Category Archives: Kenya

Kenya: Blame Siaya Council Elections on Raila – Oduya, Maurice where are you!

From: Judy Miriga

Maurice,

Following what Okinda and others have commented, we look forward that you charge directly on the ODM Officials in defense of Mrs. Elizabeth Owino. She truely and rightly won fairly and squarely ……. and let her not be intimidated and robbed off her victory…….

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

– – – – – – – – – – –

— On Wed, 7/13/11, jt okinda wrote:

I happen to come from siaya and know both the outgoing council chairman and mama Elizabeth. It was a big shame for those of us who profess democracy and are national officials of odm for our party to be associated with such filth! As I have said before, it is the right of the voter to vote for a man/woman of his/her choice no matter the preference of some of us. Voters always have second chances if they vote in a wrong person. What happened in Siaya is of criminal nature. I called the D.C. and expressed the same sentiments that those who broke the law be taken to court without any further delay. Mama Elizabeth is a respected grandmother to be subjected to barbaric action by those who have no respect for free choice. I condemned it in the strongest terms possible.

I demand that ODM leadership come out and state their position on violence against women. It is not time to be indifference when our party members are culprits on matters of violence! It is such image that I intend to erase from ODM once elected party secretary general.

OKINDA JT

From: maurice oduor

Nyamodi,

Give me a brief synopsis of what happened.

From: okil@ . . .

Maurice,

I feel what needs to happen is for party h/q to put their foot down and give the lady a chance, which she deserves! Your MP, Jim Orengo, can be of assistance if you can reach him!

Regards.

Nyamodi Ochieng-Nyamogo.

From: “maurice oduor”

Nyamodi,

Is there anything we can do to ensure a fair result? May be the people on the ground can tell us what kind of help they need. Is it possible to get the contacts of the people on the ground?

Courage

From: Nyamodi Ochieng Nyamogo

Maurice,

I was on the phone, yesterday, with Councillor Oriaro, of Boro West Ward, and i gathered that this was the answer, by the sitting County Council Chairman Aggrey Oduor Onyango and his goons, to his being defeated to the Chair by a lady Councillor from Ugenya! Beats crude sense how we wind up with chaps like that as Chairmen of our civic bodies! Also speaks volumes as to how ready, and willing, we are to embrace the new Constitutional dispensation with respect to women empowerment!!!

Regards.

Nyamodi Ochieng-Nyamogo.

Kenya: Role of Energy Management towards Kenyan Economic Prosperity

From: amenya gibson

Dear people,

As Hon Chris Okemo and former KPLC MD Gichuru battle to avoid jails terms. I want us to recall this scenario that happened a few years ago. Large scale power rationing in 1992 or 93 IMF flew in large generators which some were stationed at Kasarani Kenyan government was slapped with a very huge bill which led to KPLC books of account to nose dive lol. Things became very thick to KPLC there was no further research and expansion of power ,communities who wanted power was slapped with very obscene connection charges.

Another mistake was massive sackings at KPLC to reduce pay costs.

And this mistake we did in 1992/93 has seen Kenya fail to catch up with Singapore tiger nations.

Is time we work hard to ensure Kenya has effecient energy to power our economy.

Over 60 % of this nation is without reliable power. Over 12,000 primary schools don’t have power yet we talk of vision 2030.

So energy if we harness it well ,Kenyan GDP will move north. Jobless rate will reduce and investors will come back so that we don’t keep losing to countries like Egypt.

Am very glad for Ministry of Energy to have begun mini power productions plants or encouraging private investors too.

But more is needed too more so in power selling KPLC is now joking with Kenyans power blackouts are all over.

I wish our leaders will amend energy at so that KPLC whenever there is power blackout customers are paid.


Thanks
Gibson Amenya
Enigma Consultants Kenya Limited
NHC Building,3rd Flr
Kenya +254720424218, +254-722-825417
Uganda ++256784867430
P.O Box 54753-00200 Nairobi
Email: gib.amenya@enigma.or.ke
Email:info@enigma.or.ke
Audit,Taxation and Business Advisory Services

KENYA: KACC’S LUMUMBA, CUT ACTIVISM AND RHETORIC, BEGIN WORK!!!

from otieno sungu

Dear Patrick,

It is with consternation that I write to you. On your appointment, like for every Kenyan, it was a a moment for me to cherish that you were appointed. Many Kenyans had hope that graft had finally got its match and would be fought vigorously.

It is with dismay that Kenyans watched the top graft fighter join helpless lawyers in demonstrations at the Ministry of Lands over graft. This act was an indication of your inability to fight graft and a beginning of the populism, musical chairs act and rhetorical vigor we have been subjected to over the years with regard to the fight against corruption.

Ordinarily, demonstrations are for those who have no recourse, no powers to tackle a situation or voice their concerns above din of impunity and need to be heard.

With the resources and personnel at your disposal at KACC, you do not fit this category.

When the top graft buster begins to demonstrate like any other helpless Wanjiku, we must have cause to worry about your competence to fight graft beyond words.

Meanwhile, your counterpart whose appointment also brought hope to Kenyans, Chief Justice Willy Mutanga has begun with earnest the reform of the Judiciary.

Could we still have a glimmer of hope that you are up to the job and have not been sucked into the usual game of populism and lip service?

The country is on the edge especially with regards to run away corruption and your role in providing a clear cut therapy in terms of successful investigations and prosecutions is critical.

Do not let this country down like the likes of Samuel Kivuitu, Aaron Ringera, Evan Gicheru,Benard Chunga, Harun Mwau etc, history will be very harsh on you if you allow yourself to fall in this category.

Their holding office greatly disenfranchised Kenyans as they became the very gate keepers for impunity and corruption through their deliberate inaction.

It is almost one year since your appointment and you are dangerously hurtling towards the incompetence of the above characters that has cost Kenya a big deal in terms of good governance.

Best Regards,

Otieno Sungu.
Chairman,
Vugu Vugu Mashinani.
Tel: 0729294743.

Kenya Airways supports the Kisumu Clean-up Campaign

from odhiambo okecth

Friends,

Following our appeal for support for the 7th, 8th and 9th Monthly Nationwide Clean-up Campaigns in Kisumu on the 16th July and in Kakamega on the 23rd July 2011, Kenya Airways Kisumu have stepped in and informed us that they will be in full attendance at Jubilee Market for the Kisumu Clean-up. On 30th July, we will be at Kileleshwa in Nairobi.

They are also buying for us cleaning equipment worth Kshs 30,000.00. On behalf of the People of Kenya and on behalf of KCDN, I want to extend our sincere appreciation with this positive effort.

