Category Archives: Security

USA: POLL: “YOU are in IT. Is it OK what the NSA is doing?”

From: CyberheistNews

CyberheistNews Vol 3, 24

Editor’s Corner

POLL: “YOU are in IT. Is it OK what the NSA is doing?”

A new Washington Post-Pew Research Center poll asked Americans if they consider the NSA’s practice of obtaining telephone calls and email through secret court orders “acceptable.” As the Post’s exploration of the poll results notes, some people said the government should be allowed to go even further than it actually is. As you are probably aware, the NSA whistle-blower is 29-year old IT pro Ed Snowdon.

It’s my opinion that most people do not really understand the issue and I think it would be very interesting to see what IT professionals answer when they are asked the same questions. I will broadly announce the survey results in a few days, perhaps even a press release. I am asking the very same questions as the Post survey, with one exception where question 5 clarifies the amount of data being monitored.

It’s just 6 multiple choice questions and should take less than 2 minutes. Thanks so much for taking the time, this should be interesting !! Here is the link:
https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/NSA_OK

Citadel Botnet ‘Shutdown’ Makes Cybercrime Worse

It was all over the news. The Citadel botnet responsible for stealing more than 500 million dollars out of bank accounts from both individuals and organizations worldwide has been largely shut down or so it seems if you read the breathless press. Citadel is a smarter and more sophisticated cousin of the Zeus Trojan.

Citadel is an example as Crime-as-a-Service and has been sold since 2012 in do-it-yourself crime kits that cost $2,400 or more. The malware itself is installed on workstations using social engineering. End-users were tricked with phishing and spear-phishing into clicking on links which infected their workstations.

The Press Release said that Redmond aligned with the FBI and authorities in 80 other countries to take down one of the world’s biggest cyber crime rings. Microsoft said its Digital Crimes Unit Wednesday took down at least 1,000 of an estimated 1,400 Citadel Botnets, which infected as many as five million PCs around the world and targeted on major banks.

Now, I agree that it’s about freaking time these gangsters were shut down, but there is quite some collateral damage with all this hoopla. Let’s have a look at what Microsoft actually did. They identified about 1,400 botnets and disturbed them by pointing the infected machines to a server operated by Redmond instead of the Command & Control servers controlled by the bad guys.

This is not new, technically this is called ‘sinkholing’, and it’s been around for a long time. Simply put, you redirect the traffic generated by the Trojan on an infected PC to the good guys, who then warn the owner so they can clean the machine.

It so happens that a lot of security researchers had created their own sinkhole domains and a good chunk of these Citadel botnets had already been sinkholed when Microsoft seized both the domains of the bad guys but also the domains of the security researchers. Nearly a 1,000 domain names out of the approximately 4,000 domain names seized by Microsoft had already been sinkholed by security researchers!

The problem is that sinkholing is just a game of whack-a-mole. Takedowns like this trigger countermeasures by the bad guys who simply respond by using a peer-to-peer architecture instead of command & control servers making it much harder to take them down.

Cybercrime cannot be stopped with takedowns; as a matter of fact takedowns make cybercrime worse. You need legislation in Eastern Europe, and sufficient resources for law enforcement to take down the bad actors themselves.

(Hat Tip to Abuse.ch)

PS, We have a new infographic you might like, explains Spear-phishing in terms that everyone can understand:
http://www.knowbe4.com/infographic/

PPS: And here is a new fun little quiz you can send to your users: “How Phish-prone Are You?”
http://www.knowbe4.com/how-phish-prone-are-you/

Quotes of the Week

“Time is a created thing. To say ‘I don’t have time’ is to say ‘I don’t want to.’” – Lao Tzu

“You will never ‘find’ time for anything. If you want time, you must make it.” – Charles Bruxton

“The future has already arrived. It’s just not evenly distributed yet.” – William Gibson

A cyber security agenda for civil society: What is at stake?

From: Yona Maro

National security is being used by governments as a justification to censor, control or surveil internet use, and sometimes to shut down communications. Some cyber security specialists in the military are establishing cyber units, and an escalating arms race in cyberspace is emerging, accompanied by the growth of a “cyber-industrial complex.”

The private sector is increasingly involved in internet control. Through mechanisms of intermediary liability, telecommunication companies, internet service providers (ISPs) and other private sector actors now actively police the internet.”

While governments, militaries, intelligence agencies and the private sector are taking the lead in steering cyber security debate and policies, civil society needs to engage in cyber security on an equal footing. Robert Deibert has argued that civil society is “increasingly recognised as an important stakeholder in cyberspace governance” and needs to develop a cyber security strategy “that addresses the very real threats that plague governments and corporations, addresses national concerns in a forthright manner, while protecting and preserving open networks of information and communication.”
Link:
http://www.apc.org/en/system/files/ISSUE_Cyberseguridad_EN.pdf


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

BRITISH GOVERNMENT GIVES LIST OF MAU MAU FIGHTERS.

By Agwanda Saye.

The Law Society of Kenya (LSK) has received lists of Ex-Mau Mau Fighters seeking compensation running into billions of shillings from the British Government.

LSK Secretary/CEO Mr. Apollo Mboya said that two law firms involved with the compensation suits complied with a formal request by the LSK to supply the lists.

“Miller and Company Advocates (on behalf of Tandem Law in the UK) have sent us a list of over 8,000 former Mau Mau Fighters who are their clients,” Mr. Mboya said.

The list of former Mau Mau fighters seeking compensation in the UK have been released to the LSK following a resolution after a boardroom meeting on Saturday at Panafric Hotel in Nairobi. The Law Firms were also to supply LSK with legal papers – within two weeks – of the compensation suits filed in the UK.

LSK convened the meeting to resolve raging disputes between local and UK law firms representing the former freedom fighters in compensation suits in UK Courts.

“We will follow the proceedings of the compensation cases filed in UK Courts and also the professional conduct of the lawyers involved to ensure the victims are adequately compensated.” Mr. Mboya said.

Mr. Mboya also said that Tandem Law supplied the LSK with a claim form for the High Court of Justice Queens Bench Division Case No. 13X02162.

“They also sent us pleadings (legal documents) relating to the said Case No. 13X02162 involving Eloise Mukami Kimathi and Others Versus The Foreign and Commonwealth Office,” Mr. Mboya said.

Tandem Law (UK) is in collaboration with local law firms Miller & Company Advocates and P.K Kamau & Company Advocates.

Mr. Mboya said that British Firm G.T Law Solicitors working with local law firm Rabala & Company Advocates has also furnished LSK with their client list of over 700 ex-Mau Mau fighters.

“We are now awaiting another list from the Kenya Human Rights Commission (KHRC) which is represented in the UK by the Law Firm of Leigh Day,” Mr. Mboya said.

Mr. Mboya said that KHRC requested for time to contact their lawyers (Leigh Day) in the UK before releasing the list of their clients to the LSK.

He said that The KHRC – through Leigh Day – filed Case Number HQ09X02666 at the English High Court for compensation due to torture and other inhumane acts caused by officials and agents of the British Government during the colonial period in Kenya.

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 & World: UHURUTO ICC CASES NOW A STATE ISSUE

from: Judy Miriga

Good People,

Rising insecurity is growith at an alarming worisome level in Kenya.
The Government of Kenya must address and contain the situation
before it gets out of control.

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

– – – – – – – – – – –

ICC chief slams critics after African Union attack

By AFP
Posted Tuesday, May 28 2013 at 23:52
In Summary

The ICC is currently facing mounting diplomatic pressure over charges of crimes against humanity filed against Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta and Vice President William Ruto linked to political unrest in 2008 when neither were in office

Bensouda vowed that the ICC would “continue to be independent, to continue to be impartial, to apply the law strictly without any political or other considerations.”

Forty-three African countries have signed the ICC’s founding Rome Statute and 34 have ratified it. This makes Africa the most heavily represented region in the court membership

UNITED NATIONS

The International Criminal Court’s chief prosecutor hit back at critics Tuesday, a day after the African Union accused the tribunal of racism.

Fatou Bensouda said the critics were defending “perpetrators” of war crimes and crimes against humanity.

The prosecutor did not mention any particular group. But her comments came only a day after an African Union summit said the ICC was targeting the continent on the basis of race.

“We all know who the voices are,” Bensouda told a meeting at United Nations headquarters when asked by an African diplomat about “voices” questioning ICC tactics.

“The voices are those who are trying to protect the perpetrators of these crimes. They are not the voices who are supporting the victims of these crimes,” said Bensouda, who is from Gambia.

The ICC is currently facing mounting diplomatic pressure over charges of crimes against humanity filed against Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta and Vice President William Ruto linked to political unrest in 2008 when neither were in office.

An African Union summit on Monday called for the ICC charges to be halted. Kenya has asked the UN Security Council to “terminate” the case.

“We should not take what ICC is doing to turn it on its head,” Bensouda said at the UN meeting on enforced disappearances organized by France and Argentina.

“The true victims of the crimes are the victims of war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide, not those who perpetrate them. And now we see that that those voices, what they are all trying to do is protect those who perpetrate the crimes.”

“I think this is an insult to the victims,” she added.

“I think this should not be happening and anybody who is concerned about addressing crimes of this nature — against the thousands and thousands and thousands of victims, African victims — should be concerned about what is happening right now,” she told the UN meeting.

Bensouda vowed that the ICC would “continue to be independent, to continue to be impartial, to apply the law strictly without any political or other considerations.”

African governments often express bitterness that all ICC investigations target the continent.

But nearly all of the eight investigations — from Uganda to Democratic Republic of Congo and Mali — were referred by the African countries themselves. Forty-three African countries have signed the ICC’s founding Rome Statute and 34 have ratified it. This makes Africa the most heavily represented region in the court membership.

Tiina Intelmann, president of the 122-country assembly of ICC member states, acknowledged that the perceived “Africa-only” focus of investigations has created difficulties for the court in dealings with African states.

“Let us not forget, however, that the current focus on the African situations also means a focus on African victims,” Intelmann said in a commentary.

A trust fund set up by the ICC statute has helped about 80,000 victims of “atrocity crimes.”

“It is fair to say that without the activities of that fund, all those African victims would have received little or no assistance at all,” Intelmann added.

Security risk as police bosses fight for power

By PETER LEFTIE pmutibo@ke.nationmedia.com
Posted Tuesday, May 28 2013 at 20:51

In Summary

He did not directly accuse Mr Kimaiyo of attempting to scuttle the recruitment but he may have been reacting to a memo sent on Monday night by the Inspector General advising senior officers not to apply for the positions. The application deadline was Tuesday.

Tuesday, 10 hardcore criminals escaped from Kamukunji police station and a police officer was arrested allegedly after attempting to hijack a trailer. Crime has reached almost unprecedented levels in addition to the massacres in Busia and Bungoma and terror attacks in Garissa and Wajir.

Police bosses are embroiled in deepening wrangles and turf wars even as security deteriorates across the country.

A cold war between Inspector General David Kimaiyo and the chairman of the National Police Service Commission (NPSC), Mr Johnstone Kavuludi, burst to the open Tuesday as the two battled over the recruitment of county commanders.

They are also fighting over proposals to amend the law to give the Inspector General more authority in the appointment, transfer and disciplining of officers.

Tuesday, Mr Kavuludi sensationally claimed that there was a plot to derail the recruitment of 47 county police commanders by anti-reformers.

“There has been a concerted attempt to derail the vetting and interview of officers for the position of county commanders. However, we are pleased to note that the Commission has received over 300 applications for these 94 advertised positions,” he said.

He did not directly accuse Mr Kimaiyo of attempting to scuttle the recruitment but he may have been reacting to a memo sent on Monday night by the Inspector General advising senior officers not to apply for the positions. The application deadline was Tuesday.

Mr Kimaiyo has previously denounced the recruitment, saying he and his two deputies were not consulted by the commission.

Mr Kavuludi and other commissioners were attending a meeting in Naivasha to agree on the criteria for vetting of the county police bosses. Mr Kimaiyo had apparently excused himself from the workshop to deal with the wave of insecurity in the country. His absence at the important process hints at the disastrous alienation of top police officers from essential functions over a force for which they have command responsibility.

Police reforms carried out since the election are an interesting experiment. It remains to be seen whether a commander can effectively control a force whose members he has no power to hire, sack, promote, transfer or discipline.

The NPSC has nine members. The IG and two other representatives of the force are ordinary members and business can be transacted without them.

In contrast, the 11-member Judicial Service Commission chaired by the Chief Justice is predominantly made up of lawyers: Three judges, one magistrate, the Attorney-General and two lawyers nominated by the Law Society of Kenya.

The in-fighting in the leadership of the police force is already having an impact on policing. There are signs of worsening discipline in the force as well as disenchantment and apathy, especially from the officer cadre which is facing the sack in the reforms.

Tuesday, 10 hardcore criminals escaped from Kamukunji police station and a police officer was arrested allegedly after attempting to hijack a trailer. Crime has reached almost unprecedented levels in addition to the massacres in Busia and Bungoma and terror attacks in Garissa and Wajir.

Mr Kimaiyo’s position on the recruitment has shifted dramatically over the past month.

On April 16, he wrote to NPSC recommending the appointment of county commanders to replace Provincial Police Officers whose positions have been scrapped. The letter was titled: “Proposal for the selection and appointment of police officers to the position of officers commanding police counties and review of appointments at formations and directorates at the headquarters levels.”

Mr Kimaiyo suggested the hiring of County Kenya Police Service Commanding Officers (CKPSCO), County Administration Police Commanding Officers (CAPSCO) and County Criminal Investigations Officers (CCIO) to head police activities at the counties for the regular, AP and criminal investigation departments.

Mr Kimaiyo could not be reached to comment on the apparent change of heart.

At issue also are proposed amendments to the National Police Service Act.

Yesterday, the NPSC blamed “forces opposed to police reforms” for the amendments which — if passed — will significantly empower the office of the Inspector General while weakening the commission.

“It has come as a shock to the National Police Service Commission that some senior officers in the Public Service who are not members of this commission, have proposed amendments to the National Police Service Act, 2011, with the intention of derailing police reforms,” Mr Kavuludi said at the workshop at Sopa Lodge in Naivasha.

“The proposed amendments, which are being done clandestinely, are intended to severely water down the powers of the Commission. These amendments have neither been done with our knowledge, participation or approval, nor the participation of other stakeholders,” he said.

He added that the amendments include a “frightening indemnity clause” where police officers who carry out illegal orders from their superiors are protected. He asked MPs to reject the changes.

The amendments propose independent powers for the Inspector General to promote, transfer and discipline officers.

It also wants the Inspector General to be the one who receives reports recommending disciplinary measures against officers such as interdiction or suspension. Currently, NPSC receives the reports.

Mr Kimaiyo was quoted on Sunday confirming that he is aware of the amendments. He, however, said they did not originate from his office.

Additional reporting by Macharia Mwangi and Joyce Kimani

Fear as Mungiki resurfaces, threatens to cripple business
Updated Tuesday, May 28th 2013 at 21:45 GMT +3
By Eric Wainaina

Kiambu, Kenya: Resurfacing of illegal gangs in Kiambu is worrying the business community.

Members of the outlawed Mungiki sect are alleged to be forcibly demanding money from matatu operators and business people in various shopping centres.

The Provincial Administration has confirmed that the members of the illegal sect are plotting to reclaim their previous status of controlling major economic sectors.

Affected areas are Kiambu, Gatundu, Lari, Githunguri and Kikuyu where they are also reportedly recruiting new members.

A matatu operator plying between Kiambu and Githunguri on condition of anonymity said the operators give Sh200 daily to the illegal gangs.

“We give them money though not openly. They resort to violence once we refuse to remit the levies,” the operator said.

Operators plying between Gatundu, Thika, Kiganjo, Kiambu, Ruiru and Nairobi said the sect members have been demanding a levy of Sh200 from each matatu.

Last month, a matatu was set a blaze in Gatundu town after the operators allegedly declined to give the money to the sect.

Three matatu sacco officials in Gatundu have been murdered and Mungiki was blamed for it. The gang is also demanding money from business players and developers who are setting up buildings in the county, causing fear among the business fraternity.

Arraigned in court

“They are collecting money from any income earning activity and given a chance, they will end up sending away investors because they also pose a security threat,” Paul Mwangi, a Githunguri resident said.

Kiambu County Commissioner Wilson Njega said they had arrested some of group’s members demanding cash from a construction site owner and were arraigned in court.

“We are alert about this group ( Mungiki) and are not going to give them any chance to regroup,” Njega said.

Even Shabaab knows greed has got no borders in Kenya

Updated Tuesday, May 28th 2013 at 21:10 GMT +3

Patesh alleges that the Tofu was spoilt and the Morning Harvest Bran Flakes had small insects in them.

About six months ago, Patesh claims to have bought an oat meal package from the same shop that had the “same insects”. He returned the package and was reportedly promised action would be taken to avoid recurrence of the problem.

“I think Uchumi Capital Centre is not doing a good job at checking on expired products,” concludes Patesh, whose contact is hitenke@yahoo.com. Is this the case, Uchumi?

And Mr Phillip Olang’ alleges there is something that Nakumatt Lifestyle has been unable to give him despite him needing it desperately (remember their motto; “You need it, we’ve got it”. Olang’ has been seeking replacement of his smartcard since February but he is yet to get a new one. His contact is phillipolang@icloud.com.

