, coal remains a relatively very cheap power generation option, with countries like South Africa and China still heavily reliant on it.

Billions of tonnes lie buried in Eastern province, waiting to transform a largely laid back region into a vibrant economic zone.

Iron Ore

Iron ore is used in the manufacture of steel products and significant deposits have been discovered in Taita Taveta, Kitui, Meru, Kilifi and Samia.

In Taita Taveta District, extraction of the mineral has already commenced, while a local industrialist has declared intention to mine in the Mutomo area of Kitui.

With Kenya spending hundreds of billions of shillings every year to import steel for manufacturing, domestic as well as construction industries, exploitation of this local wealth would hugely boost the economy.

Conveniently, the discovery of coal, a major input in the mining of iron ore, in Kitui means a major industry is in the offing, with investors circling with intent.

Soda Ash

Kenya exports close to one million tonnes of soda ash, mined predominantly in the Lake Magadi area of Kajiado. But the potential to multiply that, according to the government, is massive.

The Magadi Soda Company is a perfect example of how minerals can be used as a major economic driver. The company employs about 500 people directly and is a major consumer of local production in the Lake Magadi area.

The company also drives development in the area with the awarding of scholarships and provision of water and other services to the local community.

Soda ash is used in the manufacture of glass, salt, preservatives, and dyes, among many other applications. The sad thing, however, is that most of the mined soda ash is exported raw, denying this country value added benefits.

Sad, also, is the fact that most of Kenya’s glassware is imported from countries like China that import their soda ash from Kenya.

Flourspar

Found in abundance in the Kerio Valley, this is one mineral whose immense value has never been capitalised.

Fluorspar, or fluorite, is an industrial mineral largely used in the manufacture of lenses for microscopes and telescopes, fluorescent bulbs and for smelting.

The mineral also has aesthetic uses as ornaments are carved out of it. With average prices of pure fluorite at a minimum of $1.2 a gramme (about Sh150), Kenya could be sitting on at least a trillion shillings of this very valuable rock.

Limestone

This is perhaps the one mineral that Kenya is synonymous with. Virtually every corner of the country has limestone whose uses touch every day life.

From the manufacture of portland cement, chalk, paper and glass to medicines, floorings and farm conditioners, this is one mineral that can earn this country a lot of foreign exchange if the capacity of its exploitation is greatly enhanced.

Demand for cement, for instance, has over the last few years of a burgeoning construction boom exposed the lack of capacity at cement manufacturing plants.

Kenya only produces below 5 million tonnes of cement compared to the between 66 to 150 million tonnes done by China, India, the United States and Turkey — by that order the four leading cement producers.

Most countries are net importers of cement, led by China, India and the United States. Evans Osano, an industry analyst, says Middle Eastern countries are leading consumers of cement, as are some African countries like Rwanda, Djibouti, Burundi, Gabon, Congo and Botswana. Osano says cement has the potential to become a leading foreign exchange earner for Kenya.

Titanium

In 2011, Tiomin finally set base to start extracting titanium from mines in Kwale. The mineral is widely used as a base compound. Aircrafts, space ships and missiles’ bodies are built with alloys that include titanium for corrosion resistance and tensile strength at low weight.

Most of titanium extracts, though, are used in the production of titanium oxide, which is used in the manufacture of cement, toothpaste, paper and plastics, among many other products.

Surgical equipment and body piercings are made with titanium as it is rust proof, while hip joints, ball joints and other human body internal bone interventions are done with titanium, which needs no replacement for 20 years.

Dental implants are also done with titanium, as are guns. If your laptop has a shiny top, or your phone, or car centre console, that is titanium as well. There are significant deposits of titanium in Malindi and Lamu as well.

Oil and Gas

Several months ago, Energy minister Kiraitu Murungi confidently claimed that oil would be struck in Isiolo in no time.

But later, miners hit a high-potential hydo-carbon belt, a drawback that nonetheless further confirmed the presence of oil in the area.

Energy specialist Eng Patrick Obath says all the ingredients for a major oil find are present in Kenya, adding that the presence of oil in western India shows that oil is available in plenty in Lamu, going by the similarity of the regions’ tectonic plates.

The southern coastal area most likely has natural gas, and with Tanzania making one big discovery after another in its coastal regions, Obath is convinced Kenya is most likely sitting on immense oil and gas wealth.

source: http://www.nation.co.ke/Features/DN2/Kenyas+trillions+of+buried+wealth+/-/957860/1299662/-/item/0/-/60twclz/-/index.html

Kenya: Fast-Growing Kenya Facing Ground Water Depletion
17 December 2012

As demand for water rises and rainfall becomes less dependable, fewer Kenyans can rely only on rivers, springs or – for the lucky minority – a piped water supply. Many instead are turning to borehole water.

But increasing urbanisation, combined with the effects of climate change and the growing popularity of tapping into underground aquifers, is proving an unsustainable combination, experts say.