The following people have also given to us their support since 1st of July;

Ms Lilian Atho- Kshs 5,000.00
Dr Robert Ayisi- Kshs 3,000.00
Mr. Daniel Masetu- Kshs 4,000.00
Mr. Gabriel Omondi- Kshs 300.00
Mr. Philip Ombwayo- Kshs 500.00
Mr. Luke Ogono= Kshs 2,000.00
Mr. Joseph Kohogo- Kshs 2,500.00
Mr. Elijah Agevi- Kshs 500.00
Kenya Airways- Kshs 30,000.00 worth of equipment

Some of this support helped us during our recent visit to Kisumu for a series of Consultative Meetings with the Stakeholders. Again, on behalf of the people of Kenya and on behalf of KCDN, I want to extend our sincere appreciation to all these Friends of KCDN. It is your support that drives The Monthly Nationwide Clean-up Campaign across Kenya.

From Kisumu, we will be in Kakamega on the 23rd July, Kileleshwa on the 30th July, Donholm Nairobi on the 6th August, Nyeri on the 13th August- not 14th, and Muranga on the 27th August- not 28th.

Once more, we are inviting your support and participation all across Kenya. You may get in touch with the undersigned and send your support through Tel; 0724 365 557.

The Hon Prof Peter Anyang’ Nyong’o will be our Guest of Honour and he will be accompanied by the area MP Hon Olago Aluoch, Kisumu Mayor Cllr Sam Okello, Town Clerk Mr Daniel Nkere, Kisumu Town West DC Mr. Mabeya Z Mogaka and many more leaders.

We will also have Susan Owiyo- yes, the Superstar, in Kisumu with us. She did Kisumu proud by her first single release- Kisumu 100 in praise of the Millenium City.

We at KCDN -www.kcdnkenya.org firmly believe that we the People of Kenya can help Clean Kenya.

This is a campaign for Kenya by Kenyans. Let us make it big……

If it is to be, it is up to me. A Clean Kenya Starts With me. A Peaceful Kenya is my Responsibility.

Disclaimer; The Monthly Nationwide Clean-up Campaign is about us Kenyans. It involves all Kenyans from the various regions, religious persuasions, political thinking and we do not discriminate against any Kenyans nor any region.

Peace and blessings,

Odhiambo T Oketch
CEO KCDN Nairobi
Nationwide Coordinator – Monthly Nationwide Clean-up Campaign
National Coordinator- Friends of KNH Maternity Unit
PO Box 47890-00100,
Nairobi Kenya.
Tel; 0724 365 557, 0735 529 126
Email; oto@kcdnkenya.org, komarockswatch@yahoo.com
www.kcdnkenya.org
http://kcdnkomarockswatch.blogspot.com
friendsofkcdn@yahoogroups.com
Facebook; Odhiambo T Oketch

Board at KCDN; Mr. Rashid Juma- Chair, Ms Janet Ongera, Mr. Julius Majuek, Ms Irene Wasike, Mr. Lameck Siage- Nigeria, Ms Brigitte Frey- Switzerland, Mr. Moses Tanui, Ms Shazeen Chatur, Mr. Odhiambo T Oketch- CEO.

Strategic Advisors; Mr. Elijah Agevi, Ms Grace Odhiambo- Australia, Dr. Matunda Nyanchama- Canada, Mr. Oduor Ong’wen, Mr. Peter Ngoge, Ms Dorcus Amondi, Ms Violet Wambua.

Odhiambo T Oketch is the current Chairman to the City Council of Nairobi Stakeholders Evaluation Team on Performance Contracting and Rapid Results Management. He is also Chair to the Nyamonye Catholic Church Development Fund.He was also the Co-Chair and Coordinator of The Great Nairobi Walk against Corruption that was held in Nairobi on the 22nd October 2010. He is the Convener of the upcoming 2nd Edition of the Great Nairobi Walk against Corruption to be held on the 21st October 2011 in Nairobi Kenya.
…….Moving From Talking to Tasking……..

– – – – – – – – – – –

From: odhiambo okecth
Subject: All Roads Lead to Kisumu; 16th July

Kisumu City will be hosting the 7th Monthly Nationwide Clean-up Campaign on the 16th July 2011 around the Jubilee Market as from 7.00am.

This is promising to be the biggest Campaign we have ever organized.

His Worship the Mayor of Kisumu is inviting the Mayors from Nairobi, Mombasa, Eldoret and Kisii and a few more to join us for the event.

The Town Clerk Kisumu is inviting Town Clerks from Nairobi, Mombasa, Eldoret and Kisii and a few more for the event.

The Director of Environment at the Municipal Council of Kisumu is also inviting his colleagues from Nairobi, Mombasa, Eldoret, Kisii and a few more for the event.

The Hon Olago Aluoch, the area Member of Parliament is inviting his colleagues from across the country for the event and he will be inviting a Cabinet Minister to grace the occasion as our Chief Guest.

We also have several NGOs in Kisumu who have talked with us and they are joining us in large numbers for the Clean-up Campaign.

This is promising to be the biggest campaign we have ever hosted and Kisumu is going to live true to being the Millennium City.

All we at KCDN can do is to ask for your continued support and partnership in this drive. All those who are keen on supporting this campaign in any way can reach out to the undersigned.

From Kisumu, we will be in Kakamega on the 23rd July, Kileleshwa on the 30th July, Donholm Nairobi on the 6th August, Nyeri on the 13th August- not 14th, and Muranga on the 27th August- not 28th.

Once more, we are inviting your support and participation all across Kenya.

We at KCDN -www.kcdnkenya.org firmly believe that we the People of Kenya can help Clean Kenya.

This is a campaign for Kenya by Kenyans. Let us make it big……

If it is to be, it is up to me. A Clean Kenya Starts With me. A Peaceful Kenya is my Responsibility.

Disclaimer; The Monthly Nationwide Clean-up Campaign is about us Kenyans. It involves all Kenyans from the various regions, religious persuasions, political thinking and we do not discriminate against any Kenyans nor any region.