DON’T YOU FORGET

Did Orange take client back to world wide web?

Recently, Telkom Orange’s customer Nancy Laura of Langata, Nairobi wrote here about delay by the firm to resolve an issue she had complained about. Nancy reported that although she paid for Internet for her Telkom Orange ASDL line in early April, her line, unfortunately, went dead on April 14. She then reported to Orange and received complaint reference numbers for both the landline and the data service that was disrupted. However, Orange did not sort out the problem and her visits to the company’s offices near Wilson Airport yielded only promises. The reference numbers she was given are 853901 (landline) and 853902 (Internet). Nancy said the line goes off every month yet she has never received any refund for lost data service. Did Orange address this customer’s complaint?

RVR is ‘off track in Embakasi’

Mr Philip Musembi is appealing to the management of Rift Valley Railways to make all efforts to keep passengers who use the train on Embakasi route off harm’s way.

On May 15, 2013, he claims to have witnessed two of the train’s last passenger wagons leave the tracks at Avenue Park Phase 1 towards the Embakasi village terminus and “rolling on the ground like a bus for a distance of about 3km”.

“The Embakasi railway track is an eyesore, pathetic and a disgrace. But despite numerous complaints from passengers, RVR has done nothing about it,” laments Musembi.

Right of Reply

Samsung explains jumbled digital television signals

This is in response to a complaint in PointBlank on May 22, 2013 raised by Antony Irungu in regards to scrambled signal on his Samsung digital television.

First, we are very proud indeed to have him as our customer. We take great pleasure in this and hope that we will continue being his preferred brand for all his electronics and household appliances for a long time to come.

His query relates to receipt of digital signal in his integrated TV. We apologise for getting back rather late, but it was because we needed to conduct some checks with the Communications Commission of Kenya (CCK) with regards to his query.

As you are already aware, whereas Samsung provides the TV set, provision of content is by licensed service providers, in this case Signet (KBC) and Pan Africa Network Group (PANG).

Currently, and as confirmed by CCK, signal feeds of some local media houses disappeared from the digital platforms for unknown reasons.

This is currently being probed with the hope of resuming normal service as soon as possible. This could be the reason as to why he may be receiving the scrambled signal message even for channels that are free to air (FTA). To contact Signet, you need to reach KBC, while for PANG he may contact StarTimes.

It is also important to note that the digital signal is not yet available nationally but is being made available progressively by region/town. The following towns already have access to the signal: Nairobi, Mombasa, Kisumu, Nakuru, Meru, Eldoret, Nyeri and Kisii. Where there is no signal, one receives a ‘No signal message’.

Emmanuel Abraham Naicca,

Manager – VD,

East and Central Africa,

Samsung Electronics East Africa

Migori TV enthusiast who can’t decode CCK message

I recently complained here over unavailability of digital television signals in Migori. Later, one of the Communications Commission of Kenya officials informed me that signals from Signet and StarTimes are found within the environs of Kisii. Does he want me to relocate in the area to make use of the decoders? Migori residents are not getting justice.

It’s worse when the decoders are being sold but we can’t get the service. The funny thing about it is that the signals are being received on the Kenyan-Tanzanian border, which is about 60km from Migori. Can we be given concrete reasons as to why we can’t get the service? I can be reached at petersonoush2003@yahoo.com.

Peter Auma,

Migori

Leader raises concern over crime wave
Updated Sunday, May 5th 2013 at 22:11 GMT +3
By ERIC WAINAINA

KIAMBU; KENYA: Kiambu MP Jude Njomo has protested over increasing in security incidents in the area.

This follows a Friday midnight raid at Kiambu Municipal Council offices, where a watchman manning the premises was murdered and another critically injured. The armed gang broke into the council offices where they made away with Sh220,000 and the mayor’s chain.

Njomo said, previously, in security had gone down in the area but the recent trend is worrying.

“Cases of breakages in homes and institutions have gone down. We were only suffering from computer thefts in learning institutions but now it seems the gang is back and terrorising and killing their targets,” the MP said after visiting the facility.

Kiambu Municipal Council offices were reserved for Kiambu Governor but William Kabogo said they are in bad shape and not enough to host him and his staff.

Organised gang

In the recent past, several cases of breakages in learning institutions and Government offices where culprits steal computers have been reported across the county.

Njomo said he had had a meeting with the area security committee where he raised the issue. He said the return of criminal activities would hamper development and scare away investors.

On Monday last week, a gang unsuccessfully attempted to raid Kiambu High School.

“Police should get to the bottom of this matter because it seems there is an organised gang targeting various institutions and the situation should be contained before it’s too late,” Njomo added.

County Commissioner Wilson Njega said they have commenced investigations to nab the culprits who are still at large.

“We took samples of fingerprints at the scene for forensic examination and we are also following leads which could help us get them,” Njega said.

OYUGI’S ROLE AND COVER UP IN OUKO’S MURDER

from: Ouko joachim omolo
The News Dispatch with Omolo Beste in images
SATURDAY, MAY 25, 2013

TAKE3

In Chapter 12 of Moi’s biography, The Making of an African Statesman, author Andrew Morton advances several hypotheses-First, Morton points a finger at the late powerful Internal Security minister Hezekiah Oyugi.

“The man who posed the greatest threat to Oyugi’s short term goal of tribal leadership was the Foreign Affairs minister, Bob Ouko, an internationally respected diplomat, brilliant orator, and the architect of the ground breaking 1986 Sessional Paper”.

Morton also suggests that Oyugi, possibly intent on hiding something from Scotland Yard’s detective John Troon, is alleged to have been obstructing the investigations. Secondly, Morton offers the view that Ouko was paranoid about his own safety and impending death.

Thirdly, he advances the view that Ouko was a habitual womaniser. Morton suggests that Ouko dangerously cavorted with “Oyugi’s third and favourite wife, Betty”. The former Langata Kanu MP, Philip Leakey, is also reported to have told Morton that Ouko was “a great womaniser”.

Fourthly, Morton advances the theory that Ouko’s death was an ethnic (rivalry) affair. Writes Morton, with unreserved authority on Ouko’s political death: “Ouko’s death was Luo affair. Every tribe in Kenya knows that”.

Finally, Morton writes that Moi propped up Ouko politically. Morton argues that Ouko won his Kisumu West Parliamentary seat in 1988 by default. The biographer states that Moi had “promised to campaign in his (Ouko) constituency to help smooth the path of his re-election”.

Scotland Yard’s Superintendent John Troon led a team of detectives to unravel the murder of Dr Robert John Ouko. Former President Moi had ordered investigations into the death. Initial investigations zeroed in on two key suspects; the late Internal Security PS Hezekiah Oyugi and former Energy minister Nicholas Biwott. The former minister has, however, denied any role.

Troon traced the circumstances leading to the murder to a Presidential trip to the United States in January 1990, where Moi led a strong delegation of government officials. During the Washington trip, according to Press reports, the American media “launched an ambush” on Moi by accusing him of running a dictatorship rife with human rights abuses.

Troon’s investigations centred on the alleged massive corruption at the Kisumu Molasses plant, and efforts to conceal the alleged perpetrators-It is claimed that Ouko had conducted thorough investigations into the malpractice at the plant, which allegedly touched on key Government officials close to Moi and who were opposed to the revitalisation of the plant.

Troon’s findings led to the arrests of Mr Oyugi and Biwott, both close associates of Moi. They were later released for lack of any incriminating evidence. The late Nehemiah Obati and former Rift Valley CID boss is reported to have interviewed both Oyugi and Biwott.

On November 26, 1991, Moi disbanded the Ouko Commission of Inquiry, which was chaired by Justice Evan Gicheru, now Chief Justice. Moi later said the discontinuation of the commission was to enable further investigations to be carried out into the minister’s death and also into alleged obstruction and interference in Troon’s work.

By that time, Oyugi had died in the United Kingdom where he was being treated. Two weeks later, Mr Obati also died. Obati, a former Interpol chief in Kenya, died at the Nairobi Hospital where he had been hospitalised for three weeks. He allegedly developed liver complications.

It was then that Mr Jonah Anguka, a former Nakuru District Commissioner, was charged with Ouko’s murder. Anguka, who was a friend of the murdered minister, is alleged to have been spotted in a white saloon vehicle believed to have been central to the murder. Anguka was later released for lack of evidence connecting him to the murder.

According to former Chief Inspector of Police Luchiri Wajakoya who fled to Britain in 1992, the Ouko murder mystery could be pieced together from the Police “music room”. This is where all the police radio communication is received.

Hezekiah Nelson Oyugi Ogango was for a long time the Permanent Secretary to the President in charge of the provincial administration and internal security. President Moi dismissed him from this post on October 28, 1991. At the Commission, Troon named him as one of the principal suspects in the Ouko murder.

The Kenya Times reported Oyugi as saying that he was “as fit as a fiddle” and that he would personally defend himself at the Inquiry. However, four days before he was to do this, Moi disbanded the Commission and Oyugi was arrested and later released for lack of evidence.

In June 1992, six months after his release, he became sick and was subsequently admitted to Nairobi Hospital, reportedly suffering from a brain ailment. Although his condition worsened, the government refused to give him a passport to travel abroad for specialist treatment, which forced his family to fly in a British neurologist, who gave independent examination results on Oyugi’s deteriorating condition. It was only then that the government allowed him to go to London for specialist treatment. He died in London on August 8, 1992.

Reportedly, he died from a motor neuron disease which impaires the nervous system that controls the sense of touch, sight, hearing, smell and touch. It is claimed that the disease can be induced and that it is incurable once contracted. According to Kenyatta National Hospital records, the disease is rare and affects only five people per annum, killing them within six months to six years.

The manner in which the government handled Oyugi’s sickness and death left a lot to be desired. When Oyugi’s body was returned to Kenya there was no single government officer to receive it at the airport. Given the fact that Oyugi had served the government so loyally for over three decades, this was strange.

And at the time of his death he was chairman of General Motors, a quasi-government organisation. And although Oyugi’s death was headline news for the daily newspapers, the government-controlled radio and television gave the item a news blackout. This hands-off position was maintained not only during the arrival of the body, but even at the funeral and burial services.

As the Provincial Commissioner for Rift Valley Province, and later the Permanent secretary of the Office of the President, Oyugi and Moi were very close. The President never attended Oyugi’s funeral service or burial, or sent a condolence message to the family of his most faithful and powerful civil servant ever.

One thing is clear; Oyugi was one of the most important individuals in the Ouko case. He was regarded as a key witness and his death resulted in loss of vital information he intended to give before the Ouko Commission. After Oyugi’s death the police used Philip Rodi to allege that he saw both Oyugi at the Minister’s home the night he disappeared.

Morton’s version of the Ouko killing differs sharply with previous written accounts. One, by former United States Ambassador to Kenya Smith named a powerful Kenyan politician as Ouko’s killer. A second one by former Provincial Commissioner Jonah Anguka – who was tried for the murder and acquitted – also points a finger at individuals allied to President Moi.

Morton’s book claims Mr Oyugi hosted lavish parties as Dr Ouko’s death was being investigated and tried to use his influence to divert the Commission’s suspicion to Mr Biwott. It confirms previous reports that the Special Branch bugged the judges’ hotel rooms.

Speaking at the historic Kanu Delegates Conference that approved the repeal of Section 2(A) of the Constitution, on December 6, 1991, Moi said that the people who had killed Dr Robert Ouko in February 1990 had also tried to poison his vice-president George Saitoti. “The people who killed Ouko also poisoned my Vice President in a plot to topple my Government,” Moi said.

Following the revelation, Saitoti told Parliament the following day: “I did not want to blow up this issue, but I thank the President for revealing for the first time that I was a victim of poisoning last year.” He did not give details then nor has he ever said anything until his mysterious death in a chopper crash in June last year.

But in reconstructing the events of that day, the Sunday Standard established that after Saitoti was poisoned, he was advised by top people in Government to keep quiet about it so as not to endanger State security at the time when Ouko was yet to be buried.

But as he read the eulogy of Ouko at Nairobi Pentecostal Church, Saitoti was himself recovering from severe effects of poisoning by a deadly substance. If the poisoning plot had succeeded, he too would have been the subject of a requiem service. Saitoti could not talk about who poisoned him or why, but it is confirmed that as he recovered, he was forced to take on a posture of normalcy so as not to arouse suspicion.

In the newspapers of the same day, Saitoti had been photographed with Moi and former Office of the President Permanent Secretary, Hezekiah Oyugi, at the airport as the President left for Bangkok.

Sources say that the doctors who had treated the V-P for poisoning had recommended he take a full bed rest for at least a week.

Moi rejected calls to appear before the committee investigating the death of Ouko. His lawyer, Mr Mutula Kilonzo, said to question the retired head of state was malicious because he (Moi) had nothing to reveal to the committee.

The committee, headed by Kisumu Town East MP Gor Sunguh, announced it would summon the former President on January 5 to elaborate on a public statement he made about Dr Ouko after the minister’s charred remains were found. He was to elaborate on his comments Mr at the time; “Those who killed Ouko are the same ones who wanted to poison Prof. [George] Saitoti.”

Ouko’s problems are said to have started in 1983 when he fell out with Hezekiah Oyugi the then Permanent Secretary in the Office of the President in charge of Internal Security and Provincial Administration. Oyugi was then a Provincial Commissioner in Moi’s home province of Rift Valley and was said to enjoy powers beyond even his boss, Permanent Secretary J. Mathenge whom the former later succeeded.

Having been business associates in a number of commercial ventures, Ouko and Oyugi parted ways. The immediate consequence was the demotion of Ouko from the glamourous Foreign Office to an obscure Labour Ministry in October 1983. Ouko’s relegation was due to advice from Oyugi, who is the only personality from Nyanza who enjoys Moi’s total confidence.

In the next four-and-a-half years, Ouko was kept “on his toes”. He shuffled around in every reshuffle to ministries of labour, industry and economic planning – an average of a new ministry every 18 months. Meanwhile, Oyugi and his mentor were busy looking for a replacement in Ouko’s Kisumu Rural Constituency.

The only man who was ready to challenge Ouko anytime and anywhere was Joab Henry Onyango Omino, a popular former civil servant and a successful businessman-cum-sports administrator.

Moi and Oyugi were not ready to back Omino since the latter had the “undesired” qualities of being popular and principled. But while Ouko was unpopular on the domestic front, internationally he had as a career diplomat, cultivated a likeable image and had many useful friends. It was on these friends that his temporary political survival and also his eventual demise would hinge.

As for the number Two slot, the Kenyan President had his own scheme. He was paving a succession path to the presidency for his nephew and long time manager of Moi’s personal estate, Nicholas Kiprono arap Biwott. Instead, Ouko was handed back the Foreign Affairs portfolio.

The Number two post went into the hands of Josephat Njuguna Karanja, a former Vice-Chancellor of the University of Nairobi, who had recently been imposed upon the people of Mathare as their Member of Parliament. Karanja’s tenure as the VP was shortlived as he was removed in very humiliating manner only twelve months later. George Kinuthia Muthengi Saitoti, an associate professor of topology and former chairman of the Department of Mathematics at the University of Nairobi was appointed to take over the vice presidency.

Margaret Thatcher and her mentor Ronald Reagan (and later Reagan’s successor George Bush) were not amused by Moi’s refusal to take their orders. They were also not comfortable with Moi’s continued association and reward for people who massively looted public coffers of billions of dollars.

Whenever Moi sent Ouko on the numerous begging missions to solicit more aid, the donors showed concern about the diversion of the aid money to foreign secret accounts in Europe. Among the listed leading looters were Biwott; Saitoti (who had headed the treasury since 1983); Eric Kotut, the Governor of Central

Bank of Kenya (CBK); Kipng’eno arap Ng’eny, the Managing Director of Kenya Posts and Telecommunications Corporation (KPTC); Arthur Magugu, once the Minister for Finance; Bethwel Kiplagat, Permanent Secretary for Foreign Affairs; Benjamin Kipkorir, Chairman Kenya Commercial Bank; Sam Ongeri, Minister for Technical Training; Mark Too (Moi’s son who is Deputy Chairman, Lonrho) and Hezekiah Oyugi, sarcastically known as “the Governor”. As at the end of 1988, estimates by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) showed that Kenyans held more than US $4 billion in overseas accounts.

Other sources indicated that in the first half of the year 1988, alone, US $175 million was siphoned out of Kenya into foreign accounts. Ouko confronted Moi the facts and that was his error number one. This hard evidence did not amuse Moi. This was in October 1989. Order was immediately issued that Ouko be shadowed round-the-clock.

Things came to a climax when Moi and his team including Ouko visited the US on January 1990. The main purpose of the visit was to persuade President Bush to prevail upon the Congress not to suspend aid to Kenya.

The Congress and a number of donor agencies had threatened to freeze assistance to Kenya due to Kenya’s well known record gross violation of human rights, diversion of aid money to individuals’ foreign accounts, corruption and lack of accountability in the government.

While in Washington, Moi and his delegation met three congressmen Donald Tayne, Tonny Hall, and Paul Simon in an attempt to persuade them to convince the Congress not to block a US $60 million military aid Moi was soliciting from the US.

They also held talks with high-ranking officials of the World Bank and IMF. The talks, however, did not bear much fruit and only ended in Moi being given stiffer conditions to fulfill before any assistance could come forth. A meeting with the US Assistant Secretary of State in charge of African Affairs, Michael Cohen was equally fruitless.