Kenya’s traditional water sources are rapidly dwindling in volume due to overexploitation, erratic rains and the degradation of catchment areas. In response, the use of underground water is becoming widespread across this water-stressed east African country, whose population of 41 million has access to an annual renewable fresh water supply of only 647 cubic metres per person, according to government figures.

But some areas are already experiencing depletion of underground water as well. Kenya’s capital city, Nairobi, has a rapidly growing population of around three million, and several satellite towns emerging on its outskirts. With no piped water, many residents of these new communities have turned to borehole water, resulting in increasing pressure on groundwater resources.

Daniel Juma, of Joska Township on Nairobi’s outskirts, has dug a 30-metre (100-foot) borehole to supply his household with water. Already he worries about how long it will last.

“It was costly digging the borehole, yet many more are being (dug) in the neighbourhood and it might dry up in a few years,” he says.

LACK OF PIPED WATER

Boreholes are widely used in Nairobi, given that 40 percent of the city’s population is not directly supplied with piped water. Agatha Thuita, an official of the government’s Water Resources Management Authority (WRMA), said that even those with access to piped water often supplement their supply with borehole water or harvested rainwater because the piped supply is unreliable.

The Nairobi Water and Sewerage Company is among those drilling boreholes to improve the water supply to Nairobi residents and supplement the supply of water from dams on the outskirts of the city, Thuita said. Residents without piped water or a borehole buy water from the company’s water tankers.

The problem is not confined to Kenya. Groundwater reservoirs are rapidly being depleted around the world. In August 2012, researchers in Canada and the Netherlands found that 80 percent of the world’s aquifers were not being used sustainably, with heavy exploitation of water threatening livelihoods and lives of millions of people.

(Page 2 of 3)

Some 430 km (270 miles) west of Nairobi, in the Mundika area of Busia County, near Kenya’s border with Uganda, people already have seen their boreholes dry up. Jackline Ajiambo is one of many residents who dug a borehole to ensure reliable access to clean water because of lower water levels in rivers and the drying up of springs and streams.

“This borehole was initially 28 feet (deep) and drawing water was much easier, but the water level has grown low, compelling us to dig it deeper,” Ajiambo said.

DRYING BOREHOLES

Because drilling boreholes with machines is costly, the majority of borehole users rely on hand-dug holes, but they are not always reliable. Milton Onyango’s borehole is 50 feet (15 metres) deep and was once a source of water for both domestic use and the watering of livestock. But it dried up two years ago, and with no source of running water, he now relies on the Sio river, 7 km (4 miles) away.

In a culture where fetching water is a woman’s role, Onyango’s wife and two teenage daughters must endure the regular long trek.

Officials point to several factors leading to the depletion of traditional water supplies. According to Musembi Munyao, an official with the water ministry in Nairobi, pollution of rivers is partly to blame for the increasing switch to groundwater in Kenya.

“If the Nairobi River (had not) been polluted, its water would still be fit for consumption thus reducing the need for drilling boreholes in the city and its environs,” Munyao, a geologist, says.

Munyao also criticises the damage done to water catchment areas, such as the destruction of vegetation on mountains and hills. According to the WRMA’s Thuita, rapid urbanisation also increases the amount of land covered in impermeable surfaces such as roads, while deforestation can also lead to more surface-water runoff during the rainy seasons. These factors make it difficult for water to percolate into the ground and recharge aquifers.

Although the government has not undertaken detailed monitoring, Thuita believes that two further factors contributing to increasing water stress are low precipitation linked to climate change, and overexploitation of groundwater.

“At the coast, heavy extraction of groundwater has led to seawater intrusion causing salinity in borehole water,” she said.

Munyao notes that the country’s exact groundwater availability is unknown, making it hard to determine which areas have enough water to tolerate increased exploitation.

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SOLUTIONS?

Addressing the problem, experts say, will require a range of changes, including more harvesting of rainwater to boost supplies and recharge aquifers, and rules to prevent housing estates being developed in water catchment areas where aquifer recharge takes place.

What Kenya needs is “an integrated water resources management system,” Thuita says. “We need to develop wisely by not undoing what nature has provided us.”

Demand for water, however, is driving action. Speaking at the opening of a recent workshop on developing a master plan for Nairobi’s water resources, Kenya’s Prime Minister Raila Odinga said the government intended to meet the needs of the capital and its 13 satellite communities one way or another.

“The water available currently meets a mere 60 percent of the demands of the city and its satellite towns,” said Odinga. In response – for better or for worse – the government plans to sink more boreholes.

Justus Bahati Wanzala is a writer based in Nairobi.

Read more at AlertNet Climate, the Thomson Reuters Foundation’s daily news website on the human impacts of climate change.

Kenya: Fresh mega financial scandal hit the Sonysugar company in Awendo

Writes Leo Odera Omolo

A private security providing firm, which is closely associated with the family of the former ODM Cabinet Minister, is allegedly minting thousands of shillings from the cash-strapped SonySugar Company.

The firm which is called Gillis Security Guard has over 100 security guards, who are protecting the company premises, property and cane farms within Awendo Town and its environs. The sugar firm is coffing out its coffers a cool Kshs 17,000 per head of each guard per month.