Peace and blessings,

Odhiambo T Oketch
CEO KCDN Nairobi
Nationwide Coordinator – Monthly Nationwide Clean-up Campaign
National Coordinator- Friends of KNH Maternity Unit
PO Box 47890-00100,
Nairobi Kenya.
Tel; 0724 365 557, 0735 529 126
Email; oto@kcdnkenya.org, komarockswatch@yahoo.com
www.kcdnkenya.org
http://kcdnkomarockswatch.blogspot.com
friendsofkcdn@yahoogroups.com
Facebook; Odhiambo T Oketch

Kenya: Who We Should Vote For In 2012 – BY NGUNJIRI WAMBUGU

from Lee Makwiny

BY NGUNJIRI WAMBUGU

Nearly everyone I know is eagerly waiting for 2012, so that they can vote out most of the current politicians. A recent poll indicated that 65% of Kenyan voters are dissatisfied with their current MPs. Considering that the poll was conducted before a large section of MPs stated their resistance to paying tax, it is not unimaginable that those disatisfied with their MPs might be 95%! Signs are also that Kenyans could even resort to violence if anyone suggested that general elections be delayed past August 14,2012, no matter how good the reasons for such delay.

What most of us do not realize is that Kenyans have in every general election since 1992 voted out at least 65% of our MPs. The preacher at my local church talked to us about culture, which is basically a way of life of a people. He explained how culture is a combination of six things— religion, ethics, aesthetics, economy, social relations and politics. It became clear why the new faces we elect every five years do not result in the new way of doing politics that we are looking for.

Firstly, religion. All our current politicians claim to be staunch followers of one religion or the other, though their actions are about corruption, violence, negative ethnicity and/or impunity: all vices condemned by every religion practiced in Kenya.

Secondly, ethics. The last time we tried to introduce ethics into politics our politicians literally hounded the guy in charge out of office.Thirdly, aesthetics—there really is nothing beautiful and/or balanced about our politics.

Fourthly, the economy. We know that most politicians overtly buy their way into office. However, how does one explain the fact that right now a packet of maize flour costs more than a litre of petrol in a country that grows maize locally but imports petrol?

Fifth, on social relations, our politicians have completely failed us. Rather than use our diversity as a source of strength, they use it to divide and rule us. That is why they will talk about tribe when they want the tribe’s votes, then stand aside and watch as we kill and maim each other across ethnic lines once they get what they want. Sixth, as regards our internal politics, this ranges from tragic, to comical, to fatal, whether at political party, individual family, business or social level.

That is our political culture and the basis on which we have been generating ‘new’ politicians every five years. It is also the reason why every general election feels like deja vu. If our political culture remains constant it will not matter even if we change 100% of the politicians in 2012, we will still want to change them again in 2017.

We keep missing the ball because we focus on changing the wrong thing. We change the politicians (and we must, again), but do not affect the political culture the new set of politicians will operate in. Before we change the politicians in 2012, we must first define what type of politician we want. Personally I will only vote for a politician who actually lives the religious values they profess.

Ethically I will vote a politician who will call ‘foul’ when something is wrong even if it is done by their party’s national leader, and who will support a position they believe is right even if it is presented by their worst political rival. Aesthetically I am looking for a balanced politician: the kind of person I can invite home for dinner with my wife and children.

I will vote for someone who defines a good economy not so much by the number of people it has made rich but by the quality of life the average Kenyan enjoys. I also want to see economic planning that makes sense such that Kenyans do not die of floods, and then starve because the rains have failed, all in the same year.

But the most important thing for me will be their social relations. The type of politician I will vote for in 2012 is the one who realizes the grave urgency, and utmost importance, of a common Kenyan identity. I am looking for a politician who understands that the Kenya we live today desperately needs a common brand that will unite us; an identity that will supersede rather than replace, all our other identities.

That will be a politician who has a plan on how to create, define, and establish a common identity that every Kenyan citizen can associate themselves with beyond their gender, age, tribe, race, or religion. This kind of person is what I call a Kenyan for Kenya, and I can just imagine what would happen if all of us were to vote for someone like this to replace the 65 to 85% or even 100%, of the current political leadership we will vote out in 2012. Kenya would turn a page in its history in such a way that our next political leadership would be a change that we can live with.

Tana River Qatar, Nyanza Belgium Company HG consulting….etc.,

from Judy Miriga

Folks,

Orengo should let PLO Lumumba smoke out all those found engaged in corruption at the Ministry of Lands……Njoki is also brawled in the Timoin lands in Kwale, how will she be able to take stand while compromised………She has a tale tale to tale first… …poor people are being ripped off…..!….Election Broundary Committee must be free from all those associated with Kibaki, PM Raila, Kalonzo, Uhuru etc.,……Even Oswago has nothing to swago for Kenyans, he too should not come anywhere near the commission team……ata swago nini??? akili zetu au mali ya uma au ya community?

We need fresh start people…I am sick and tired of these folks….PLO should go ahead and smoke them all….!

PM Raila previously at the Court in Mombasa claimed that the Original land he bought, he did not see any neighbours within the surrounding and that the owner of the original land is “GOD”………Surely……!

PLO has all rights to swing into full action and let the heads swing and spiral, we are all set to protect the poor-man land and the disadvantaged by matching through the “Walls of Jericho”……….7 seven times……People …!

Each and everyone get into full gear action……..take charge…..Give the thieves sleepless nights…….YES, join with the 40 MPs who are against the thieves……and the thieves must be exposed and smoke them out people……..!

Unataka nini….??.”Tuna taka UNGA”……No Ethanol when people are dying from hunger…….you cannot sucrifice PETRO-DOLLAR ETHANOL for UNGA…..and this is DANGER…..

Ati Land for Sale…..?????

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

– – – – – – – – – – –

Orengo attack personal, replies livid Lumumba

The war of words between Lands minister James Orengo and anti-graft agency boss Patrick Lumumba over corruption at the ministry of Lands escalated on Friday with the latter now accusing the minister of making personal attacks.

The Kenya Anti-Corruption Commission (Kacc) director wrote to the minister asking him to stop attacking the anti-graft body for raising concern over issues facing his ministry.

In his letter which was copied to the Sunday Nation, Prof Lumumba accused the minister of attacking his character and other lawyers rather than addressing the issues raised.

Last week, LSK and Kacc protested over the “serious rot” in the ministry, and they demanded immediate action against corrupt civil servants who “frustrated efficient services in the lands office”.

Prof Patrick Lumumba and LSK chairman Kenneth Akide led the demonstration. (READ: Lawyers besiege Lands ministry)

“I fail to understand how your involvement in the struggle for multiparty politics is related to the performance of the Ministry of Lands and the protest by the legal fraternity in which I am a member of good standing without any history of impropriety and without any case in its disciplinary committee in my 25 years of practice,” Prof Lumumba said in his letter.

He went on to tell the minister that just because he was “involved in the multi-party politics struggle” it does not mean that any ministry he leads is “immune to public scrutiny”.