Interpreting his president’s public humiliation as a failure on his (Ouko’s) part as a Foreign Affairs Minister, Ouko used his experience in the world of diplomacy to try and arrange a face-saving private meeting between Moi and Bush.

In such a meeting, nobody would know whatever transpired between the two Heads of State, and would believe whatever is reported. He, therefore, secured an audience with the US Secretary of State James Baker and managed to persuade the latter to prevail upon President Bush. Ouko was, thus, invited to meet Bush.

The three – Bush, Baker and Ouko – are said to have met for forty minutes before President Bush agreed to grant Moi an audience, in the presence of Baker and Ouko. The meeting took only ten minutes, according to reports.

During the ten minute talks, Moi is reported to have been given a number of conditions for continued assistance, including putting someone with knowledge of economics in charge of Treasury as opposed to topologist Saitoti; democratization of Kenya’s politics; release of all political prisoners and improvement of Human Rights record; making Ouko his Vice President as well as ensuring that money smuggled out of Kenya was brought back. Moi was not particularly pleased with the apparent rapport between Bush and Ouko.

After the meeting, Moi addressed a news conference, where he was in-undated with a barrage of what he considered “embarassing” questions like torture of suspects at Nyayo House, mass imprisonment on trumped-up political charges, street shooting by the police, discrimination of ethnic Somali Kenyans, persecution of the clergy and rampant corruption.

Moi had no ready answers to these questions. Once again, in a bid to save his boss from public embarassment, Ouko intervened time and again to “elaborate on His Excellency’s self explanatory answer” and articulately, albeit untruthfully, answered the questions.

The journalists in attendance were impressed by Ouko’s articulate interventions and, as is typical with American scribes, some remarked that ought to have been the president. That was Ouko’s mistake number two. Moi could not hide his rage. To be upstaged twice in half a day was not something he was accustomed to. Ouko’s other detractors, chiefly Biwott and Oyugi, did not waste away this opportunity.

After that Press Conference of February 2, 1990 Biwott is said to have even sarcastically addressed Ouko as “Your Excellency the President”. Moi on his part emotionally declared that he did not want even to set eyes on Ouko and that he would not travel with his foreign minister in the same plane.

Ouko was, thus, left in Washington. Worried by the inexplicable behaviour of his President Ouko took the next flight and arrived in Nairobi two days later, only a few minutes after Moi’s arrival. He infact found Moi still being entertained at the airport and asked his escorts who had come to the airport to meet him to show him where Moi was being entertained (“Kenya Times”, October 23, 1990 page 18). That was Ouko’s third blunder.

The following day, February 5, 1990, Ouko went to State House, Nairobi, understandably to plead with Moi to forgive him whatever sins he (Ouko) might have committed. His worry was even more compounded by the fact that upon his arrival at Jomo Kenyatta Airport, his passport was impounded “for adjustment”. Instead of forgiving him, Moi ordered his Foreign minister to go to his Nyanza home and never to appear in Nairobi unless and until called back by Moi personally.

Ouko left State House a shaken and confused man and extremely worried. From State House he went to his office along Harambee Avenue via his lawyers, Oraro and Rachier Advocates. From his office, he is reported to have taken his confidential file, bid his staff “Kwaheri ya kuonana” and left.

He was convinced that he was going to be relieved of his ministerial post. The same day in the evening, Ouko, his wife and two youngest children went to Moi’s Woodley residence, along Kabarnet Road. He was of the illusion that on seeing his two young children, Moi the “lover of children” Moi have pity. The mission badly aborted and Moi was uncompromising in his decision to send Ouko to Nyanza.

Ouko is said to have been silent all the way as he drove his family back from Woodley to his Loresho Home. On arrival at Loresho, he found his driver and one of his security escorts waiting. One of the security escorts, George Otieno, had already been withdrawn. The other two, including driver, Joseph Yogo Otieno were under instruction to leave him as soon as (Ouko) arrives at his home in Nyanza (Nyahera or Koru).

On February 6, 1990 a meeting chaired by Biwott and attended by Saitoti, Kotut, Kipng’eno arap Ng’eny, Noah Too, Frederick Koskei (Saitoti’s Aide de Camp) and Bethwel Kiplagat was held at Midwest Hotel, Kericho.

It was at this meeting where the decision to deal with the ‘Ouko problem’ was taken. Noah Too was appointed to head the project. Moi was briefed about the meeting at his Woodley house on February 8 or 9 (Our informant could not get the exact date) in the evening around 9 p.m.

Another meeting was held at Nyayo House, Nairobi, 24th Floor on Saturday February 11, 1990 where specific tasks were assigned. It was at this stage that Oyugi, Julius Kobia (the PC Nyanza), John Anguka (the DC Nakuru) and Philip Kilonzo (Commissioner of Police) were indoctrinated into the conspiracy, which had been codenamed “Operation Bikini Succession” – Bikini being Biwott’s initials (BIwott, KIprono, NIcholas).

Ouko, meanwhile went to the official residence of Peter Lagat, the Kericho District Commisioner, who is close kin of Biwott’s on February 9 to ask Lagat to plead with Biwott to save Ouko’s neck. He had arrived at the Kericho DC’s house at 7.25 a.m. Lagat phoned Biwott who told him to leave Ouko’s matter alone.

Ouko’s worries multiplied as his earlier attempts to have Oyugi plead with Moi for him had only drawn the remark: “If you have collided with Nyayo, ‘shauri yako’. I give you only two days”. On Saturday February 10, 1990, while officiating at a function organized by Lions Club held at Kisumu’s Imperial Hotel, Ouko attempted to “apologise” publicly by narrating how His Excellency had “articulately” answered Kenya’s critics.

Ouko was not a keen churchgoer. But on Sunday February 11, 1990, he surprised his family when he went with them to AIC Koru church and even asked for special prayers after volunteering to preach.

During the week, Ouko had tried to get help from people like Kibaki and Dalmas Otieno, but they were not of much help. He, therefore, decided to fall back on Oyugi – this time asking the latter to provide him with a GK vehicle for his escape. Oyugi promised to oblige – and he indeed came in a white GK mercedes ! Ouko’s mistake number 4 and 5.

By Monday February 12, 1990 Ouko was properly isolated and focused on. The directive from Managing Director Ng’eny home had cut telephone links with Ouko’s Nyahera and Koru. His security escort had long been withdrawn and all his movements were closely monitored.

Biwott and Kobia had been spotted together in Kisumu that Monday afternoon while Noah arap Too, Frederick Koskei and other high ranking security personnel were seen at Kapkelion in a white Subaru (KTN 865), light blue Volkswagen Kombi (KQC 039) and green Audi (KQC 041). Between 3 and 4 a.m. on Tuesday February 13, a white Mercedes Benz car from the Nyanza PC’s office pulled at the gate of Ouko’s Koru home.

The occupants introduced themselves as Security Intelligence officers who had been sent to call Ouko as the president wanted to see him urgently. Within less than 2 minutes there were more than 15 men in GSU uniform at the minister’s gate and all security personnel attached to Ouko had been whisked away. They were severely warned not to “talk”.

The only person the abductors forgot to lock up was Ouko’s housegirl, Sebina Were who was sleeping in one of rooms in the main house. She was woken up by an unusual bang as the abductors dragged Ouko away. She rushed out, only in time to see the white car moving out of the main gate.

As he was confronted, Ouko asked his captors, who had told him Moi wanted to see him, for time to change from his pyjamas. Back in his bedroom Ouko wrote down the names of his captors, who included Oyugi, Biwott, Kobia, Koskei and Noah Too. He folded the note and put it behind a wall picture.

Ouko was driven straight to Nakuru with a brief stop at Kericho, at Shell Petrol Station along the Kericho-Nakuru highway just opposite Kericho Police Station. One motorist who knew Ouko saw him and went greet him. He was immediately chased away but after he had gone close enough to notice that the minister was handcuffed. This man later wrote an “anonymous” letter to Ouko’s Koru address, giving a clue as to how the New Scotland Yard detectives would trace him.

Ouko was reportedly killed at Nakuru with a pistol shot after intensive torture. His naked body was later dumped at Nakuru mortuary, with genitals missing. By a twist of fate, a nurse at Nakuru General Hospital, who was a family friend of the Oukos recognised the body and telephoned Christobel, Ouko’s wife. Mrs. Ouko immediately began enquiring from the government about the whereabouts of her husband. Alerted by this enquiry the murderers rushed to the mortuary and removed the body.

They sprayed it with highly corrosive chemicals and then flew it in a Police Airwing helicopter for dumping at Got Alila, a few kilometers from the late minister’s home where they “discovered” it two days later.

The dumping of the body was done on Wednesday February 14 and the spot remained guarded by GSU personnel until Friday February 16 at 12.30 p.m. when an announcement was made through public address system at the scene that Ouko’s remains had been found.

When this writer visited the scene at 3.00 p.m. he found the police had cordoned the spot and people, including the press, were kept about 20 metres away from the spot. No vegetation was burnt at the spot where the body was found despite the fact that the body was burnt beyond recognition. As Commissioner Kilonzo, Oyugi and Too collected the remains on a stretcher, Oyugi personally lit fire on the spot where the body had been found.

Nobody understood the significance of this act but our guess is that the Nyanza butcher wanted to burn the grass and vegetation around that spot to sell the story that Ouko had shot himself and burnt himself there.

Two days later, Oyugi issued what he termed the preliminary findings of police investigations, which tended to suggest that Ouko had committed suicide. What followed were massive demonstrations demanding that the truth be told. The government, through Moi himself, promised that “no stone would be left unturned” to bring the culprits to book.

Moi asked the British government to send him detectives from the New Scotland Yard hoping this would lull the people as he bought time for emotions to cool down. Troon (John) the leader of the team and his two colleagues began their work conscientiously briefing the press at every stage. The government was not impressed. Within two weeks of the detectives’ work, the state ordered the Scotland Yard sleuths not to issue any more press statements.

Later, Troon felt he could not proceed further without interviewing Biwott. On three occasions when they had appointments with the Energy minister, Biwott simply failed to turn up. Meanwhile, through the British High Commission, Kenya was asking Mrs. Thatcher to prevail upon the New Scotland sleuths to write their report without mentioning “sensitive” personalities. Mrs. Thatcher is reported to have been reluctant to help in this, fearing the consequences should the British people know.

After several attempts to interview the ‘Kabarak Syndicate’ failed the British detectives saw no option other than packing their bags and returning home. Troon refused to come to Nairobi to deliver his incomplete report unless he was guaranteed of his security as it was rumored both in Nairobi and London that the “Kabarak Syndicate” was planning for him an “accident” the Kenya style.

As soon as the report was delivered to Attorney General Mathew Guy Muli, the government announced that the report was not to be made public. This was a 180-degree turn from the earlier assurances that the government had nothing to hide and would make the entire report public.

To appease people – or so the Nairobi regime deludes itself – Moi has appointed a Commission of Inquiry to inquire into the “mysterious disappearance and subsequent death” of minister Ouko.

Another attempt at diverting people’s attention from the truth behind Ouko’s murder was the arrest and torture of Ouko’s younger brother, Barrack Easton Mbajah, a former District Commissioner for allegedly murdering his brother. Ouko it would therefore seem fell victim to the bloodthirsty murderers of the Nairobi regime.

Final edition on this take

Fr Joachim Omolo Ouko, AJ
Tel +254 7350 14559/+254 722 623 578
E-mail omolo.ouko@gmail.com
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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: OUKO’S BODY WAS NOT BURIED ON FEBRUARY 24, 1990

From: Ouko joachim omolo
The News Dispatch with Omolo Beste in images
FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2013

TAKE2

New evidence shows that former Foreign Affairs minister Robert Ouko’s body was not buried on February 24, 1990, as the public was led to believe. His skull and charred remains were handed over to Dr Ian West, the Scotland Yard pathologist who was part of the team of murder investigators, for forensic examination.

Fourteen years later, as the East African Standard launches its campaign for the reopening of a proper investigation into Dr Ouko’s brutal murder, the whereabouts of his remains are shrouded in mystery.

The East African Standard’s special investigations show that the former minister’s remains were loaded on to British Airways flight on March 5, 1990, long after he was supposed to have been buried. But his remains are not on the list of evidence that was returned to Kenya by Scotland Yard.

There are reports that the British police in their museum of famous murders retained the remains, though there is no evidence of this. This brings us to the big question: “so where are Dr Ouko’s remains”? Another mystery behind Ouko’s remains is that when he was found brutally murdered on February 14, 1990, by herdsboy Shikuku, the boy himself disappeared without trace.

Known simply as Shikuku, his employer, Mzee Kipng’eny Soi, is as much at sea as anyone else is on the whereabouts of his former employee. During an exclusive interview with the East African Standard, Soi recounted for the first time the events surrounding the herdsboy’s mysterious disappearance after discovering Ouko’s burnt body at the foothills of Got Alila (Alila Hill) in Koru.

Soi lives slightly over a half a kilometre away from the site where Ouko’s body was found on the other side of River Nyando. When the East African Standard caught up with him, Soi admitted he was still baffled about what happened.

“I’m still confused as to what really happened. All I know is that the police took him away and then he just vanished. “I’ve waited all these years for him to return but he hasn’t, maybe he will never come back, maybe he is dead,” he said.

Shikuku was out in the field-tending cattle when he spotted smoke billowing from a thicket, upon which he went to investigate and discovered the charred remains of a man. This was days after Ouko went missing in February 1990, and the Government had subsequently launched a massive hunt for the minister.

“(Shikuku) came home and told me he had found a burning body in the fields. At first, I dismissed it as a joke but reality would soon sink in. “Although I had heard about Ouko’s disappearance over the radio, I didn’t expect he would be found dead in the field, much less by my own herdsboy,” said Soi.

And little did he know that Shikuku’s discovery would trigger a chain of events that would lead to the boy’s disappearance and his (Soi’s) protracted brush with the authorities. Soi promptly reported the matter to the area chief, who in turn informed the police.

The police picked up Shikuku, allegedly to show them the spot where Ouko’s body lay. “And that is the last time I saw him,” said Soi. Shikuku would later be seen in the area in the company of the detectives for a few days before he vanished into thin air.

The swift police action to immediately barricade the site where Ouko’s body was found fired off speculation.

No civilian was allowed within a hundred metres of the scene. In fact, very few people around there apart from Shikuku saw the body.

“Besides, if Shikuku’s crime was that he saw the body, it is wrong for the police to have detained or harmed him for that matter, because if Ouko’s body was lying out there, it was bound to be discovered and anyone could have found it,” said Soi.

According to Soi, Shikuku arrived at his home one morning looking for a job and was offered one as a herdsboy, a job he performed for only three months before being taken away by the police.

The only personal details Soi has of the boy was his last name (Shikuku) and where he came from (Kakamega).

Another mystery which remains unresolved till today is the investigations ordered by the former government which did not only get nowhere, but also the man picked as the suspect, former Nakuru DC Jonah Anguka who was acquitted under circumstances that leave a lot to be desired.

Anguka approached Foreign Affairs Permanent Secretary Bethuel Kiplagat in his office and requested him to transfer his wife to the Kenyan mission in Bonn, Germany. The indications are that Ouko was shot and his body was set on fire in an attempt to destroy it.

Following the linking of some prominent personalities with the murder, the Government dissolved the commission on November 26, 1991, and directed the Commissioner of Police to start further investigations founded on the Troon report.

.A number of people, including Oyugi, Biwott, and Anguka, who had been adversely mentioned in the findings, were arrested between November 20 and 27. Investigations were stepped up to gather evidence sufficient enough to merit prosecution of key suspects, and on December 10, all those who had been arrested, except Anguka, were released.

A chronological report was compiled, giving the finer details of the evidence against the former DC.

February 13, 1990: Anguka’s official car had covered 270km with excess fuel, which he was unable to account for. He explained that his driver might have made a mistake when writing the work ticket.

On the same day, he went to work at 9am, instead of his usual time of 7.30am. Guards at his residence said he had returned home at about 5am. On the same day, at a meeting with Provincial Commissioner Yusuf Haji, Anguka asked for permission to travel to Nairobi, saying he had important issues to tackle at the Foreign Affairs Ministry. The break was granted.

February 14: Anguka approached Foreign Affairs Permanent Secretary Bethuel Kiplagat in his office and requested him to transfer his wife to the Kenyan mission in Bonn, Germany. He said he was suffering from backache and hoped to use his wife’s privileges as a diplomat to get travel documents and accommodation abroad.

The same day at about 11pm, Anguka telephoned Oyugi at the Rumuruti State Lodge and reported Ouko’s disappearance. The cause of his concern was unclear, considering that the matter had nothing to do with his docket or his administrative area. February 16: The DC is said to have travelled to Nyanza. February 16: Anguka travelled to Koru before Ouko’s body was found.

The purpose of his mission was unclear. On the same day, he broke the news of finding the body to Ouko’s wife in an “inappropriate manner” and in utter disregard to the head of the investigation. Anguka had himself received the news from his wife, who telephoned from Nairobi.

Earlier, when Troon arrived to take over the investigation, Anguka assigned himself the responsibility of acting as his interpreter, while; in fact, a senior police officer had been assigned those duties. The DC also interfered with Nyanza police officers assisting in the investigation, but when complaints were raised, the Nyanza PC ordered him back to his station.