However, reports reaching us from various sources in Awendo says, the firm is only paying the guards the peanut of between Kshs 5,000 and Ksha 7,000 while pocketing the rest.

The same sources have told us that

each security dog is minting Kshs 27,000 per month for its maintenance, while the dog’s handlers are taking home just peanuts.

The firm is closely associated by the former Energy Minister George Ochillo-Ayacko,and it was in roaring business during Ayacko tenure as the Energy Minister winning lucrative tenders from nearly all the parastatal organizations under the Eneregy Ministry such as Ken-gen and KPL, up –to-date it is still providing security services to those firms.

Its interest in Awendo zone is under the local manager called John Walter Odhiambo Sirawa,alias John Walter Owino Ogur “Odari”. Who has since declared his interest in contesting the newly created Awendo parliamentary constituency

Awendo constituency is one among the 80 extra parliamentary constituencies which were created by the IEBC and later endorsed by an act of parliament. Its electoral areas are covering several administrative locations which included Sakwa West, Sakwa Central, Sakwa North, Sakwa South and Sakwa East.

Members of the cane farming fraternity are up in arms questioning the exorbitant payment for the security guards from this firm, alleging that its charges are too excessive from the perennially financially ailing sugar millers.

The farmers wants the matter to be investigated by a competent government investigation institution so as to establish how this firm had secured tender to provide the sugar mill with its guards and as to whether there were element of political connotation involved .

It has also been established that the second name of the security company is believed to have been faked. He true and real John Walter Owino Ogur [Hodari} who is ma close cousin of John Walter Sirawa is a deceased person.

Our investigations have revealed that the real Owino Ogur (hodari} was once a to student at the nearby Manyatta Secondary School where he passed his {O} level with flying color, and was later admitted to one of the High Schools to study for his {A} level certificate, but died while in the Form Five. The deceased died around 19887.

The current bearer of the same name John Walter Sirawa is believed to have studied up to upper primary standard seven at a local school called Ombasa Primary School, which is also located in Sakwa West Location and did not go beyond. That.

Sirawa it is being alleged to have fake the deceased academic certificate and used it to secure entry into the police force, but deserted and left the force in huff after the word went round that the force was actively investigating his academic background to escape punishment. He was later employed as a watchman by the Gillies Security Guard.

All the revelation of the startling and shocking information come into the surface after Sirawa who is now the top manager of the security firm guarding the property of the Awendo Sugar miller had declared his interest in contesting the Awendo parliamentary seat.

He is actively campaigning for the seat and is believed to have already deposited substantial amount of money with the ODM headquarters in Nairobi as one of the aspirants vying for the Awendo .parliamentary seat.

The allegations have sparked off the bitter complaints from other aspirants vying for the same seat who have expressed fears that the ODM headquarters could easily pass the applications from one who is armed with fake academic certificates.

The aspirants have called on the ODM to conduct a thorough investigation on all the applications submitted by aspirants vying for the various elective positions within the County governance, national assembly, Sanate and governorship.

The Awendo parliamentary seat has attracted other aspirants who included the former top KRA manager Jude Ayieko, who hails from Sakwa South, the Principal of Gamba high School Fred Otieno Kopiyo, Erick Oyoo, who is an executive with an international NGO Joseph Owuor who is the PA to the Public Service Manager Dalmas Otieno who hails from Central Sakwa, Lameck Okoth from Sakwa East ad Dr. Abwao from Sakwa West

The real bruising election battle is expected to be a two horse race between Eric Oyoo and Fred Kopiyo. Both are university graduate with high profile.

The ODM is the dominant party whose flag bearer is expect to carry the day after its preliminaries, and the electorate have appealed to the party not to allow anybody with fake academic certificate to pass the party’s nomination test and that the academic certificates of the aspirants should be thoroughly scrutinized with double checking’s.

Ends

Kenya: Atwoli appeals for peaceful polls

BY JEFF OTIENO.

Cotu Secretary General Francis Atwoli has appealed to all Presidential aspirants to embrace duologue and tolerance as the General Elections approaches the corner.

He applauded the prevailing gestures of negotiations or alliances bid by leaders across the political divide but further urged that it should be all inclusive.

“In order for the country to remain peaceful and united we should engage each other positively and not appear to be side lining other leaders or else we risk going back to the previous 2007 election scenario”, he said.

Atwoli was speaking to the press when he went to register as a voter in his rural home at Ebukwala pri School Kwishero constituency. He urged voters to register in large numbers a head of march 4th elections.

Atwoli further lauded President Mwai Kibaki statesmanship and development track record during his tenure and urged his would be successor to follow suit.

On the recent formation of a rival trade union-Pesatu to clip the wings of Cotu Atwoli said that the scheme which was hatched by two corrupt government ministers he declined to mention is doomed to fail. He said that some two union officials names with held were the ministers side kicks and one of them was recently bought a house worth staggering millions in the leafy suburbs of Nairobi in obvious circumstances.

ENDS