“Please do not pooh pooh the message against corruption and poor service delivery at the ministry of Lands because you dislike the messenger, nor should you forget the antelope of corruption in pursuit of the squirrel of ad personam (personalised) attacks,” Prof Lumumba told the minister.

He added that he and Kacc will not be “deterred from using all legal methods to create awareness in the fight against corruption as it is mandated by law”.

On Wednesday, Mr Orengo had launched an attack on Prof Lumumba asking him to “focus on his work” instead of engaging in public theatrics. (READ: Orengo accuses Kacc of incompetence)

He was dismissing claims by Kacc and the Law Society of Kenya that his ministry was not acting tough on corruption.

The minister produced correspondence between him and Prof Lumumba in which the latter asked him to revoke titles of public land that had been grabbed.

He added that the anti-graft body should concentrate more on prosecuting cases on economic crimes instead of “making noise” about it and not acting.

“I take exceptions to the director of Kacc who — forgetting about his mandate and instead of doing his job — he is out there demonstrating; the reports we give get nowhere. If he wants lessons in demonstrating I can organise counter demonstrations effectively,” he said.

“It is therefore amazing that people can now come and say we are not working and yet there is evidence of our cooperation with Kacc.”

The minister also came to the defence of his ministry following a public spat between the lawyers and his PS Dorothy Ongote during the demonstration.

He challenged the Kacc boss to prove that he was committed to his work by investigating and instituting proceedings against officials of the Lands ministry found culpable.

Source: Nation media

Africa: secret land deals fleece Africa 0

Jul9
Kenya risks leasing out huge tracts of land in rushed, one-sided deals that may create new social and environment problems, according to new reports questioning such deals across the continent.

The reports say most contracts are heavily biased in favour of foreign investors. They grant them long-term access to public and community land at very low costs. There is also little to safeguard benefits for local people and the environment.

Foreign companies are currently acquiring large amounts of lands in Kenya and other African countries to grow food crops for export and for biofuels.

In Land deals in Africa: What is in the contracts? author Lorenzo Cotula analysed several contracts and found that most were negotiated in secret “Expected benefits are often in the form of jobs or irrigation and infrastructure development, rather than rental fees,” he says in the report produced by London-based think-tank, International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED).

The report analyses 12 recent contracts through which investors have leased millions of hectares of land in East, West, Central and Southern Africa for farming. It found many problems with the contracts but also some signs of positive deals.

In Kenya, multinationals have applied for 500,000-plus hectares of land – more than five times the size of Nairobi – to do large scale farming and mining. The government earlier agreed to lease 40,000 hectares in the Tana River Delta to the Government of Qatar to grow crops to feed the people of Qatar.

Further, an Italian company, Kenya Biofuel Ltd, has been allowed to convert 5,000 acres of Dakatcha woodland at the Coast and plant Jatropha.

The investor had asked for 50,000 acres to plant Jatropha but that was scaled-down to 5,000 for “trial” after protests by conservation groups. “I will use any means to ensure the project begins,” Magarini MP and Fisheries minister Amason Kingi, who is the area MP, said recently.

In Nyanza, Belgium Company HG consulting is expected to put 42,000 hectares of land under sugarcane production while Dominion Farms Ltd has invested in 17,500 hectares around the Yala Swamp. There are other projects in the works, mostly at the Coast.

A second report released in Nairobi last week by Oxfam predicts food riots in East Africa, saying decreasing farmland will severely limit food production in the next 20 years. Oxfam is grouping of 15 international organisations which campaigns against poverty and injustice.

Its report, Growing A Better Future: Food Justice In a Resource-Constrained World, Oxfam advises governments to stop leasing fertile farmland and grazing land to foreign companies for tourism, large-scale agriculture for exports and biofuels. The report says African governments should instead support women and small scale farmers.

Oxfam projects food prices across the world will double in the 20 years and biofuels will increase hunger in Africa. “The grain required to fill the fuel tank of one 4×4 vehicle with ethanol is enough to feed one person for a year,” said Irungu Houghton, Oxfam’s pan Africa director. Oxfam says with the current trends, population will far outstrip food production.

The latest revision of United Nation’s World Population Prospects, for instance, shows that Kenya will be grappling with 71.5 million people in the next 20 years, yet maize production is only expected to rise by a third.

By John Muchangi – Nairobi Star

KENYA RISK LEASING OUT HUGE TRACTS OF LAND IN A RUSHED ONE-SIDED DEALS

Kenya risks leasing out huge tracts of land in rushed, one-sided deals that may create new social and environment problems, according to new reports questioning such deals across the continent.

The reports say most contracts are heavily biased in favour of foreign investors. They grant them long-term access to public and community land at very low costs. There is also little to safeguard benefits for local people and the environment.

Foreign companies are currently acquiring large amounts of lands in Kenya and other African countries to grow food crops for export and for biofuels.

In Land deals in Africa: What is in the contracts? author Lorenzo Cotula analysed several contracts and found that most were negotiated in secret “Expected benefits are often in the form of jobs or irrigation and infrastructure development, rather than rental fees,” he says in the report produced by London-based think-tank, International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED).

The report analyses 12 recent contracts through which investors have leased millions of hectares of land in East, West, Central and Southern Africa for farming. It found many problems with the contracts but also some signs of positive deals.

In Kenya, multinationals have applied for 500,000-plus hectares of land – more than five times the size of Nairobi – to do large scale farming and mining. The government earlier agreed to lease 40,000 hectares in the Tana River Delta to the Government of Qatar to grow crops to feed the people of Qatar.

Further, an Italian company, Kenya Biofuel Ltd, has been allowed to convert 5,000 acres of Dakatcha woodland at the Coast and plant Jatropha.

The investor had asked for 50,000 acres to plant Jatropha but that was scaled-down to 5,000 for “trial” after protests by conservation groups. “I will use any means to ensure the project begins,” Magarini MP and Fisheries minister Amason Kingi, who is the area MP, said recently.

In Nyanza, Belgium Company HG consulting is expected to put 42,000 hectares of land under sugarcane production while Dominion Farms Ltd has invested in 17,500 hectares around the Yala Swamp. There are other projects in the works, mostly at the Coast.

A second report released in Nairobi last week by Oxfam predicts food riots in East Africa, saying decreasing farmland will severely limit food production in the next 20 years. Oxfam is grouping of 15 international organisations which campaigns against poverty and injustice.