As the commission went on with its work, Anguka summoned Administration Police officers who guarded his Nakuru residence at the time Ouko disappeared and implored them to say he had not left his house at night throughout the week. But the officers stated that he had returned home at dawn on the day Ouko was reported missing. She later died mysteriously in the long saga of unexplained deaths connected to the Ouko murder.

Investigations by Scotland Yard detective John Troon found two empty briefcases at the Ouko home in Koru, believed to have contained the “dossier” the minister intended to hand over to former President Moi. Briner, the sole proprietor of BAK Group of Consultants that featured prominently in the investigations, says that based on investigations conducted by the Scotland Yard, Ouko’s killers may originally not have planned to eliminate him. But his captors went too far in torturing him to force out vital information, or he may have recognised one or several of them thus making his complete elimination inevitable.

It is believed that it is after his captors realised that they had injured him extensively that they made a telephone call, apparently to ask what to do with him. “Maybe it is then that they (captors) were told to finish him,” Briner postulates.

Briner also suspects Dr Ouko’s killers could have been trained hitmen of Eastern European extraction, which possibly explains the Caucasian hair found on Dr Ouko’s body. “This vital finding was never followed up, perhaps because investigators were not allowed to. This is something Troon has also talked about,” Briner noted.

Briner’s view corroborates Jonah Anguka’s observations in his memoir Absolute Power in which it is stated: “The resultant damage was so brutal, that the impression on my mind was that the murderer’s intention was not only to kill, but to totally dismember Bob; to butcher and disfigure him.”

In his book, Absolute Power: The Ouko Murder Mystery, Anguka observed that the deaths were also used to instill fear in the minds of potential witnesses. And, indeed, fear still reigns following the mysterious deaths of key witnesses, numerous death threats and the evident ability of some key witnesses to manipulate information and the justice system.

Some died mysteriously others were threatened while still others encountered a series of dangerous obstacles. Some of the mysterious deaths include the following:

1. Mr Mohammed Aslam: Aged 55 at the time he died in November 1991, Aslam was the chairman of the Pan African Group of Companies that included the Pan African Bank, the Pan African Credit Finance Company and the Corporate Insurance Ltd. Allegations were made against him at the Ouko Commission of Inquiry that he had acted as an intermediary in asking for a kickback in an international business transaction.

The claims came at a time when corruption was being examined as a motive in Ouko’s murder. Aslam was set to appear before the Commission to answer these allegations, and it was expected that he would reveal information about high-level corruption and even drop names of those involved.

But it was not to be. He suddenly fell ill and was admitted to the Nairobi Hospital. His son, Raza, was later to say that at the time of admission, Aslam was complaining of dizziness and general fatigue. Eight days after his death, President Moi dissolved the Commission.

2. Mr Oidho Agalo: He was the son of Mr Zablon Agalo Obonyo, the elderly Administration Police guard attached to Ouko’s Koru home. Oidho, a worker at Dr Ouko’s farm, died quietly at Nyalenda estate in Kisumu before he was called to testify on what he knew of the events on the night Ouko disappeared.

3. Mr Otieno Gor: He was among the few people who saw the minister just before his disappearance. But he died mysteriously before he could testify at the inquiry.

4. Mr Martin Ochanda: He was attached to the Kisumu Special Branch office and was a known friend of Ouko. After the minister’s death, Ochanda was transferred to Nairobi and in December 1991, he fell sick and died a few days later in what was described as a “short illness”.

5. Mr Pius Omollo Ngwaye: He was Mr Jonah Anguka’s personal bodyguard for nearly five years. Soon after Anguka’s arrest, he was also seized and detained by the police. Anguka met Ngwaye at the CID headquarters where they were both being interrogated. “He was in a deplorable state with blood-red eyes and was trembling,” said Anguka in his book. Ngwaye died soon after his release from custody.

6. Mr Joseph Otieno Yogo: He was Ouko’s driver and guard, who drove the minister from Nairobi to Kisumu on February 5 and later returned to Nairobi to fetch Ouko’s wife, Mrs Christabel Ouko. In June 1992, Yogo died at the Mater Hospital in Nairobi following a “short illness”.

7. Mr Joseph Mbogo: He was a Superintendent of Police who took part in the Ouko investigation and later joined the Commission of Inquiry. He died mysteriously and was buried quietly at his farm. The cause of death was not known.

8. Master Paul Shikuku: The then 16-year-old houseboy who first saw the charred remains of Ouko burning at the foothills of Got Alila. He disappeared mysteriously before testifying at the Commission and his whereabouts remain unknown.

9. Mr James Eric Onyango: Was a relative and confidante of Ouko and was among the few people the minister talked to on phone just before he disappeared. He also died mysteriously.

10. Mr Hezekiah Nelson Oyugi: Was a long-time Permanent Secretary in the Office of the President in charge of Provincial Administration and Internal Security. He was named as one of the principal suspects in the Ouko murder. He died of a brain ailment after his release from custody.

11. Mr Masinde Muliro: A day before Oyugi’s body was brought home from London, the Forum for the Restoration of Democracy (Ford) founder member and vice-chairman, Mr Masinde Muliro, travelled to and from the UK on the same flight with then Cabinet minister Nicholas Biwott.

Muliro reportedly met with a former police officer, Mr George Wajakoyah, who had made sensational allegations over the Ouko murder. Muliro returned home on August 14, 1992 aboard a British Airways flight from London. He collapsed and died as he was clearing at the Customs.

12. Mr Nehemiah Shikuku Obati: A senior Assistant Commissioner of Police, he spearheaded the arrest and interrogation of the chief suspects in the Ouko murder, among them Biwott. But after this, Obati was removed from the CID Headquarters and transferred to a junior posting in Nakuru. In August 1992, Obati fell ill and was admitted to the Nairobi Hospital. He died a few days later from what was described as liver failure.

13. Mr Philip Kilonzo: He was the Police Commissioner at the time of the Ouko murder. The police force was severely criticised for not doing enough to bring the culprits to book. Instead, it was obstructing investigating teams such as the Scotland Yard. He was replaced as commissioner in 1993. In 1997, he collapsed and died at his hotel in Machakos amid allegations of foul play, which the authorities immediately denied. But the cause of his death still remains a mystery to this day.

14. Mr Justice Fidahussein Abdullah: He presided over the trial of former Nakuru DC, Jonah Anguka, who had been charged with Ouko’s murder. He died mysteriously just before he delivered his ruling. It was understood that in his ruling, he was set to free Anguka and criticise the manner in which the government was handling the murder case.

15. Ms Susan Aloo Seda: Ouko’s mother, Susan, also died mysteriously. Another one was Selina Were who was Ouko’s maid and a star witness at the inquiry. The last time she featured in public was in December, 1991, when she was released from custody. Nobody seems to know what became of her since, though there were rumours that she had died. Later on there has been information that Selina is actually alive, only that she had gone underground after threats were made on her life.

The allegations of corruption concerning the Kisumu molasses plant and Dr Ouko’s efforts to expose those behind the scandal are cited as the most potent motive for his assassination. Based on evidence presented by two directors of the Swiss-based BAK group whose efforts to revive the Kisumu molasses plant were frustrated by senior Kenyan government officials, the report outlines the dispute between Dr Ouko and these government officials and describes his efforts to prepare a dossier about their activities for presentation to President Moi.

In conclusion, the Troon report strongly recommended:

1. That a full and impartial investigation be implemented into the allegations made by the BAK directors against some senior government personnel. These allegations in my view have some bearing to the death of Dr Ouko.

2. All senior government officials and civil servants should be interviewed in relation to the Washington visit and their knowledge of what may have transpired between Dr Ouko and other colleagues. The visit to Washington in my opinion also has some bearing on the cause of Dr Ouko’s death.

3. Full enquiries should be undertaken to establish the truth surrounding the allegations that files and papers were taken from the Minister’s Koru farm which subsequently disappeared, and established the details of those files and papers.

4. Additional full enquiries should be made to obtain any evidence from Special Branch officers in relation to their interviews with possible witnesses in relation to the death of Dr Ouko, particularly those persons who gave interviews in the “rumour mongering” detentions.

5. Enquiries and further interviews should also take place to establish beyond doubt the movements and alibis of Mr Oyugi, his driver and bodyguard from to February 9 to 13, inclusive.

6. Enquiries must also be made to fully establish the alibi put forward by Mr Joab Omino, and any connection that he and/or Mr Biwott may have with the Muhoroni sugar complex- Signed: John Troon, Detective Superintendent SO1.

Continues tomorrow

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

Rwanda & USA: Paul Kagame: I asked America to kill Congo rebel leader with drone

from: Judy Miriga

Good People,

All these information are clear indication that Kagame is fully involved in distabilization of DRC through M23. Kagame must be taken to task at the ICC Hague as He has a case to answer.

Why would Kagame as America to kill Congo rebel leader ?

Is it for cover up??? Does Kagame know something he does not want the world to know…..???

Push for the truth people…….There is more here and it is unacceptable……

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

– – – – – – – – – – –

http://financialservices.house.gov/calendar/eventsingle.aspx?EventID=333875

JEB HENSARLING, TX , CHAIRMAN

United States House of Representatives

Committee on Financial Services 2129 Rayburn House Office Building Washington, D.C. 20515

MAXINE WATERS, CA, RANKING MEMBER

M E M O R A N D U M

To: Members of the Committee on Financial Services
From: FSC Majority Committee Staff
Date: May 16, 2013
Subject: May 21, 2013, Monetary Policy and Trade Subcommittee Hearing on “The Unintended Consequences of Dodd-Frank’s Conflict Minerals Provision”.

The Subcommittee on Monetary Policy and Trade will hold a hearing on “The Unintended Consequences of Dodd-Frank’s Conflict Minerals Provision” at 2:00 p.m. on Tuesday, May 21, 2013, in Room 2128 of the Rayburn House Office Building. This will be a one-panel hearing with the following witnesses:

• David Aronson, Freelance Writer, Editor of www.congoresources.org

• Mvemba Dizolele, Peter Duignan Distinguished Visiting Fellow, Hoover Institution

• Rick Goss, Senior Vice President of Environment and Sustainability, Information Technology Industry Council

• Sophia Pickles, Policy Advisor, Global Witness

Background

Ever since it gained its independence in 1960, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) has been in a state of civil war. In 2000, the United Nations Group of Experts linked the Congolese civil war to the mineral trade. Tin, tantalum, tungsten, and gold—which are used to manufacture everyday goods such as pens, USB drives, buttons, and food containers—are mined in areas of the eastern DRC that the Congolese army and armed militias are fighting to control. The factions use proceeds from mineral sales to buy weapons. Some have argued that banning the use of minerals mined in or near the DRC or discouraging companies from using such minerals by “naming and shaming” them might deny rebel militias a source of funding and end the conflict.

Section 1502 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (P.L. 111-203) is one such effort to discourage companies from using minerals mined in the DRC. Section 1502 requires the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to promulgate rules for public companies requiring them to disclose their use of minerals that originated in the DRC, which Section 1502 defines to be “conflict minerals.” Public companies must comply with Section 1502’s disclosure requirements when these minerals are necessary to the functionality or production of a product. If companies cannot verify that the minerals they use did not originate in the DRC, Section 1502 requires them to (1) exercise due diligence on the source and chain of custody of these minerals; (2) hire an independent third party to audit the due diligence measures; and (3) report to the SEC on the due diligence measures they undertook and their auditor’s assessment of those measures.

Hearing:

Hearing entitled “The Unintended Consequences of Dodd-Frank’s Conflict Minerals Provision”
Tuesday, May 21, 2013 2:00 PM in 2128 Rayburn HOB
Monetary Policy and Trade

Witness List

Mr. David Aronson, Freelance Writer, Editor of www.congoresources.org

Mr. Mvemba Dizolele, Peter Duignan Distinguished Visiting Fellow, Hoover Institution

Mr. Rick Goss, Senior Vice President of Environment and Sustainability, Information Technology Industry Council

Ms. Sophia Pickles, Policy Advisor, Global Witness

$625,000 Worth Gold Shipment Got Lost At Miami Airport
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6-MUreAjFx0
Published on May 17, 2013

A shipment of gold valued at $625,000 vanished in a suspected heist after arriving in Miami on an American Airlines flight, authorities announced Thursday.

A police report says the gold, which arrived in a box, was brought on the flight from Guayaquil, Ecuador to the Miami International Airport early Tuesday, WSVN reports.

The plane’s cargo was unloaded by five crew members, but the box containing the gold disappeared after apparently being loaded onto a motorized luggage cart or tug, the report said.

The cart was found in front of a gate of the same terminal were the flight from Ecuador was unloaded, about an hour after workers emptied the cargo hold, but without the box containing the gold.

The police incident report did not say who owned the gold or what its final destination was and an American Airlines security official at the airport declined to comment to Reuters on the case, saying only that it was being investigated by the FBI.

“The FBI is aware of the situation,” FBI spokesman Michael Leverock told Reuters in an email.

Miami International serves as a major trans-shipment point for large quantities of gold produced in South America and exported primarily to Switzerland for refining.

The city has seen the trans-shipment of gold rise sharply in recent years as investors have turned to gold and its price has risen.

Gold is Miami’s No. 1 import valued at almost $8 billion last year, mostly from Mexico and Colombia, and almost all destined for Switzerland, according to World City, a Miami-based publication that tracks trade data.

And Now This ………

Paul Kagame: I asked America to kill Congo rebel leader with drone

In an exclusive interview with Chris McGreal in Kigali, Rwanda’s president denies backing an accused Congolese war criminal and says challenge to senior US official proves his innocence

Rwanda’s president, Paul Kagame, has rejected accusations from Washington that he was supporting a rebel leader and accused war criminal in the Democratic Republic of the Congo by challenging a senior US official to send a drone to kill the wanted man.

In an interview with the Observer Magazine, Kagame said that on a visit to Washington in March he came under pressure from the US assistant secretary of state for Africa, Johnnie Carson, to arrest Bosco Ntaganda, leader of the M23 rebels, who was wanted by the international criminal court (ICC). The US administration was increasing pressure on Kagame following a UN report claiming to have uncovered evidence showing that the Rwandan military provided weapons and other support to Ntaganda, whose forces briefly seized control of the region’s main city, Goma.

“I told him: ‘Assistant secretary of state, you support [the UN peacekeeping force] in the Congo. Such a big force, so much money. Have you failed to use that force to arrest whoever you want to arrest in Congo? Now you are turning to me, you are turning to Rwanda?'” he said. “I said that, since you are used to sending drones and gunning people down, why don’t you send a drone and get rid of him and stop this nonsense? And he just laughed. I told him: ‘I’m serious’.”

Kagame said that, after he returned to Rwanda, Carson kept up the pressure with a letter demanding that he act against Ntaganda. Days later, the M23 leader appeared at the US embassy in Rwanda’s capital, Kigali, saying that he wanted to surrender to the ICC. He was transferred to The Hague. The Rwandan leadership denies any prior knowledge of Ntaganda’s decision to hand himself over. It suggests he was facing a rebellion within M23 and feared for his safety.

But Kagame’s confrontation with Carson reflects how much relationships with even close allies have deteriorated over allegations that Rwanda continues to play a part in the bloodletting in Congo. The US and Britain, Rwanda’s largest bilateral aid donors, withheld financial assistance, as did the EU, prompting accusations of betrayal by Rwandan officials. The political impact added impetus to a government campaign to condition the population to become more self-reliant.

Kagame is angered by the moves and criticisms of his human rights record in Rwanda, including allegations that he blocks opponents by misusing laws banning hate speech to accuse them of promoting genocide and suppresses press criticism. The Rwandan president is also embittered that countries, led by the US and UK, that blocked intervention to stop the 1994 genocide, and France which sided with the Hutu extremist regime that led the killings, are now judging him on human rights.

“We don’t live our lives or we don’t deal with our affairs more from the dictates from outside than from the dictates of our own situation and conditions,” Kagame said. “The outside viewpoint, sometimes you don’t know what it is. It keeps changing. They tell you they want you to respect this or fight this and you are doing it and they say you’re not doing it the right way. They keep shifting goalposts and interpreting things about us or what we are doing to suit the moment.”

He is agitated about what he sees as Rwanda being held responsible for all the ills of Congo, when Kigali’s military intervention began in 1996 to clear out Hutu extremists using UN-funded refugee camps for raids to murder Tutsis. Kagame said that Rwanda was not responsible for the situation after decades of western colonisation and backing for the Mobutu dictatorship.

The Rwandan leader denies supporting M23 and said he has been falsely accused because Congo’s president, Joseph Kabila, needs someone to blame because his army cannot fight. “To defeat these fellows doesn’t take bravery because they don’t go to fight. They just hear bullets and are on the loose running anywhere, looting, raping and doing anything. That’s what happened,” he said.

“President Kabila and the government had made statements about how this issue is going to be contained. They had to look for an explanation for how they were being defeated. They said we are not fighting [Ntaganda], we’re actually fighting Rwanda.”