Its report, Growing A Better Future: Food Justice In a Resource-Constrained World, Oxfam advises governments to stop leasing fertile farmland and grazing land to foreign companies for tourism, large-scale agriculture for exports and biofuels. The report says African governments should instead support women and small scale farmers.
Oxfam projects food prices across the world will double in the 20 years and biofuels will increase hunger in Africa. “The grain required to fill the fuel tank of one 4×4 vehicle with ethanol is enough to feed one person for a year,” said Irungu Houghton, Oxfam’s pan Africa director. Oxfam says with the current trends, population will far outstrip food production….Quote…(Mollasses is producing ETHONAL…..The reason PM Raila is starving Luos through Dominion land thieving/grabbing)

The latest revision of United Nation’s World Population Prospects, for instance, shows that Kenya will be grappling with 71.5 million people in the next 20 years, yet maize production is only expected to rise by a third.

The country is currently unable to feed its 40 million people, and is a major maize importer despite having large tracts of unfarmed arable land. Irungu says African countries can produce enough food if they stop leasing land to other countries and instead empower women and small scale farmers. “Food is about power – those with power and money can eat, those without cannot. Africa is abundant with resources, yet governments fail to invest effectively in its biggest resources – its people and its land,” he says.

Already in the Tana Delta, where different foreign companies are jostling for more than 300,000 hectares land, indigenous communities are feeling the pinch.

About 250,000 villagers in Tana and Lamu, where a Canadian company wants 130,000 hectares to plant sugarcane for ethanol, have already been threatened with eviction notices. “Farmers in Wema and pastoralists in Dida Waride affirmed that they would die first before moving out of their land,” says Nature Kenya’s advocacy officer Serah Munguti, who leads a campaign to protect the Tana Delta. This is an expansive area where Kenya’s biggest river, the Tana River, branches out before emptying into the Indian Ocean.

She says it is one of the most important wetlands in Africa. It supports more than 350 species of birds, including globally threatened birds such as the Basra reed warbler, for which the delta is a critical wintering site, and two threatened primates found nowhere else in the world – Tana red colobus and Tana River mangabey. But some political leaders and locals accuse the NGOs of blocking developments at the Coast.

Magarini MP Kingi says the Italian Jatropha project will, for instance, create 7,000 jobs. Most villagers in this region are poor, jobless and the government has not sponsored any irrigation project there. “It is godsend,” says Mohammed Gule, a jobless father of six in Magarini.

District environment officer Samuel Ng’ang’a told the Star the 5,000-acre Jatropha project has already been licensed but the National Environment Management Authority in Nairobi contradicted this.

Other parties with projects include Bedford Bio fuels Inc, a private multinational company based in Canada, which wanted 90,000 hectares through 45-year lease agreements. They have been licensed a smaller portion to grow Jatropha curcas. Mumias Sugar Company and Tarda will jointly get 20,000 hectares for a Sh24 billion sugarcane project. The fifth, Tiomin Kenya Ltd, a company incorporated in Canada, mines titanium near Kwale.

The report by IIED expresses fears that nearly all farming companies surveyed have not created the jobs they promised. There are no mechanisms to force them to do so, says Cotula, the report author.

He says most contracts reviewed across Africa lack enforceable commitments, or fail to provide detail about how many and what kind of jobs the investment will create. “Some of the contracts analysed by the report are just a few pages long, with scant details on what investors should do to ensure that risks will be properly managed and that expected benefits will materialise,” he says.

Changamwe MP Ramadhan Kajembe, expresses a similar concern. “What happens to the owner of the land where minerals have been discovered? Is he going to benefit in any way?” he asked recently at a meeting to draft legislation on land use and natural resources provisions of the Constitution.

An exception is Liberia where contracts stand out for their shorter duration. They are also specific commitments on jobs and greater attention to local food security. In addition, the Liberian contracts are ratified by Parliament and are available online. Kenyan contracts are not available to the public. Head of Kenya Land Alliance Odede Lumumba says deals shrouded in secrecy cannot be good deals.

KLA is an alliance of 117 civil society organisations and individuals advocating for reform of policies and laws governing land in Kenya. “Mutually beneficial decisions need to be made, and this cannot happen when land agreements continue to take place without involvement of the public,” Lumumba said recently during the meeting on Politics of Food Security in Eastern Africa meeting.“The veil of secrecy that often surrounds these land deals must be lifted so poor people don’t ultimately pay the heavy price of losing their land,” World Bank Managing Director, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, said last year when the bank released its report on land deals.

The IIED notes agricultural investment can bring benefits to developing nations, but large land deals carry big risks as local people may lose access to the land and resources they have used for generations.“The more promising investments are those that involve supporting local smallholders, rather than large plantations,” their report says.

Secret Land Deals Fleece Africa
John Muchangi
6 July 2011

Kenya risks leasing out huge tracts of land in rushed, one-sided deals that may create new social and environment problems, according to new reports questioning such deals across the continent.

The reports say most contracts are heavily biased in favour of foreign investors. They grant them long-term access to public and community land at very low costs. There is also little to safeguard benefits for local people and the environment.

Foreign companies are currently acquiring large amounts of lands in Kenya and other African countries to grow food crops for export and for biofuels.

In Land deals in Africa: What is in the contracts? author Lorenzo Cotula analysed several contracts and found that most were negotiated in secret “Expected benefits are often in the form of jobs or irrigation and infrastructure development, rather than rental fees,” he says in the report produced by London-based think-tank, International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED).

The report analyses 12 recent contracts through which investors have leased millions of hectares of land in East, West, Central and Southern Africa for farming. It found many problems with the contracts but also some signs of positive deals.

In Kenya, multinationals have applied for 500,000-plus hectares of land – more than five times the size of Nairobi – to do large scale farming and mining. The government earlier agreed to lease 40,000 hectares in the Tana River Delta to the Government of Qatar to grow crops to feed the people of Qatar.

Further, an Italian company, Kenya Biofuel Ltd, has been allowed to convert 5,000 acres of Dakatcha woodland at the Coast and plant Jatropha.

The investor had asked for 50,000 acres to plant Jatropha but that was scaled-down to 5,000 for “trial” after protests by conservation groups. “I will use any means to ensure the project begins,” Magarini MP and Fisheries minister Amason Kingi, who is the area MP, said recently.

In Nyanza, Belgium Company HG consulting is expected to put 42,000 hectares of land under sugarcane production while Dominion Farms Ltd has invested in 17,500 hectares around the Yala Swamp. There are other projects in the works, mostly at the Coast.

A second report released in Nairobi last week by Oxfam predicts food riots in East Africa, saying decreasing farmland will severely limit food production in the next 20 years. Oxfam is grouping of 15 international organisations which campaigns against poverty and injustice.

Its report, Growing A Better Future: Food Justice In a Resource-Constrained World, Oxfam advises governments to stop leasing fertile farmland and grazing land to foreign companies for tourism, large-scale agriculture for exports and biofuels. The report says African governments should instead support women and small scale farmers.

Oxfam projects food prices across the world will double in the 20 years and biofuels will increase hunger in Africa. “The grain required to fill the fuel tank of one 4×4 vehicle with ethanol is enough to feed one person for a year,” said Irungu Houghton, Oxfam’s pan Africa director. Oxfam says with the current trends, population will far outstrip food production.

The latest revision of United Nation’s World Population Prospects, for instance, shows that Kenya will be grappling with 71.5 million people in the next 20 years, yet maize production is only expected to rise by a third.

The country is currently unable to feed its 40 million people, and is a major maize importer despite having large tracts of unfarmed arable land. Irungu says African countries can produce enough food if they stop leasing land to other countries and instead empower women and small scale farmers. “Food is about power – those with power and money can eat, those without cannot. Africa is abundant with resources, yet governments fail to invest effectively in its biggest resources – its people and its land,” he says.

Already in the Tana Delta, where different foreign companies are jostling for more than 300,000 hectares land, indigenous communities are feeling the pinch.

About 250,000 villagers in Tana and Lamu, where a Canadian company wants 130,000 hectares to plant sugarcane for ethanol, have already been threatened with eviction notices. “Farmers in Wema and pastoralists in Dida Waride affirmed that they would die first before moving out of their land,” says Nature Kenya’s advocacy officer Serah Munguti, who leads a campaign to protect the Tana Delta. This is an expansive area where Kenya’s biggest river, the Tana River, branches out before emptying into the Indian Ocean.

She says it is one of the most important wetlands in Africa. It supports more than 350 species of birds, including globally threatened birds such as the Basra reed warbler, for which the delta is a critical wintering site, and two threatened primates found nowhere else in the world – Tana red colobus and Tana River mangabey. But some political leaders and locals accuse the NGOs of blocking developments at the Coast.

Magarini MP Kingi says the Italian Jatropha project will, for instance, create 7,000 jobs. Most villagers in this region are poor, jobless and the government has not sponsored any irrigation project there. “It is godsend,” says Mohammed Gule, a jobless father of six in Magarini.

District environment officer Samuel Ng’ang’a told the Star the 5,000-acre Jatropha project has already been licensed but the National Environment Management Authority in Nairobi contradicted this.

Other parties with projects include Bedford Bio fuels Inc, a private multinational company based in Canada, which wanted 90,000 hectares through 45-year lease agreements. They have been licensed a smaller portion to grow Jatropha curcas. Mumias Sugar Company and Tarda will jointly get 20,000 hectares for a Sh24 billion sugarcane project. The fifth, Tiomin Kenya Ltd, a company incorporated in Canada, mines titanium near Kwale.

The report by IIED expresses fears that nearly all farming companies surveyed have not created the jobs they promised. There are no mechanisms to force them to do so, says Cotula, the report author.

He says most contracts reviewed across Africa lack enforceable commitments, or fail to provide detail about how many and what kind of jobs the investment will create. “Some of the contracts analysed by the report are just a few pages long, with scant details on what investors should do to ensure that risks will be properly managed and that expected benefits will materialise,” he says.

Changamwe MP Ramadhan Kajembe, expresses a similar concern. “What happens to the owner of the land where minerals have been discovered? Is he going to benefit in any way?” he asked recently at a meeting to draft legislation on land use and natural resources provisions of the Constitution.

An exception is Liberia where contracts stand out for their shorter duration. They are also specific commitments on jobs and greater attention to local food security. In addition, the Liberian contracts are ratified by Parliament and are available online. Kenyan contracts are not available to the public. Head of Kenya Land Alliance Odede Lumumba says deals shrouded in secrecy cannot be good deals.

KLA is an alliance of 117 civil society organisations and individuals advocating for reform of policies and laws governing land in Kenya. “Mutually beneficial decisions need to be made, and this cannot happen when land agreements continue to take place without involvement of the public,” Lumumba said recently during the meeting on Politics of Food Security in Eastern Africa meeting.

“The veil of secrecy that often surrounds these land deals must be lifted so poor people don’t ultimately pay the heavy price of losing their land,” World Bank Managing Director, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, said last year when the bank released its report on land deals.

The IIED notes agricultural investment can bring benefits to developing nations, but large land deals carry big risks as local people may lose access to the land and resources they have used for generations.”The more promising investments are those that involve supporting local smallholders, rather than large plantations,” their report says.

Large Land Deals Threaten Farmers, World Bank Says
September 08, 2010, 4:25 PM EDT

By Sandrine Rastello
(Corrects third paragraph to reflect Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala is a woman.)
Sept. 8 (Bloomberg) — Foreign purchases of agricultural land from Mozambique to Cambodia pose “significant risks” to the livelihoods of farmers in countries with “weak land governance,” the World Bank said in a report.

Large-scale purchases raise “a real concern about the ability of local institutions to protect vulnerable groups from losing land on which they have legitimate, if not formally recognized claims,” according to the report by the Bank’s Agriculture and Rural Development department.

“The veil of secrecy that often surrounds these land deals must be lifted so poor people don’t ultimately pay the heavy price of losing their land,” World Bank Managing Director Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, a former Nigerian finance and foreign minister, said in a statement. The acquisitions “can come at a high cost,” she said.

Rising prices of rice, corn and palm oil in 2008 triggered deadly unrest in some parts of the developing world. The report, Rising Global Interest in Farmland, said that over the next year farmland investment spiraled, with 10 times more property bought in developing countries by nations seeking food security.

Nations dependent on food imports, such as Saudi Arabia and South Korea, stepped up efforts to buy land and lock-in overseas resources to ensure food security, the bank said. Foreign investment in Sudanese agricultural land in 2009 was estimated to increase five-fold by 2014, according to a Sudan Investment Ministry estimate last year.

Environmental Impact

Investor deals also have an environmental impact in countries such as Brazil, where deforestation was pursued to enable farmland expansion, the report said. The report reviewed data from 14 countries in Africa, Latin America, Europe and Asia between 2004 and 2009.

“The question will be what will the bank be able to do to change these dynamics,” said Vince McElhinny, who is a project manager for The Bank Information Center, a nonprofit in Washington, D.C. that advocates for transparency and public accountability within the World Bank. “In practice what we’re seeing is a trend that suggests that it will be able to do very little.”