— On Wed, 5/22/13, Lutgard Kokulinda Kagaruki wrote:
From: Lutgard Kokulinda Kagaruki
Subject: Paul Kagame: I asked America to kill Congo rebel leader with drone
Date: Wednesday, May 22, 2013, 1:27 AM

I Liked this one most; “We don’t live our lives or we don’t deal with our affairs more from the dictates from outside than from the dictates of our own situation and conditions,” Kagame said. “The outside viewpoint, sometimes you don’t know what it is. It keeps changing. They tell you they want you to respect this or fight this and you are doing it and they say you’re not doing it the right way. They keep shifting goalposts and interpreting things about us or what we are doing to suit the moment.” LKK

On Wed, May 22, 2013 at 1:37 AM, Nyoni Magoha wrote:

Saturday 18 May 2013 Chris MacGreal in Kigali

In an exclusive interview with Chris McGreal in Kigali, Rwanda’s president denies backing an accused Congolese war criminal and says challenge to senior US official proves his innocence

Rwanda’s president, Paul Kagame, has rejected accusations from Washington that he was supporting a rebel leader and accused war criminal in the Democratic Republic of the Congo by challenging a senior US official to send a drone to kill the wanted man.

In an interview with the Observer Magazine, Kagame said that on a visit to Washington in March he came under pressure from the US assistant secretary of state for Africa, Johnnie Carson, to arrest Bosco Ntaganda, leader of the M23 rebels, who was wanted by the international criminal court (ICC). The US administration was increasing pressure on Kagame following a UN report claiming to have uncovered evidence showing that the Rwandan military provided weapons and other support to Ntaganda, whose forces briefly seized control of the region’s main city, Goma.

“I told him: ‘Assistant secretary of state, you support [the UN peacekeeping force] in the Congo. Such a big force, so much money. Have you failed to use that force to arrest whoever you want to arrest in Congo? Now you are turning to me, you are turning to Rwanda?'” he said. “I said that, since you are used to sending drones and gunning people down, why don’t you send a drone and get rid of him and stop this nonsense? And he just laughed. I told him: ‘I’m serious’.”

Kagame said that, after he returned to Rwanda, Carson kept up the pressure with a letter demanding that he act against Ntaganda. Days later, the M23 leader appeared at the US embassy in Rwanda’s capital, Kigali, saying that he wanted to surrender to the ICC. He was transferred to The Hague. The Rwandan leadership denies any prior knowledge of Ntaganda’s decision to hand himself over. It suggests he was facing a rebellion within M23 and feared for his safety.

But Kagame’s confrontation with Carson reflects how much relationships with even close allies have deteriorated over allegations that Rwanda continues to play a part in the bloodletting in Congo. The US and Britain, Rwanda’s largest bilateral aid donors, withheld financial assistance, as did the EU, prompting accusations of betrayal by Rwandan officials. The political impact added impetus to a government campaign to condition the population to become more self-reliant.

Kagame is angered by the moves and criticisms of his human rights record in Rwanda, including allegations that he blocks opponents by misusing laws banning hate speech to accuse them of promoting genocide and suppresses press criticism. The Rwandan president is also embittered that countries, led by the US and UK, that blocked intervention to stop the 1994 genocide, and France which sided with the Hutu extremist regime that led the killings, are now judging him on human rights.

“We don’t live our lives or we don’t deal with our affairs more from the dictates from outside than from the dictates of our own situation and conditions,” Kagame said. “The outside viewpoint, sometimes you don’t know what it is. It keeps changing. They tell you they want you to respect this or fight this and you are doing it and they say you’re not doing it the right way. They keep shifting goalposts and interpreting things about us or what we are doing to suit the moment.”

He is agitated about what he sees as Rwanda being held responsible for all the ills of Congo, when Kigali’s military intervention began in 1996 to clear out Hutu extremists using UN-funded refugee camps for raids to murder Tutsis. Kagame said that Rwanda was not responsible for the situation after decades of western colonisation and backing for the Mobutu dictatorship.

The Rwandan leader denies supporting M23 and said he has been falsely accused because Congo’s president, Joseph Kabila, needs someone to blame because his army cannot fight. “To defeat these fellows doesn’t take bravery because they don’t go to fight. They just hear bullets and are on the loose running anywhere, looting, raping and doing anything. That’s what happened,” he said.

“President Kabila and the government had made statements about how this issue is going to be contained. They had to look for an explanation for how they were being defeated. They said we are not fighting [Ntaganda], we’re actually fighting Rwanda.”

Source: The Guardian (UK)

U.S. SEC requires company disclosures on use of DR Congo minerals

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on Wednesday approved a rule that would require public companies to disclose information on the use of minerals from the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). Under the rule, public companies would have to disclose annually their tracing of the minerals back to the sources if they use in their products the designated minerals from the DRC and neighboring countries, where armed groups have profited much from mining minerals used in electronics, jewelry and other goods… (view news)

US Cuts Military Aid to Rwanda Over Support to Rebels in DR Congo

The United States has cut its military aid to Rwanda, citing concerns that the government in Kigali is supporting rebels in neighboring Democratic Republic of Congo. The U.S. State Department said Saturday it had evidence that Rwanda is helping Congolese rebel groups, including M23. It said it will withhold $200,000 of aid pledged to help a military training agency. The Rwandan government has repeatedly denied helping the rebels. Washington’s move comes a week after the presidents of Rwanda and the DRC agreed to the deployment of an international force to fight the rebellion in eastern Congo and to patrol their … (view news)

M23 Political Leader Bertrand Bisimwa’s letter to Ban Ki Moon
mai23

Bunagana, May 22nd 2013

Réf : 027/Prés-M23/2013

RE: Actual situation in the Eastern part of DRC

To the UN Secretary General
New York

Your Excellency,

We are once again honored to write to you about the situation that is taking place in the eastern part of the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The military operations which are taking over in the surrounding of Goma are a result of Congolese army working together with his allies FDLR and MAI-MAI armed groups attacking the M23 positions from Monday 20th may, 2013 at 4:30 am.

We would like to see this military hostilities being stopped on both sides as it appears in our letter of 1st May, 2013 addressed to his Excellency MUSEVENI KAGUTA, President of the Republic of Uganda, Mediator of the Kampala peace talks and President of ICGLR, requesting for bilateral cease fire as shows our attached letter. Unfortunately the DRC government consider the Kampala negotiations as an opportunity for a delay, in order to obtain the UN resolution for a militarist option.

We again express our political will to have a bilateral cease fire agreement to bring peace to our people and allow the political dialogue to take over. We want this framework to deal with root causes of this conflict rather than a simple treatment of symptoms as it was recommended by H.E OLOUSSEGUN OBASANJO your Special Envoy in this very matter in the year 2008 – 2009.

We stay convinced that war will never bring sustainable peace in the DRC and want to assure you, that we believe that, the presence of the UN Mission in DRC remains an opportunity in our quest for peace .

Hoping that our correspondence will take your attention, we thank you anticipatively.

Respectfully

Bertrand BISIMWA

CC:
– Permanent Members of the Security Council
– President of the African Union
– Heads of State of the CIRGL
– Embassies

M23 Leader Bertrand Bisimwa’s letter to Mary ROBINSON
mai23

Bunagana, May 22nd, 2013
Réf : 026/PRES-M23/2013

To the attention of Her Excellency Mary ROBINSON,
UN Secretary General Special Envoy in the Great Lakes Region

Re: Actual situation in the Eastern of DRC

Your Excellency,

We are once again honored to write to you about the situation that is taking place in the eastern part of the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The military operations which are taking over in the surrounding of Goma are a result of Congolese army working together with his allies FDLR and MAI-MAI armed groups attacking the M23 positions from Monday 20th may, 2013 at 4:30 am.

This situation is disturbing the political peace process which was proned by the framework agreement of Addis Ababa of February 24th 2013, the true way for solution in the DRC crisis and even complicates the Kampala negotiations in which we did and do still build our hope.

We would like to see this military hostilities being stopped on both sides as it appears in our letter of 1st May, 2013 addressed to his Excellency MUSEVENI KAGUTA, President of the Republic of Uganda, Mediator of the Kampala peace talks and President of ICGLR, requesting for bilateral cease fire between us and the Government of the DRC.

Unfortunately the DRC government consider the Kampala negotiations as an opportunity for a delay, in order to obtain the UN resolution for a militarist option.

We remain believing that war will never bring sustainable peace in the DRC.

We highly thank you, Excellency, as you endeavour to bring peace in our region through the political solution rather than war.

Hoping that our correspondence will take your attention, we thank you anticipatively.

Respectfully

Bertrand BISIMWA

CC:
– UN Secretary General
– Permanent Members of the Security Council
– President of the African Union
– Heads of State of the CIRGL
– Embassies

M23 letter To Yoweri Museveni Kaguta President of Uganda
mai23

Bunagana, May 1st, 2013
Réf : 021/Prés-M23/2013

To His Excellency YOWERI MUSEVENI KAGUTA, President of Republic of Uganda,

Chairman of the International Conference of the Great Lakes Region “ICGLR” and Mediator of the negotiations between the DRC government and M23

Re: Ceasefire Agreement

Your Excellency, Mr President,

We, at M23, are honored to inform you that we still have hope in peace through the negotiations taking place in Kampala.

Since December, 2012 on the request of the international community represented by the International Conference of Great Lakes Region, we submitted ourselves to all requests from the ICGLR, for instance we withdrew from Goma while we were militarily stronger than the DRC Army and we signed the unilateral ceasefire while the DRC government refused to do so. We maintained our military positions as it was requested and we humbly accepted all the demands which allowed the progress in the negotiations today, it’s during the Kampala negotiations period that the DRC government went to the UN seeking for the resolution 2098.

At this moment while we are still in negotiations, the DRC Army in coalition with the FDLR have left their positions, crossed over and took our positions in Mabenga. Others came from Tongo through the Virunga national Park where they are preparing to attack ours positions in Rutshuru territory.

In Kanyarutshina, the DRC Army in coalition with MONUSCO peace keepers took our positions, which consequently shows that the DRC government is preparing war against us. This is why we at M23, are requesting to the DRC government to sign the ceasefire agreement and to release all our members kept in prison in Kinshasa as a proof of willingness to pursue with negotiations.

We are convinced that the ceasefire agreement will bring in the end of the war and allow peaceful negotiations to take place.

We believe that the efforts made by the mediator and the ICGLR would not be taken in vain by the DRC government and we thank you for all.

Respectfully

Bertrand BISIMWA

CC:
– Heads of States of ICGLR;
– His Excellence The Facilitator of Talks between M23 and The DRC’s Government;

GOMA – RDC : Une tragédie à l’horizon
mai23

Des soldats de parade, aussi remarquables les jours de défilé qu’inaptes sous le feu.

They look like soldiers on parade, but useless under fire Qu’il s’agisse d’une escarmouche due à des raisons plus ou moins futiles -la gestion d’une source-, ou d’un accrochage plus sérieux qui pourrait mettre fin à cinq mois d’une trêve de facto, les combats qui ont opposée hier les soldats du M23 aux troupes gouvernementales et aux rebelles hutu rwandais des FDLR, leurs alliés, autour de l’abreuvoir de Mutaho -à une dizaine de kilomètres de Goma, dans l’Est de la RDC- préfigurent certainement une partie du scénario pour les semaines à venir.

Lorsque la Brigade d’intervention de la MONUSCO, mise en place par la résolution 2098 du Conseil de sécurité de l’ONU pour « neutraliser » les forces de l’Armée Révolutionnaire Congolaise, branche militaire du M23, sera prête à agir, il suffira un épisode déclencheur comme celui de Mutaho -une offensive conjointe FARDC-FDLR contre les positions de l’ARC et la riposte, quoique contenue, de cette dernière- pour susciter l’intervention sur le terrain de la nouvelle unité spéciale onusienne sous commandement d’un général tanzanien. Celle-ci ne se limitera pas, par conséquent, à exercer une fonction de dissuasion mais se déploiera en ordre de combat face aux troupes du général Sultani Makenga, chef militaire du M23.

Dans cette perspective d’« affrontement final » contre la « révolution congolaise » du M23, se consomme tristement la dérive des Nations Unies qui abdiquent leur rôle fondateur de partenariat mondial pour la paix pour se muer en force d’agression contre toute forme de résistance au nouvel ordre planétaire établi par les grandes puissances. Un ordre qui exige un pouvoir faible et prédateur en RDC avec Joseph Kabila à la tête de l’Etat et qui sera à tout prix défendu, même au risque d’embraser à nouveau la sous région. Ainsi, l’alliance qui se profile dans les collines et les jungles du Kivu entre Casques Blues, FARDC et FDLR signe -dans la collusion théoriquement contre nature entre une mission de paix devenue mission de guerre et des forces génocidaires- l’arrêt de mort de l’ONU en tant que régulateur impartial des conflits et la perte définitive de sa légitimation en tant qu’agent de paix.

Mais les événements de Mutaho nous apprennent une deuxième leçon. La provocation orchestrée par Kabila à la veille de la visite du Secrétaire général des NU à Kinshasa montre jusqu’à quel point le locataire du Palais de la Nation se sent conforté par ses parrains internationaux. Ceux-ci feront probablement mine de critiquer son inaction face aux engagements pris dans l’accord-cadre d’Addis-Abeba. Mais ils sont en réalité les derniers à être intéressés à un véritable processus de réformes en RDC, qui dote par exemple ce géant d’Afrique centrale d’une armée en mesure de faire respecter sa souveraineté nationale et d’un pouvoir capable d’en assurer le développement et de garantir le bien être de ses populations.

Pourtant, et avant qu’il ne soit pas trop tard, il faut au moins que les Etats de la sous région prennent la mesure des conséquences de l’intervention de la Brigade onusienne. Car tous ne resteront pas les bras croisés devant le nettoyage ethnique et l’extermination des communautés banyarwanda dans le Nord Kivu.

Luigi Elongui

Translated in English:

Whether it’s a skirmish due to reasons more or less trivial-managing a source-or a more serious clash that could end in five months a de facto truce, fighting who opposed yesterday soldiers M23 government troops and Rwandan Hutu FDLR rebels, allies around the trough Mutaho to ten kilometers from Goma, in eastern DRC, certainly foreshadow some scenario for the coming weeks.

When the Intervention Brigade of MONUSCO, established by resolution 2098 of the Security Council of the UN to “neutralize” the forces of the Congolese Revolutionary Army, the military wing of the M23 will be ready to act, simply a trigger episode like Mutaho-joint FARDC-FDLR offensive against the positions of the CRA and the response, although contained, this latest addition to spark action on the ground of the new UN special unit under the command of a Tanzanian general. This will not be limited, therefore, to exert a deterrent but will deploy in battle order against the troops of General Sultani Makenga military leader M23.

In this perspective of “final battle” against the “Congolese revolution” of the M23, is sadly consumes drift UN abdicate their role founder of Global Partnership for Peace to turn into an aggressive force against any form of resistance the new world order established by the great powers. An order requiring low power and predator in the DRC with Joseph Kabila as head of state and will be defended at any cost, even at the risk of flare again the subregion. Thus, the alliance looming in the hills and jungles of Kivu between Helmets Blues, FARDC and FDLR sign-in collusion against theoretically kind between a peacekeeping mission to become war-forces genocidal death sentence UN as an impartial regulator of conflict and the final loss of its legitimacy as an agent of peace.

But the events of Mutaho we learn a second lesson. Provocation orchestrated by Kabila on the eve of the visit of the UN Secretary General in Kinshasa shows how much the tenant of the Palace of the Nation feels buoyed by its international sponsors. They probably do mine to criticize his inaction on commitments made in the framework agreement in Addis Ababa. But in reality they are the last to be interested in a genuine process of reform in the DRC, which endows eg the giant Central African army in a position to enforce its national sovereignty and a power capable of ensure the development and ensure the welfare of its people.

Yet, before it is too late, we need at least the countries of the sub region are measuring the impact of the intervention of the UN Brigade. Because all will not stand idly by ethnic cleansing and extermination of Banyarwanda in North Kivu communities.

KENYA: KISUMU POLICE VOWS TO EXTINGUISH CRIMINALS.

By Chak Rachar.

The recent crime waves within Kisumu where armed thugs have been robbing residents within the city at will have got to do with well known criminals who are having various criminals’ cases yet they are out on court bonds according to Kisumu District Criminal Investigations Officer Henry Ndombi.

This comes amid allegations of laxity and ineptness on the part of the police which has seen crime rising within the Lake side with unsubstantiated statistics showing that people are killed daily within the city and three social places usually being attacked daily.

The area residents are now said to be living in fear as most residential estates are ghost estates by as early as nine o’clock as the allege that criminals take charge within their residences as early as that hour.

Operators of social joints within the city are calling upon the police to help them have back their clients as they register low turn out of patrons as the said usually vacates the said premises as early as eight o’clock.

Former Kisumu Councilor and a leading businessman within the city Nahashon Okwaro is pleading with the law enforcers within the region to pull up their socks if investors have to come to Kisumu and invest.

“No one would wish to invest in an area where their investment’s securities is guaranteed, for Kisumu County to redeem itself then security which is paramount should be addressed by all and sundry” he added

He calls on the entire city’s residents to help law enforcers in dealing with the security issues.

Hotels and bar operators lament that very soon they will be closing down as there is no business at night when they should be making money.

“We have been incurring loses people fear sitting in bars for long as they do not know what is likely to happen next given that a day hardly passes before thugs strike and robs either an hotel or bar “says Dj Jack Ogolla who operates a bar within the town.

But the worst one in recent time is an incident in which the daring thugs struck at a two star hotel owned by Gem MP Jakoyo Midiwo which is situated along Kisumu –Kakamega road opposite Ofafa Hall and hardly two kilometers from Kisumu’s main Central Police station.

An eye witness who was among those who were attacked and robbed lamented at the laxed pace the thugs attacked tem and despite them raising an alarm no help came from security law enforcers.

“The thugs numbering about four held us hostage for nearly thirty minutes, two kept an eye on us while their two colleagues went into the rooms and started harassing people who were in those respective rooms, surely for thirty minutes the police couldn’t arrive” she lamented.

During the incident the thugs took away with them a pistol firearm from one of the patrons who is a licensed firearm holder which they police have vowed to recover from all cost as they claim the pistol might be used for wrong reasons.

The thugs had earlier attacked a bar opposite Dr.Robert Ouko estate where senior government officials stays before going to Raial; Odinga’s owned Royal Citry situated within he centre of the town where they ransacked rooms before robbing patrons who were in both the bar and the restaurant.

“I hardly wish the week to reach Wednesday, this is the time of the week when these thugs strike at will in almost ten places within two hours but we are doing the much we can” said a crimes investigations detective officer who is not authorized to speak to the press.

The issue has taken different views among the residents and law enforcers within the town who say that it might be a sabotage attempt on the part of the police officers who are out to frustrate their seniors whom they accuse of high handedness.

“Some junior police officers charged with stemming the said crimes are of the view that their seniors flex too much muscles on them which they claim really demoralizes them then again the operation wrangles between the general police and the Administration Police Officers” argues a police officer who is not authorized to speak to the press.

But Kisumu East District Commissioner Willy Cheboi has denied any security operations rivalry existence between the APs and the general Police.

“The mode of operation is clear among the two forces and there is no any rivalry which might culminate into them relaxing hence compromising security, lets give credit where it deserves” Cheboi added

Another group of police officers says that their morale is low as it seems that their seniors have put limitations in regard to their way of dealing with criminals.

“There are instances when there is a need to shoot dead some criminals but once we might be attempted to do that our seniors might sacrifice us, we need assurance that we will be protected and we will not take any chances with the criminals” said another officer.

His sentiments was also echoed by another senior officer who says that any killing of acriminal might land a police in problems with the Independent Oversight Police Authority which was created by an act of Parliament to provide for a civilian Oversight of the work of the police ;to promote policing oversight authority to provide for its functions and powers and for connected purposes.

“Are the offences against discipline for police officers still based on the old police act or the new constitution, we are not keen to shoot the criminals but we can if need be” one police officer added

According to the DCIO the trend is likely to change as his office in liaison with Kisumu courts have made mutual agreement which will see his office holding suspects longer than the stipulated twenty hour hours which is required by the law for the suspect to be charged in court.

“To be sincere, the agreement is only mutual and does not exist within any law, however we are ready to swear affidavits to the respective courts to admit that we have the accused within our custody as we continue with our investigations” Ndombi added.

He laments that it’s a fact well known within the security circles that the criminal gangs which ahs been terrorizing the area residents are moistly out on court bonds and some have warrant of arrests within various courts as they go ahead with their criminal acts.

He however defended his officers from allegations that most cases are usually dismissed by courts due to shoddy investigations saying they always do their best as investigators before they take anyone to court but the discretion of conviction or acquittal squarely lies with courts.

In spite of tells and tales from the police, Kisumu residents would wish to go on with their business unperturbed

KENYA: SCORE OF PEOPLE INJURED FOLLOWING THE FIGHTING FOR THE COMPOSITION OF SEME CONSTITUENCY CDF LOCAL DISBURSING COMMITTEE.

Writes Leo Odera Omolo In Kisumu City

Scores of people sustained minor bodily injuries following the fighting which broke out at Manywanda health centre in Seme West Location where the local had gathered to install the new CDF disbursing committee.

Unconfirmed report from the area say, the area MP Dr. James Nyikal left the fighting venue with the torn up long trouser following the fighting which last for close to six hours.

Seme is one of the newly newly created parliamentary constituencies within the Kisumu County having been hived from the old Kisumu Rural constituency whose representative in the 11th parliament was the now ailing Prof. Peter Anyang’ Nyong’o

The Mp had fronted a senior lecturer at the Bondo University to be the new CDF local committee chairman, something which did not please the locals. The security were present mainly the APs, but did not intervene in separating the combatants who were consisting mainly of the ODM youth

The MP left the vanue of the melee quickly and the local people installed the new committee of their own choice after vehemently opposing the one proposed and fronted by the area MP.

Ends

KENYA & WORLD: PRESS DAY MARKED AS TWO JOURNALISTS RECEIVE DEATH THREATS

From: Ouko joachim omolo
The News Dispatch with Omolo Beste in images
FRIDAY, MAY 3, 2013

Today is World Press Freedom Day. Although the day gives people the chance to pay tribute to media professionals who risked or lost their lives in the line of duty, in Kenya as the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) reports-Kenya: 2013 – Committee to Protect Journalists, the day is marked at the time two investigative journalists have received death threats.

Mohammed Ali and John-Allan Namu, investigative journalists from the private KTN television network received threats from anonymous callers and via social networking sites on Wednesday, according to Namu and Willis Angira, associate producer for KTN.

David Ohito, news editor of The Standard, which is also affiliated with KTN, told CPJ that the threats were linked to an investigative story aired on KTN two weeks ago, called “Inside Story: Death in Ten Minutes” that suggested foul play in a helicopter crash that killed former Interior Minister George Saitoti.

It is also being celebrated at the time police were also implicated in the January 2009 murder of Weekly Citizen journalist Francis Nyaruri, shortly after he investigated corruption within the police department.

Nyaruri was brutally murdered in western Kenya in January 2009 while investigating suspected corruption in a police construction project. The investigation has not yielded arrests to date.

Just recently a correspondent for The Star daily newspaper was found dead Sunday morning in his house in the coastal city of Mombasa. A housemate found reporter Bernard Wesonga with blood on his nose and mouth at around 11:30 a.m. according to Star Deputy Editor Charles Kerich.

Local journalists said Wesonga, 27, was with friends at a local pub in Mombasa Saturday night, leaving around 10 p.m. Wesonga had told friends he recently received anonymous threats via text message in connection with a story that described allegations of unlawful shipment and sale of fertilizer that had exceeded its expiration date. Authorities have not established a cause of death.

Against the background that on Saturday, March 9, 2013, US President Barack Obama made a statement in a gala for journalists in Washington that appeared to suggest that Kenya is not a safe destination for foreign correspondents.

“They’ve risked everything to bring us stories from places like Syria and Kenya, stories that need to be told,” he said. Syria is currently in the midst of a bloody civil war that was started on the pretext of removing its dictatorial ruler Assad from power. The conflict in Syria has killed more than 70,000 people.

The period following the Kenya’s last presidential elections in 2007 was marred by widespread ethnic violence. Over a thousand people were killed. Kenya’s journalists, especially those working independently, found themselves the targets of public anger, police intolerance and political fury. Many were threatened, injured, attacked and had equipment damaged or taken.

In Nairobi the day will be marked with two key celebrations:

1)The regional journalists convention – Second Annual Journalism Excellence Awards (AJEA) Gala, an event that seeks to acknowledge, identify and promote excellence in media in Kenya

2) The Executive Council meeting of World Association of Press Councils (WAPC, which will draw participants of press councils from Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda, South Sudan, Somalia Burundi, Zimbabwe, Turkey, Nepal, the United States of America, Pakistan, India, Malawi, and North Cyprus among others.

These events will focus on safety and protection of journalists and encourage Development Journalism in Kenya in respect to Vision 2030.

Each year since 1997, the UNESCO/Guillermo Cano World Press Freedom Prize is awarded to honor the work of an individual or an organization defending or promoting freedom of expression, especially if it puts the individual’s life at risk.

The award is named after a journalist murdered in 1986 after denouncing drug barons. Last year it was awarded posthumously to a Russian investigative reporter who was murdered in a contract-style killing in 2006.

Established by the General Assembly of the United Nations in December 1993 as an outgrowth of the Seminar on Promoting an Independent and Pluralistic African Press, World Press Freedom Day has only been celebrated since 1993. This seminar took place in Namibia in 1991 and led to the adoption of the Windhoek Declaration on Promoting Independent and Pluralistic Media.

It has much deeper roots in the United Nations, Article 19 of the 1948 Universal Declaration on Human Rights which states that everyone “has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers”.

The Windhoek Declaration called to establish, maintain and foster an independent, pluralistic and free press. It emphasized the importance of a free press for developing and maintaining democracy in a nation, and for economic development. World Press Freedom Day is celebrated annually on May 3, the date on which the Windhoek Declaration was adopted.

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

USA: Shut down Guantanamo

From: Manuel de Lizarriturri

Below is an email from Manuel de Lizarriturri, a MoveOn member who started a petition on the MoveOn website, where anyone can start their own online petition.

President Obama: Deliver on your campaign promise and shut down Guantanamo.

Sign the Petition!

http://www.moveon.org/r?r=289657&id=67060-21095459-cBVl2Yx&t=4

Dear MoveOn member,

President Obama promised during his campaign that one of his top priorities would be closing the prison at Guantanamo. The New York Times reported on April 25 that the treatment of detainees is inhumane. It’s time for the president to deliver on his promise, and for Congress to allow him do so.

That’s why I started a petition to the United States Congress and President Barack Obama, which says:

Mr. President, when detainees with no hope of release go on a permanent hunger strike and are force-fed through nasal tubes, America can no longer claim to be the worldwide champion of human rights. How can you sleep at night knowing you have reneged on your campaign promise? Please close the Guantanamo Bay prison now!

visit the address here below to add your name to this petition, and then pass it along to your friends.

http://www.moveon.org/r?r=289657&id=67060-21095459-cBVl2Yx&t=5

Thanks!

–Manuel de Lizarriturri

This petition was created on MoveOn’s online petition site, where anyone can start their own online petitions. Manuel de Lizarriturri didn’t pay us to send this email—we never rent or sell the MoveOn.org list.

Want to support our work? MoveOn Civic Action is entirely funded by our 8 million members—no corporate contributions, no big checks from CEOs. And our tiny staff ensures that small contributions go a long way. Chip in at web address below.
https://civic.moveon.org/donatec4/creditcard.html?cpn_id=457&id=67060-21095459-cBVl2Yx

Kenya: These are some excellent leads

From: Judy Miriga

This is a straightforward case and by now, it would have been concluded.

This is one of such cases that are “A See-Through” and we are convinced that it shall be resolved soon both by the Local and the International community. It will also expose the inside rot stored in Kenya’s Political landscape………

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

– – – – – – – – – – –

— On Thu, 5/2/13, Clara Shegu wrote:
From: Clara Shegu
Subject: Kenyans are now sacaring us/ Kilonzo´s case
Date: Thursday, May 2, 2013, 10:05 AM

Paul, i have no background in medical field but yours is also an opinion on possible cause of death,he could have actually committed suicide so don’t just dismiss it especially his behaviour prior to his death.

But what is coming out as the more likely cause of death is poisoning whether self or third parties.

Who could be the third parties and what could be their motivation?

a) Kilonzo defeated Harun Mwaua in Makueni senator race..drugs and politics

b) Muthama wanted Kalonzo in parliament by all means..political

c) Kilonzo is believed to have secrets about perpetrators of PEV. According to a video of him recorded in Jan 2008, he says he believes PEV was actually planned..ICC

From: Paul Nyandoto
Sent: Thursday, May 2, 2013 8:50 AM
Subject: Kenyans are now sacaring us/ Kilonzo´s case

People:

Polonium 210 in kenyan soil. How did they bring it into kenya?. Our airport detect radioactive substances or not?. May be through sea, or through land.

I hear they are not leaving stones unturned. But what do they want people in the funeral homes or Kilonzo`s family to wear during burial time?. They definately need radiacative protectors.

Why should our media throw such a lethal news, but still want Kilonzo to have a normal burial. Polonium 210 is radioactive, but it hardly kills instantly like Kilonzo´s case. I think that the pathologist should not have released all the details to the public unless they were sure of what they are saying.

It means macroscopic evidences are not enough to give any clue yet. Kilonzo also did not leave any signatures, containers of poison, or needles or writings like it always happens during suicide deaths. Kilonzo was also not of a type who can commit suicide. The man was born a fighter and a winner too. No winning warrior commits suicide. Just go back to Prof Wangari; look that ladies history, how she was treated politically, had even a deadly disease cancer, but never commited suicide. She died from a natural cause. Kenyan politicians hardly kill themselves, life is good for them. So the theory that he may have taken poison and hide the container in the soil outside is zero. Nobody hangs himself and take the rope after death to hide in the bush. Or shoot himself and hide the gun.

Paul

— On Thu, 5/2/13, Jectone Ndunya wrote:
From: Jectone Ndunya
Subject: Kenyans are now sacaring us/ Kilonzo´s case
Date: Thursday, May 2, 2013, 8:43 AM

Do you people believe that the Late Mutula, would have his dinner at 8pm, go to bed with remains of the food still on his bedroom table? I doubt that! and then be seen at 2 am in the garden? doing what? and by whom? was he on phone, seated, standing running or what? where were his security at the vilas at that wee time?

Then he went back to bed with food remains still on the table and slept? i doubt that, Mutula would have cleared the table if the house help had gone to sleep before he went to bed! I told you that, that food mix, ( Githeri, Nyama Choma, fruit drink, etc) were not adding up and i think they may have been placed to confuse investigations!

From the closest of his family member’s, whom did he talk with last according to his phone call history? Do you want to tell me that, from 8 pm, till 1 pm the following day, no one from his Children or wife, contacted his phone? If they did and at what time, and failed to get a response, did they try to contact the workers for information? If so, at what time!

You expect Mutula to keep vital documents in his bed room and which should be out of bounds, do you think the Late would go to bed without locking his bed room door? Not likely!

If the door was that open, why did it take his workers so long to get to his bed room?

Lots of simple questions would solve this instantly!

Jexx in the hood

“Success never resides in the world of weak wishes, but in the palace of purposeful plans and prayerful persistence”

— On Thu, 5/2/13, mohamed warsama wrote:
From: mohamed warsama
Subject: Kenyans are now sacaring us/ Kilonzo´s case
Date: Thursday, May 2, 2013, 1:36 AM

The implication of testing for Polonium poison is obvious: it brings into the investigation radar the lunch Mutula Kilonzo had last Thursday at Norfolk Hotel with Raila, Wako and Muthama, because polonium can take long to react.

Mohamed Warsama

From: Maurice Oduor
Sent: Thursday, May 2, 2013 11:12 AM
Subject: Kenyans are now sacaring us/ Kilonzo´s case

Laktar,

I agree with you. A pathologist or Crime Scene Investigator should never reveal what cause of death is suspected. If a murder, the killer will have an opportunity kujipanga or to hide evidence. I’m surprised that a pathologist from the UK would agree to this. Unless they are doing this as a diversion to lull the killer into peace of mind.

Courage

MIKE SONKO in deep TROUBLE – He cannot access UHURU at State House after stealing 500 MILLION
By Staff27/04/2013 08:12:00 // Kenya News | MIKE SONKO in deep TROUBLE – He cannot access UHURU at State House after stealing 500 MILLION

The Kenyan DAILY POSTPolitics05:12

Saturday April 27, 2013 – Word has it that Nairobi Senator Mike Mbuvi Sonko is now using all means available to access President Uhuru Kenyatta after his earlier efforts of meeting the President hit a dead end.

According to some sources, Sonko has resorted to bribing some security officials attached to the Presidential Escort as a way of getting access to State House.

The flamboyant MP, who was a key pillar in the Jubilee Alliance campaigns, has found himself on the rough side since the day President Uhuru was sworn in as President.

He has been thrown out of Uhuru’s entourage and it has been made clear that he is not wanted near State House after he failed to account for the huge sums of money he was given during the campaigns.

Rumor has it that Sonko was given more than Sh 500 million by Uhuru, but he is unable to account on how he spent the money during the Jubilee campaigns.

Big Kenya names hire and plot for power
Alternative text.
By BERNARD NAMUNANE bnamunane@ke.nationmedia.com ( email the author)

Posted Tuesday, December 27 2011 at 22:30

Many of the presidential hopefuls spent the Christmas holiday putting final touches on their preparations for next year’s campaigns.

The 2012 presidential race is crowded, attracting more candidates than any other election since the re-introduction of multiparty politics in 1992.

Prime Minister Raila Odinga, who starts the race in pole position by virtue of being the contender leading the biggest party, has also made some radical changes.

Out goes the old Orange Democratic Movement party slogan “Chungwa Moja Maisha Bora” and in comes a new slogan, “Change We Need”.

Vice-President Kalonzo Musyoka, another candidate who is buoyed by the trappings of incumbency, has gone a step further and renamed his party, Orange Democratic Movement-Kenya. It is now called Wiper Democratic Movement.

Other strong contenders are Deputy Prime Minister Uhuru Kenyatta, Internal Security minister George Saitoti and MPs William Ruto (Eldoret North) and Martha Karua (Gichugu).

Also in the race are Deputy Prime Minister Musalia Mudavadi, assistant minister Peter Kenneth, Foreign Affairs minister Moses Wetang’ula, former Cabinet minister Raphael Tuju, MPs Mutava Musyimi (Gachoka), Eugene Wamalwa (Saboti), and Education permanent secretary James ole Kiyiapi.