Foreign agricultural investments have sometimes met with resistance. Protests by local communities in Madagascar caused that country to abandon a $6-billion farming agreement last year with Daewoo Logistics Corp.

Governments were “unprepared” for the increase in such land deals after the food and fuel crisis, the report said.

The report noted that private investors had the potential to increase productivity in less-developed countries with technological help. “In many cases, however, the desired benefits were not achieved,” the report said. The World Bank is trying to develop voluntary principles for responsible agricultural investment, it said.

ARE KENYA MEMBERS OF PARLIAMENT TOO BROKE TO PAY TAXES?

By Agwanda Jowi

Those who have paid taxes we have used the word: TAX PAID

Those who have refused to pay taxes we have used the word: NO

– – – – – – – – – – –

Parliamentarian’s name
Representative for:
Belongs to:
TAX Paid

OR

NO?

Benjamin Kipkirui Langat
Ainamoi
ODM
NO

Sally Jemngetich Kosgei
Aldai
ODM
NO

Edwin Ochieng Yinda
Alego/Usonga
ODM
NO

Ojaamongson, Sospeter Odeke
Amagoro
ODM
NO

Benedict Fondo Gunda
Bahari
ODM
NO

Sammy Silas Komen Mwaita
Baringo Central
ODM
NO

Asman Abongotum Kamama
Baringo East
PNU
NO

William C. Kipkiror
Baringo North
ODM
NO

Charles Cheruiyot Keter
Belgut
ODM
NO

Christopher Mogere Obure
Bobasi
ODM
NO

Simon Ogari
Bomachoge
ODM
NO

Beatrice Cherono Kones
Bomet
ODM
NO

Charles Onyancha
Bonchari
ODM
NO

Oginga, Oburu
Bondo
ODM
NO

Namwamba Ababu
Budalangi
ODM
NO

Bifwoli, Wakoli Sylvester
Bumula
PNU
NO

Abdi Nasir Nuh
Bura
ODM-K
NO

Frankilin Bett
Buret
ODM
NO

Oparanya, Wycliffe Ambetsa
Butere
ODM
NO

Alfred Bwire Odhiambo
Butula
ODM
NO

Gitobu Imanyara
Central Imenti
CCU
NO

Kajembe, Ramathan Seif
Changamwe
ODM
NO

Isaac Kiprono Rutto
Chepalungu
ODM
NO

Joshua Serem Kutuny
Cherangany
ODM
NO

Beth Wambui Mugo
Dagoretti
PNU
NO

Bare Aden Duale
Dujis
ODM
NO

Moses K. Lessonet
Eldama Ravine
ODM
NO

Margaret Jepkoech Kamar
Eldoret East
ODM
NO

Ruto, Samoei William K.
Eldoret North
ODM
NO

Peris Chepchumba
Eldoret South
ODM
NO

Assistant Minister

Ferdinand Ndungu Waititu
Embakasi
PNU
PAID

Elijah Kiptarbei Lagat
Emgwen
ODM
NO

Wilber Ottichilo Khasilwa
Emuhaya
ODM
NO

Sugow, Ahmed Aden
Fafi
KANU
NO

Paul Otuoma Nyongesa
Funyula
ODM
NO

Mutava Muyimi
Gachoka
PNU
PAID

Dhadho Gaddae Goghana
Galole
ODM
NO

Francis S. K. Baya
Ganze
KADU-A
NO

Mungatana, Danson Buya
Garsen
NARC-K
NO

Kenneth, Peter
Gatanga
PNU
NO

Clement Kungu Waibara
Gatundu North
PICK
NO

Kenyatta Uhuru
Gatundu South
KANU
NO

Midiwo, Washington Jakoyo
Gem
ODM
NO

Karua, Martha Wangari
Gichugu
PNU
NO

Peter Njoroge Baiya
Githunguri
SAFINA
NO

John Mbadi Ngóngó
Gwasi
ODM
NO

Khaniri, George Munyasa
Hamisi
ODM
NO

Ntoitha M”Mithiaru
Igembe North
PNU
NO

Frankilin Mithika Linturi
Igembe South
KANU
NO

Haji YusufMohammed
Ijara
KANU
NO

Dr Khalwale
Ikolomani
New Ford K
NO

Kuti,Mohammed. Abdi
Isiolo North
NARC-K
NO

Abdul Bahari Ali
Isiolo South
KANU
NO

William Kabogo Gitau
Juja
NARC-KENYA
NO

Poghisio, Samuel Losuron
Kacheliba
ODM-K
NO

Ndambuki, Gideon Musyoka
Kaiti
ODM-K
NO

Nkaisserry, Joseph Kasaine
Kajiado Central
ODM
NO

Saitoti, George
Kajiado North
PNU
NO

Samuel Kazungu Kambi
Kaloleni
PNU
NO

Vacant
Kamukunji
VACANT
NO

James Maina Kamau
Kandara
PNU
NO

Alfred Khan’gati
Kanduyi
ODM
NO

Michuki, John Njoroge
Kangema
PNU
NO

Johnson Nduya Muthama
Kangundo
ODM-K
PAID

Julius Recha Murgor
Kapenguria
ODM
NO

James G. Kwanya Rege
Karachuonyo
ODM
NO

Elizabeth Ongoro
Kasarani
ODM
NO

Joseph Oyugi Magwanga
Kasipul-Kabondo
ODM
NO

Wavinya Ndeti
Kathiani
CCU
NO

Chepkitony, Lucas Kipkosgei
Keiyo North
ODM
NO

Jackson Kiplagat Kiptanui
Keiyo South
ODM
NO

Evans Bulimo Akula
Khwisero
ODM
NO

Stanley Munga Githunguri
Kiambaa
KANU
NO

Philip Kyalo Kaloki
Kibwezi
ODM-K
NO

Nemesyus Warugongo
Kieni
PNU
NO

Jamleck Irungu Kamau
Kigumo
PNU
NO

Barnabas Muturi C. Mwangi
Kiharu
PNU
NO

Lewis Nguyai Nganga
Kikuyu
PNU
NO

Gideon Sitelu Konchela
Kilgoris
PNU
NO

John Harun Mwau
Kilome
PICK
NO

David Eseli Simiyu