The aspirants are spending heavily, buying helicopters, setting up campaign secretariats, hiring staff at county levels and retaining campaign experts and PR gurus to clean up their image.

Mr Odinga, vying for the presidency for a third time, has set up four separate offices in Nairobi with former Kenya Ports Authority chief Brown Ondego leading the fundraising team.

He is yet to appoint a person to lead his main secretariat and double up as the campaign manager.

The appointment of lawyer Paul Mwangi as his legal adviser has been interpreted to mean that the PM wants his core campaign team to reflect the face of Kenya. (READ: Lawyer Mwangi appointed to replace Miguna)

Sources said the secretariats will be led by professionals and business people.

Several lobbies such as Friends of Raila, ODM Network Team, ODM Youth for 2012 and ODM Women Congress have joined his campaign.

A group of professionals from the Rift Valley has been formed to counter the anti-Raila wave in the region, and a coordinator is expected to head his campaigns in the diaspora.

Campaign website

When you log onto his campaign website, www.railaforpresident2012.com, you will be hit by the ‘Change is Coming’ message and hip-hop songs by local artistes, including Kigeugeu by Jaquar.

Mr Odinga has also set up several Twitter and Facebook accounts to woo voters on the social media.

Mr Musyoka has, on more than one occasion, declared that the 2012 presidential race is between him and Mr Odinga.

The party has two secretariats, one at the headquarters in Wiper House, Kileleshwa and another in Lavington.

Prof Marete Marangu leads the main secretariat, while Brig (rtd) Henry Rop is at Wiper House.

He has also brought on board lawyer Donald Kipkorir and Nominated MPs Ahmed Affey and Shakila Abdalla to win Muslim votes. Mr Musyoka also enjoys the backing of prominent parastatal heads.

“The secretariats are only on provisional basis since the Vice-President is an active member of the PNU Alliance,” said his spokesman, Mr Kaplich Barsito.

Mr Musyoka, who will be making the second attempt at the presidency, has opened offices in the United Kingdom to lead the hunt for the diaspora vote.

He argues that he is not a tribalist and wants Kenyans to elect a ‘servant leader’. He has a website, www.mykalonzomusyoka.com and several Twitter and Facebook accounts.

Mr Kenyatta, who recently regained control of Kanu, wants to take a second stab at the presidency after losing to President Kibaki in 2002.

Also a member of the G7 Alliance, the Deputy Prime Minister and Finance minister has picked some of the people who led President Kibaki’s re-election in 2007.

Top business people

His main secretariat is based at Chancery House, but he is yet to appoint the head. Mr Kenyatta has two other campaign offices, one in Lavington and the other at the UK Centre in the city.

Those working closely on his campaign include State House political advisor Nancy Gitau, former MPs Justin Muturi and David Murathe, Mr Alfred Gitonga and Mr Kenyatta’s long time personal assistant, Njee Muturi. Top business people and parastatal heads are also coalescing around Mr Kenyatta.

Mr Kenyatta has a chopper at his disposal, has extensive links with Kenyans in the diaspora and runs a website, www.uhuru.co.ke.

His aides are also active on the social media, often releasing statements on Twitter and Facebook.

Mr Ruto, who will be vying for the presidency for the first time, has opened a secretariat in Kileleshwa headed by Mr Sande Oyolo and another office for his party, the United Democratic Movement (UDM).

He has a think-tank comprising university lecturers and business people managing all aspects of his campaigns, from raising funds to preparing a manifesto.

“I am contesting the presidency not because I want power, but because I feel that as a person who has at one time walked to school barefoot, I understand problems facing Kenyans from all walks. Kenyans require leaders who can deliver them from poverty,” he said.

He has ordered a helicopter, runs www.williamsamoeiruto.co.ke, is active on Twitter and Facebook and has a dedicated short text message number, 7777, for interacting with supporters.

But like Mr Kenyatta, his push for the house on the hill seems to be held back by the pending case at the International Criminal Court in The Hague.

Ms Karua (Narc Kenya) and Prof Saitoti (PNU) have established their secretariats in Kilimani and Lavington, respectively.

Ms Karua runs www.marthakarua.wetpaint.com and launched her presidential bid this year. She is the most active aspirant on Twitter and Facebook.

Even though seen as outsiders, Mr Tuju and Mr Kenneth have covered a lot of ground in their bids for the presidency. Mr Tuju has two secretariats, runs www.raphaeltuju.com and is active on Twitter and Facebook.

Mr Kenneth is said to have acquired a second helicopter and recently launched his manifesto for the presidency.

He runs www.peterkenneth.com and has revived Kenya National Congress (KNC) as his vehicle to State House.

“We are actually shopping for a running mate. I cannot be somebody else’s running mate.

“There has never been any discussion with any presidential aspirant. Kenya needs ability, vision and energy, not a name or fame,” he says.

He is also setting up party offices in Lavington, and is recruiting members.

“We will focus on fewer things that have more impact on the economy. Most of my campaigns will be based on town hall meetings,” he says.

Prof Kiyiapi has been criss-crossing the country seeking support, but is the only aspirant without a party.

Perhaps he will disclose his political network when he steps down as Education PS and hits the ground running.

The Headliner: Garissa residents say police should change tact

Published on Apr 30, 2013
http://www.ntv.co.ke
An uneasy calm continues to prevail in Garissa after a week of police operations to flush out those behind the series of grenade and gun attacks. But questions still abound as to why the town has since December 2011 remained vulnerable to attacks. And whether security officials in an effort to curb crime in the county have been going about it the right way. NTV’s Sheila Sendeyo reports on this week’s headliner

Kalonzo Courts Kalembe

Published on Apr 29, 2013
http://www.ntv.co.ke
Daniel Owira stood in front of the President, giving a memorable performance, an experience he says he could never have dreamed of. This experience is in total contrast to his reality, one of a single-roomed shack in one of the city’s slums with a torturous time every start of term to get school fees. And as the re-opening date for second term neared, Daniel was a worried boy, but today, he needs not worry. His plea for an education fell on the right ears and his dreams to be a lawyer are no longer just that… they might actually come to fruition.

CORD Steps Up Musyoka Comeback Plan

Published on Apr 24, 2013
Efforts to get former Vice President Kalonzo Musyoka into Parliament have gone a notch higher with deliberations and consultations now geared towards getting Kibwezi West MP Dr. Patrick Musimba to step down for him. And just to be sure, those keen to have Musyoka as the next Kibwezi MP have since approached former area MP Kalembe Ndile who lost narrowly to Musimba seeking to persuade him not to contest should there be a by election.

Mutula Opposed To MPs Stepping Aside For Kalonzo

Published on Apr 18, 2013
Nominated Makueni senator Mutula Kilonzo is opposed to the option of having nominated MPs in the national assembly step aside to give way to the former VP Kalonzo Musyoka return to the house. Speaking exclusively to K24, Mutula said the move would be against article 97 of the constitution.

Kalonzo’s return to Parliament hits a snag

Published on Apr 16, 2013
http://www.ntv.co.ke
The Cord coalition’s plan to have former Vice President Kalonzo Musyoka return to parliament appears to have hit a snag. While it has been reported that several MPs are ready to give up their seats for the former VP, those being mentioned are denying such reports. NTV’s Enock Sikolia reports.

Kalonzo to go back to parliament

Published on Apr 15, 2013
Watch KTN Streaming LIVE from Kenya 24/7 on http://www.ktnkenya.tv

— On Wed, 5/1/13, Tebiti Oisaboke wrote:

From: Tebiti Oisaboke
Subject: MIKE SONKO IN DEEP TROUBLE
Date: Wednesday, May 1, 2013, 5:14 PM

I pity him too. Now he is in much more hot waters than he was during the Kibaki administration. No wonder he bowed twice to Junior and his assistant to and from the ballot box during the Senate speaker’s elections. The duo had graced the occasion to witness how the folks they “poured” millions of Kenya shillings voted. During the parliamentary speaker’s elections following the 2007 general elections, the Mt Kenya goons greased the freshman MP for Embakasi to purchase his vote so that he could vote for their preferred candidate. The Mt. Kenyans didn’t have majority in the house so they wanted to purchase some votes from the majority ODM’s party to win the seat. However, Hon Were pocketed the cash and voted for the ODM candidate (Hon Marende). When the Mt. Kenya realized that, Hon Were never delivered his “cherished” goods they had already signed the invoice for, they were so upset and ordered for his elimination. And that is what eat Hon Were and not what Mutahi Ngunyi is trying to lie to us. The Ainamoi MP who lost his life by the road side, was involved in a love triangle with a police officer who was dating her colleague. ODM had nothing to do with this as Ngunyi is trying to defend those crooks who are out to exterminate our brilliant brains. ODM never deployed the officer who shot and killed the MP along with his darling baby come baby. That was their own business on the side.

Coming back to Sonko Bin Mbuvi, I am surprised to learn that the one million cash he distributed to Harambee Stars at JKI Airport upon their arrival from Lagos, Nigeria was stolen money. I wondered how in the world could a crook arm himself with 1M cash Patin-Moi’s “Jirongoes” and distribute it freely in the open to members of the public in this modern 21st Century world. I couldn’t phantom why he chose to do it that way instead of drawing a check to the team so that they can cash it. Doesn’t he know how the check system works?

God bless Kenya as we move and forge backwards

TOI

From: ROSE KAGWIRIA
Sent: Wednesday, May 1, 2013 3:59 PM
Subject: MIKE SONKO IN DEEP TROUBLE

Poor mike. Yes he campaigned for jublee but who told him he will sit in state house after that. I really pity him. If he was cleaver, he would have campaigned for his brother Kalonzo. Now I understand why people were running towards one direction for campaign. Kumbe there was so much money?

http://www.kenyan-post.com/2013/04/mike-sonko-in-deep-trouble-he-cannot.html

MIKE SONKO in deep TROUBLE – He cannot access UHURU at State House after stealing 500 MILLION

By Staff27/04/2013 08:12:00 // Kenya News | MIKE SONKO in deep TROUBLE – He cannot access UHURU at State House after stealing 500 MILLION

The Kenyan DAILY POSTPolitics05:12

Saturday April 27, 2013 – Word has it that Nairobi Senator Mike Mbuvi Sonko is now using all means available to access President Uhuru Kenyatta after his earlier efforts of meeting the President hit a dead end.

According to some sources, Sonko has resorted to bribing some security officials attached to the Presidential Escort as a way of getting access to State House.

The flamboyant MP, who was a key pillar in the Jubilee Alliance campaigns, has found himself on the rough side since the day President Uhuru was sworn in as President.

He has been thrown out of Uhuru’s entourage and it has been made clear that he is not wanted near State House after he failed to account for the huge sums of money he was given during the campaigns.

Rumor has it that Sonko was given more than Sh 500 million by Uhuru, but he is unable to account on how he spent the money during the Jubilee campaigns.

Kenya: Scapegoating: Mutula feared for his life: Muthama

from: Judy Miriga

Good People,

Because of these outbursts here under, Muthama must be given police protection and if the Government fail to do that and incase Mutham is killed, then the Leadership has himself to face legal justice as this will be seen as pre-plan terrorist tactics to intimidate and cover-up for the true killer or Mutham will be now used as a scape-goat for cover-up.

Let justice take its rightful course, if it is Muthama, then justice shall reveal; but jumping the gun is in a way taking law on your hands……..

and it shall be unacceptable……

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

– – – – – – – – – –

— On Wed, 5/1/13, Judy Miriga wrote:

Good People !!!

God’s spirits do not lie……The truth shall come out very soon.

More pressure and the whole truth will come out……

Speak up people before all of you perish……………

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

Muthama: Mutula feared for his life

Published on Apr 30, 2013
http://www.ntv.co.ke
In the senate on Tuesday, Johnstone Muthama sensationally claimed that the late Makueni Senator Mutula Kalonzo had expressed fears about his safety. Muthama said the late Mutula had warned that his life and that of the former Prime Minister alongside his very own were in danger. He spoke as MPs asked the government to ensure it unravels the mystery surrounding Mutula’s sudden death. Brenda Wanga has the update from the two houses.

Mutula feared for his life: Muthama

By ISAAC ONGIRI iongiri@ke.nationmedia.com AND JOHN NJAGI jnjagi@ke.nationmedia.com
Posted Tuesday, April 30 2013 at 23:30

In Summary
Senators pay tribute to departed colleague as Muthama claims Mutula had raised fears over his life

Makueni Senator Mutula Kilonzo had raised fears over his life 48 hours before he was mysteriously found dead at his Maanzoni home, it has now emerged.

Machakos Senator Johnson Muthama on Tuesday told the Senate that Mr Kilonzo had casually raised issues about his life when they met over lunch together with former Prime Minister Raila Odinga at the Norfolk Hotel on Thursday afternoon.

“He told the former PM that you and all of us here are not safe. Our lives are in danger,” Mr Muthama said.

He said he received news of the senator’s death on Saturday at 11.05am before rushing to his home immediately to find out what had gone wrong.

The Machakos Senator was contributing to an adjournment motion moved by the Leader of Majority Kithure Kindiki to give senators time to pay tribute to their departed colleague.

Planned meeting

“We had lunch at the Norfolk hotel with him (Mr Kilonzo), (David) Musila and the PM on Thursday and we had planned to meet again this Thursday,” Mr Muthama said.

He, however, did not divulge the details of the discussion on their security and what the agenda of the meeting they planned to hold on Thursday would have been.

His remarks were, however, dismissed by Nominated Senator Beth Mugo who termed them “largely unfounded”.

“It is not fair for leaders to make inflammatory remarks while mourning a great leader like Mutula. Let us not incite one region against the other. If any life is in danger let us report to the police,” Mrs Mugo said.

While paying tribute to Mr Kilonzo, Siaya Senator James Orengo said he met the Makueni leader at the Senate chambers on Thursday where he looked disturbed and distraught.

Said Mr Orengo: “I met him on Thursday and told him Mr Mutula you have not spoken in the Senate, what is wrong? He looked tired and distraught. He then told me there is nothing to talk about.”

The Siaya Senator further told the House it was strange that in every election, Kenya has to lose great leaders through strange deaths, citing the cases of former MPs George Kapten and Masinde Muliro who also died suddenly and mysteriously.

While paying tribute to the fallen colleague, Minority Leader Moses Wetang’ula urged investigators, police and doctors leading the inquiry into Mr Kilonzo’s death to do a thorough job to allay fears of foul play.

Mr Wetang’ula, who is also the Bungoma Senator, said he learnt a lot from the Makueni leader during his pupillage at his law firm in 1981.

Murang’a Senator Kembi Gitura urged his colleagues not to join the fray of people peddling conspiracy theories surrounding Mr Kolonzo’s death and instead leave investigators to conduct their work to unearth the truth.

Mr Kilonzo’s colleagues eulogised him as a brilliant lawyer, who spoke his mind without fear, and one who transcended ethnic divisions in his work as a politician and Cabinet minister.

Elgeyo Marakwet’s Kipchumba Murkomen said the Makueni Senator’s brilliance inspired them to pursue the law career.

Meru Senator Kiraitu Murungi described Mr Kilonzo as a man of all seasons, saying even though he was in the end removed from the Justice ministry, he managed to steer it with a light head and heart.

Speaker Ekwee Ethuro formed a six-member committee to work with other teams in arranging the burial of the Makueni Senator.

Kenya: GOD FINALLY HEARS THE CRY FOR JUSTICE BY BUTERE GIRLS

From: Ouko joachim omolo
*The News Dispatch with Omolo Beste in images*
THURSDAY, APRIL 18, 2013

At last the High Court has lifted a ban on the controversial play ‘Shackles of Doom’ by Butere Girls High School saying the move by the government was unlawful. Justice David Majanja ordered that the play must be shown because the Constitution does not allow a ban and it is not enough for the ministry of Education to ban it without reason.

Banned without reason because what the play depicts is real in Kenya. The play captures national ills of nepotism and tribalism which has tempered with development in Kenya since 1963 when Kenya got independence. The play was allegedly banned by the Kenya Schools and Colleges Drama Festival Executive Secretary Patrick Sirengo Khaemba.

The suit was filed by human rights activist and a long time friend of mine Okiya Omtatah.

The Permanent Secretary for Education George Godia and Attorney General Githu Muigai were listed as respondents.

Shackles of doom is play that depicts a film shoot set in the land of the Kanas, who refer to themselves as the TRUE KANAS, their land is oil rich but they are ignorant of the treasure that lies beneath their soil….a delegation arrives to their land and offer a beautiful lady – Wamaitha, to be married off to Lopush who is “Kana” in exchange of land where they settle.

Wamaitha is 3 weeks pregnant when they come and Kimani who is purported to be her guardian is responsible, she is married off against her will and her community with great determination and strong will construct “Mafuta Oil Refinery Company”.

During appointing of human resource, job opportunities are given with biasness and nepotism! The people of Kana demand for equal opportunities but are dismissed; only one person is considered from the marginalised community but as a watchman.

On the eve of Lopush and Wamaitha’s wedding, Kimani who is the CEO of the refinery company has an order to deliver 600 barrels of oil and dictates that everybody works on the night shift including those who were on duty during daytime. Lopush is not spared either because of his wedding that is coming up at the break of dawn; he is forced to be on duty as a security officer.

Kimani invades Lopush’s house demanding for intimacy from Wamaitha, of which she declines and they are caught up in the argument by Lopush who has absconded his duty in rebellion. Kimani hides in the children’s bedroom but unfortunately Lopush finds him, Wamaitha insists that the daughter can bare her witness that she did not fornicate.

As a matter of bad fortune she finds the daughter dead, still and lifeless when she goes to wake her up. Kimani is accused of her demise. A technical hitch occurs in the Mafuta Oil Refinery Company and there is a fire breakout at about the same time, angry villagers are summoned and just when they want to deal with the accused murderer (Kimani), his wife calls and says they are trapped in an inferno and Lopush has the keys to all the exits.

The whole village rush to help but they find a tragic scene, everyone has been consumed by the inferno, Wamaitha breaks news that her dead daughter was Kimani’s child.

The film director calls for cut and signifies end of their shooting, one member of the cast however retorts that the film has no credible resolution and cannot compete favourably, she suggests that all the communities be equally represented in employment opportunities for good relations, harmony and peaceful coexistence. Cameras were rolling in the meantime and the director terms the resolution to be credible.

The play is* written by award winning play-wright Cleophas Malalah, the Kakamega MCA for Mariakalo Ward. The play won Zonal, Divisional, District, Regional levels but banned from being staged at the National Drama Festivals set for Mombasa this month on claims that play is hate speech.*

* *

*The play calls for a thorough clean up of the mess in government key position jobs awarded to one particular ethnic and regional community. It calls for clean up in the *Ministry of Internal Security and Provincial Administrative beginning with Permanent secretary post, CID Director, GSU post, NSC – Peace and Conflict Management, Government Printer and Senior Director Administration/Internal Security.

Other messes that the play calls upon for a clean up include the Finance Ministry beginning with Permanent Secretary, Pensions secretary, ERD director, D/Finance secretary, and Controller and Auditor General.

Another key position the play calls upon for a clean up include Central Bank beginning with its Govern, Deputy Governor, Kenya Revenue Authority Commissioner General, Board Secretary, Senior Deputy Commissioner, Investigation and Enforcement, Deputy Commissioner, Administration and Deputy Commissioner Procurement.

Other key positions that need clean up include Commissioner for customs services, Senior Deputy Commissioner (Customs), Deputy Commissioner, Finance and Commissioner Domestic Taxes (LTO).

Senior Assistant Commissioner, Security, Senior Deputy Commissioner, Southern Region and Commissioner of Investigation and Enforcement post- Kenya Airports Authority MD, and General Manager Finance.

General Manager Marketing and Business Development, General Manager Information and Communication, Technology, General Manager Security Services, Head of Corporate Communications / PA to the MD, and Head of Procurement and Logistics.

Ministry of Industrialization, Chairman of the National Standards Council, Permanent Secretary, and Chairman of the Board-Kenya Power and Lighting Company (KPLC)- Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer.

Company Secretary, Chief Manager, Energy Transmission, Commercial Services, Distribution Chief Manager, Planning, Research and Performance Monitoring; Eng. Kenya Petroleum Refineries General Manager, Finance Manager, Human Resource Manager and Engineering Manager.

It is Kenyan people’s hope that after Sunday performance by Butere Girls High School Drama Club, current government headed by Hon Ohuru Kenyatta and his Deputy William Ruto would have heard the cry of these tender girls, crying for their beloved country Kenya-to act and made balance in these key posts among other posts.

*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*
* *

ARMED CONFLICT IN THE DR CONGO PUT TANZANIA INTO A CATCH 22 POINTS AS IT IS CONFLICTING WITH DAR’S SADC MEMBERSHIP.

Writes Leo Odera Omolo

Information emerging from the Tanzania’s commercial capital Dar Es Salaam says that armed conflict in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo is likely to shift to the East African Legislative Assembly this week with the regional parliament taking Tanzania to task over its support for a new UN sanctioned peacekeeping force following the recent breakdown talks between the M23 rebels and Kinshasa government.

Tanzania currently chairs the Southern African Development Community {SADC} peace and security Council, that political pundits and analysts argue that leaning towards SADC give Dar’s conflicting obligation to the international conferee on the Great Lakes and east African community, leaves on a collision course with Uganda and Rwanda, which are vehemently opposed to troop deployment under the UN.

A Ugandan member of the East African Legislative Assembly Fred Mukasa Mbidde was last week quoted as having tabled a motion at the regional parliament asking Tanzania to support the position that “military confrontation can only escalate war”.

THe EALA member said, ”Our position is based on three facts,
One, that Uganda and Rwanda may be drawn into an unnecessary war,
Two, that Uganda and Rwanda sometimes, Tanzania always suffer the humanitarian burden,
Third, war can only lead to further proliferation of arms in the region.”

The motion at the EALA meeting which is scheduled for April 16 will also propose that SADC AND THE un Security Council resolution or an “offensive international peacekeeping force” against M23 rebels be kept in abeyance to give dialogue a chance.

The newly elected Kenyan head of state President Uhuru Muigai Kenyatta will attend the EALA meeting o the first time since winning his presidential race on 4 March 2013.

However, this latest development comes as Tanzania prepares to seek parliamentary approval for its troops participation in the mission when the government tables on 3 May 2013, the Ministry o Defense and National Service budget, which its national security council has already endorsed.

Tanzania is also engaged in other UN peace keeping missions in Liberia,Sierra Leone,Ivory Coast and Sudan It has committed itself to deploying 850 troops in the DR Congo, part of UN Security Council sanctioned 2,000 –man “Intervention Brigade” approved a week ago.South Africa is another SADC member state wit economic interest in the SADC has also agreed to contribute troops, according to the Uganda EALA member Mbide.

The M23 rebels and the Kinshasa government of President Laurent Kabila have been in talks aimed at ending fighting which ha claimed many lives and displaced thousands since late last year when a section of rebels that had joined government after brokered deal opted out and resumed fighting citing marginalization.

A UN probe committee accused Rwanda and Uganda of supporting the M23, but Uganda was .Kampala in spite of the accusations, brokered the dialogue between the belligerents citing the talks broke two months ago following a violent split in the M23 leadership. Uganda’s Defense Minister Dr Crispus Kiyonga however, continued with the efforts to brig the belligerents back to the talking table.

The Permanent secretary in the Ugandan ‘s ministry of Foreign affairs James Mugume dismissed talks as ridiculous exercise between Uganda and Tanzania.

He said, It is entirely untrue. We are currently hosting SADC and EAC Joint Chief of Staff we are doing truck carrot we are supporting dialogue but if dialogue fails then members can resort to other means of resoling the conflicts ,he added.

Mbidde said the regional parliament {EALA} has ten a position for dialogue and Tanzania position for troop deployment is against this spiriti of dialogue

Ends

KENYA: TERROR GANGS ARE STILL KILLING PEOPLE UNABATED IN OYUGIS TOWN AS A CHIEF INSPECTOR OF POLICE DIES IN A SAVAGE PANGA ATTACK.

Reports Leo Odera Omolo

POLITICALLY motivated thuggery which was so rampant in Oyugis town during the recently concluded general elections is still thriving prompting the residents to call upon the Provincial Administration and police authorities to declare the town an emergency area.

Oyugis town is the largest commercial an administrative town in Rachuonyo south district. The residents want the authorities to intensify night police patrols of this busy commercial town after close to three people have been reported killed by night gangsters.

The town became so much prone to thuggery during the recently concluded general election, when marauding went into the rampage of hunting or the supports of different and preferable candidates with machetes and other crude weapons.

Last weekend, a Chief Inspector of Police who was in-charge of the prosecution Oyugis courts became the latest victims of thuggery. The officer was walking back to his house after purchasing some milk in the shops in the town when the attackers whose numbers remained unknown pounced on him with pangas and other crude weapons.

Other unconfirmed sources said tat Chief Inspector John Kipyegon was armed with his services revolved, which the thus I suspected to have stolen. He was found by a good Samaritan who rushed him to Kisii hospital about 32 kilometers away where he was pronounced dead before receiving treatment. The incident occurred at about 8.p.m

Another young man who was walking to his home in Kokal village, which is located next to Oyugis town was killed in similar circumstances. Oyugis own, which is located right in the middles of the main Kisumu-Kisii road which houses the main-bus terminals.

Thugs are said to be targeting those travelers alighting out of Matatus and county buses late in the evenings. Several people have reported being attacked by gangs said to be numbering between six and eight, but so far no arrests have been made despite of the town having a full fledged and well equipped police station.

The former MP for Kasipul-Kabondo William Oloo Otula appealed to the area OCPD whose offices are situated at Kosele district headquarter to consider increasing the number of officers to be on patrol of Oyugis town to stamp out insecurity there.

The fast growing Oyugis town, he said, is yawning or investment, but as the situation stands today, he said no sane person would risk investing his/her money in the crime prone town.

Otula appealed with the officers from the CID department operating the area to work closely with the local population so as to enhance the security of the area.

Since the election is long over, bands of youths hitherto marauding youths who were supporting various parliamentary aspirant I he area should be disbanded and it is up to their members to embark on gainful development activities instead of thuggery, aid one trader in Oyugis town.

Ends

KENYA: THE SAITOTI REPORT MUST BE RELEASED TO THE WORLD NOW

From: Nyambok, Thomas

THE SAITOTI REPORT MUST BE RELEASED BEFORE THE WORLD.SAITOTI WAS KILLED SO THAT UHURU KENYATTA COULD HAVE A WAY TO BE THE FOURTH PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF KENYA AFTER MWAI KIBAKI

There is a brighter prospect of Barack Obama visiting his father’s home Land during his presidency and touting the gains of democracy in Africa.

No doubt the post election politics in Kenya are of interest to the International community for a number of reasons. It will determine the countries relationship with the United States where Barack Obama, a Kenya-American, is the president.

It is clear that elections, corruption, transparency and political participation are perennial challenges facing nearly 1.2billion African Citizens.

The United Nations has one of its headquarters in Nairobi, Kenya’s Capital and therefore they have a stake in the future stability of the East African Country.

The forces of nationalism and patriotism among Kenyans have also been responsible for the elections’ outcome, surely an unintended consequence of prosecuting a nationalist of Kenyatta’s stature at International Criminal Court.

The rigged electoral votes for Kenyatta was made to look like votes were cast for Kenyatta by Kenyans in protest of his Indictment by the International Criminal Court, and other western collaborators for crimes against humanity that Kenyatta allegedly committed after the 2007/08 election.

The retired presidents are culprits for killing Kenyans, the genocide that have been executed by this thugs, mafia and mungiki should bee addressed by Kenyans and by the International Community before this retired presidents dies, they have to be taken to court some where not in Kenya because they are corrupt as they buy Kenyan’s Judiciary from Chief Justice, Attorney General and parliament, 80%Congress are in their hands, once red briefcase is lifted up they gung to gather to oppose the International Criminal Courts.

There is nothing like ICC, ICC is in their hands so Kenyans’ you will be forced to enter into the cord of 6666 other wise you will bee left behind time this is true and watch.

Since 1963 have you ever seen or having knowledge of knowing any prominent Kenyan that have been prosecuted for any wrong doing? No, Why’ because they are protected by the 6666 cord system from the masters using the powers from the devil to make sure that Judiciary is only for the middle class and for the poor see the Kenyan’s jails and prisons statistic.

KENYANS’ WAKE UP CALL FOR TOMORROW WILL BE FAMILLIES THAT WILL BE KILLED AS HAS BEEN DONE TO OTHERS IN THE PAST.

Dear Kenyans and the world at large, it is pathetic to have Kenyans being killed just like dogs by a few individuals around the presidency. I have been mentioning about the system and the methods that the State House does it’s poaching among tribal lines – the house of the people, the state house, is being misused for every execution exercise. They plan how some innocent or notorious Kenyans can be executed and the government goes free. The system of killings is really working from State House Nairobi successfully.

The killings are done in order to elect those who are the members of the evil clubs. Kenyans are competent with my reports as I have been reporting about the reach Kenyans and the money. I have been giving reports including the time when Jomo Kenyatta took over the leadership. It becomes a usual system as Arap Moi took over the presidency from J. Kenyatta in 1978.

Watch, the leadership of Mwai Kibaki is all about killing innocent Kenyans especially during the 2007/08 Genocide. He is getting away with the two reports from the two commissions. Why can’t former presidents reveal the secrets in the numerous commission’s findings – are the reports kept secret to protect those who were mentioned in these reports.

And now the three presidents have shown Uhuru all the methods to use for killing innocent people. Killing will still continue in Kenya till Jesus comes back, or till some wise Kenyan will have away to set Kenyans free from the bondage of evil.

Kasarani stadium was used to commemorate the day wrangles and fighting professor Saitoti started so that Uhuru Kenyatta would take over from Arap Moi for Kanu to be in power for one hundred years as Moi promised.

Raila Odinga and Professor Saitoti left Kanu party to start new collisions to succeed the Moi Uhuru project. Kasarani stadium was used for Uhuru Kenyatta’s inauguration day to burry Professor Saitoti’s ghost. Kenyans must demand the recorded video’s on the day Moi and Saitoti fell apart for Uhuru Kenyatta to succeed Moi. That’s why Raila Odinga and Saitoti decided to leave Kanu party.

Kenyan’s, it is time to wake up and to work together before this former presidents die. Kenyans must stand straight and demand to know why Saitoti was killed by the presidency’s mafia machinery from State house Nairobi. Killing plans got executed by Moi, Kibaki and Uhuru Kenyatta. Professor Saitoti was killed because he was more powerful than Uhuru.

Kenyans must demand the tapes that were recorded on the first day Moi, Saitoti and Raila Odinga’s relationship fell apart at Kasarani stadium when Moi declared Uhuru Kenyatta as his project.

Kenyans, remember that after they had executed the late professor Saitoti, Moi took his Crocodile tears to Saitoti’s family house as he did to Dr. Robert Ouko?

Remember, Uhuru Kenyatta and Kibaki contested the presidency one time – both of them are from Kikuyu Land and what happened between Raila and Kibaki was that Raila got in between Kibaki and Uhuru and used the words of only Kibaki is enough (Kibaki tosha). This happened because Raila knew that Uhuru was Moi’s project and by all means, Uhuru was to be rigged in just the same way they succeeded this time round.

Kenyans should know that they are at risk of living with Moi’s Kanu party under Uhuru’s ambrella. Kanu is ruling now, not Jubilee. That’s why Biwott is at a higher smiling point. They used mafia machinery for the successful execution to make rigging as the norm.

The rituals are done by executing prominent Kenyans and Intellectuals while rich people receive red briefcases from Kabarak. Those who got the red briefcase will have to pay back by sacrificing themselves or their family members soon.

Remember, you could be smiling with these mafia people today, and tomorrow, you’ll never know, you may find that you’re in the execution list for the next kill as a sacrifice for riches – blood money.

Kenyans, let’s use the wisdom and the commonsense we were given by God. God wants us to be very careful about things that are not done in his way, hold your Bible with your right hands higher up if you are a true Christian don’t copy the former presidents who never held Bible for the truth but for the evil motives don’t love money too much brothers and sisters you will find your self at sine.

Kenya is still at stake of 6666.

Yours faithfully Tom Nyambok and all be blessed. 4/12/2013.

Kenya: Supreme Court Struggles With Written Opinion In Dismissed Raila Petition

from: Samuel Omwenga

http://omwenga.com/2013/04/12/supreme-court-struggles-with-written-opinion-in-dismissed-raila-petition/
Supreme Court Struggles With Written Opinion In Dismissed Raila Petition

I have learned from a reliable source the Supreme Court has been struggling to put together a written opinion not so much so to convince us Kenyans that their decision was right but to avoid being viewed with disdain among the international jurisprudential community.

The Court’s primary concern is having been recently heralded in both Kenya and in international circles as an emerging model of African jurisprudence operating in an independent environment without interference from outside, that notion is on balance and how the court explains its decision will determine whether that notion still holds or not.

In other words, whether the Court is deemed to be finally independent and judicious all depends on its written opinion, an opinion I have also learned from a different source will be issued on Tuesday.

There are a number of factual contradictions flying in the face of the Court’s decision that the Court must convincingly explain but one that stands out the most, is the Court’s own re-tallying which clearly shows inflation of votes in Jubilee strongholds and deflation of votes in Cord strongholds.

Although the numbers evincing this was small in the pre-decision partial results for the Court to get away with dismissing as “insignificant,” which is laughable, anyway, as each vote counts, it is believed the final results of the Court’s own ordered re-tallying shows an inflation and deflation of numbers the Court cannot possibly dismiss as insignificant and thus the reason many are dying to see what the explanation is.

I can confidently state based on what I know there is no explanation the Court will provide that can make sense even to those propagating it.

But something must be offered as an explanation and what that is is what we await knowing it’ll have a direct bearing on the Court’s credibility as the final arbiter of justice in our beloved country.

Peace, Unity and Truth

Omwenga

World: Reflections on The Fog of (Cyber)War

From: Yona Maro

This paper aims at assessing some widespread assertions related to the highly controversial issue of cyberwar. It does so by using the following approach: First, it reviews the original concept of cyberwar according to its original employ. Second, it presents three general controversial assertions synthesized from the qualitative content analysis of selected academic publications, landmark documents, and news accounts.

Link:
http://www.umass.edu/digitalcenter/research/working_papers/13_001_Canabarro-Borne_FogofCyberWar.pdf


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