Kimilili
FORD-K
NO

Rai, Samuel Gonzi
Kinango
FORD-P
NO

David Mwaniki Ngugi
Kinangop
SISI KWA SISI
NO

Kimunya, Amos Muhinga
Kipipiri
PNU
NO

Kiprono Langat J. Magerer
Kipkelion
ODM
NO

Joseph Gitari
Kirinyaga Central
PNU
NO

Hassan Ali Joho
Kisauni
ODM
NO

Nyong’o, Peter Anyang’
Kisumu Rural
ODM
NO

Shabbir Ahmed Shakeel Ahmed
Kisumu Town East
ODM
NO

John Olago Aluoch
Kisumu Town West
ODM
NO

Ngilu, Charity Kaluki
Kitui Central
NARC
NO

Isaac Mulatya Muoki
Kitui South
ODM-K
NO

Charles Mutisya Nyamai
Kitui West
NARC
NO

Richard Momoima Onyonka
Kitutu Chache
PDP
NO

Walter Enock Nyambati Osebe
Kitutu Masaba
N LP
NO

Julius Kipyegon Kones
Konoin
ODM
NO

Zakayo Kipkemoi Cheruiyot
Kuresoi
ODM
NO

Machage Wilfred Gisuka
Kuria
DP
NO

Wekesa, Noah Muhalangángá
Kwanza
PNU
NO

Maalim Farah
Lagdera
ODM
NO

Kiunjuri, Festus Mwangi
Laikipia East
PNU
NO

Ndiritu Muriithi
Laikipia West
PNU
NO

Joseph Lekuton
Laisamis
KANU
NO

Abu Mohamed Chiaba
Lamu East
PNU
NO

Twaha, Yasin Fahim
Lamu West
NARC-K
NO

Prime Minister

Odinga, Raila Amolo
Langata
ODM
PAID

David Njuguna Kiburi Mwaura
Lari
PPK
NO

Mwalimu Masudi Mwahima
Likoni
ODM
NO

Peter Mungai Mwathi
Limuru
FORD-P
NO

Judah Katoo Metito
Loitokitok
NARC-K
NO

Khwa Shakhalaga Jirogo
Lugari
KADDU
NO

Atanas Manyala Keya
Lurambi
ODM
NO

Victor Kioko Munyaka
Machakos Town
ODM-K
NO

Amason Kingi Jeffah
Magarini
ODM
NO

Gidion Kioko Mbuvi
Makadara
NARC-KENYA
NO

Peter L.N. Kiilu
Makueni
ODM-K
NO

Shitanda, Peter Soita
Malava
NEW FORD-KENYA
NO

Maitha Gideon Mungáro
Malindi
ODM
NO

Hussein Mohamed Abdikadir
Mandera Central
SAFINA
NO

Mohamed Hussein Ali
Mandera East
ODM
NO

Mohamed, Muhamud Maalim
Mandera West
ODM
NO

Emilio Mureithi Kathuri
Manyatta
DP
NO

Mbau, Elias Peter
Maragwa
PNU
NO

Kilimo, Linah Jebi
Marakwet East
KENDA
NO

Boaz Kipchumba Kaino
Marakwet West
ODM
NO

Mbai, Benson Itwiku
Masinga
ODM-K
NO

Clement Muchiri Wambugu
Mathioya
PNU
NO

Empraim Mwangi Maina
Mathira
SAFINA
NO

Chirau Ali Mwakwere
Matuga
PNU
NO

Were, David Aoko
Matungu
ODM
NO

Kajwang’, Gerald Otieno
Mbita
ODM
NO

Mutula Kilonzo
Mbooni
ODM-K
NO

John Pesa Dache
Migori
ODM
NO

Hellen Jepkemoi Sambili
Mogotio
UDM
NO

Joseph Nganga Kiuna
Molo
PNU
NO

David K. Koech
Mosop
ODM
NO

Mohamud Mohamed Ali
Moyale
ODM
NO

Omar Mbwana Zonga
Msambweni
ODM
NO

Fred Chesebe Kapondi
Mt. Elgon
ODM
NO

Olweny, Patrick Ayiecho
Muhoroni
ODM
NO

Kabando Wa Kabando
Mukurweini
SAFINA
NO

Benjamin Jomo Washiali
Mumias
ODM
NO

Kilonzo, Julias Kiema
Mutito
ODM-K
NO

Balala,MohammedNajib
Mvita
ODM
NO

Daniel Mutua Muoki
Mwala
ODM-K
NO

Andrew Calist Mwatela
Mwatate
ODM
NO

Peter Njuguna Gitau
Mwea
PNU
NO

Vice President

Musyoka, Stephen Kalonzo
Mwingi North
ODM-K
PAID

Musila, David
Mwingi South
ODM-K
NO

John Michael Njenga Mututho
Naivasha
KANU
NO

Lee Maiyani Kinyanjui
Nakuru Town
PNU
NO

Okemo, Chrysanthus
Nambale
ODM
NO

Ntimama, William Ronkorua Ole
Narok North
ODM
NO

Nkoidila Ole Lankas
Narok South
ODM
NO

Jeremiah Ngayu Kioni
Ndaragwa
PNU
NO

Joshua Orwa Ojode
Ndhiwa
ODM
NO

Githae Robinson Njeru
Ndia
PNU
NO

Japhet M. Kareke Mbiuki
Nithi
KANU
NO

Francis Chachu Ganya
North Horr
ODM
NO

Silas Muriuki Ruteere
North Imenti
MAZINGIRA
NO

Wilfred Moriasi Ombui
North Mugirango/Borabu
KANU
NO

Pollyins Ochieng Anyango
Nyakach
ODM
NO

Fredrick Otieno Outa
Nyando
ODM
NO

Robert Onsare Monda
Nyaribari Chache
NARC
NO

Samson Kegengo Ongeri
Nyaribari Masaba
KANU
NO

Peter Edick Omondi Anyanga
Nyatike
ODM
NO

Esther Murugi Mathenge
Nyeri Town
PNU
NO

Erastus Kihara Mureithi
Ol’ Kalau
PNU
NO

President Kibaki, Mwai
Othaya
PNU
PAID

Martin Otieno Ogindo
Rangwe
ODM
NO

Nicholas O. Gumbo
Rarieda
ODM
NO

Luka Kipkorir Kigen
Rongai
ODM
NO

Dalmas Angango Otieno
Rongo
ODM
NO

Cecily Mutitu Mbarire
Runyenjes
PNU
NO

Wycliffe Musalia Mudavadi
Sabatia
ODM
NO

Eugene Ludovic Wamalwa
Saboti
PNU
NO

Hussein Tarry Sasura
Saku
ODM-K
NO

Raphael Lakalei Letimalo
Samburu East
ODM
NO

Lesirma, Simeon Saimanga
Samburu West
ODM
NO

Justus Kizito Mugali
Shinyalu
ODM
NO

Lenny Maxwell Kivuti
Siakago
SAFINA
NO

Wilson Mwotiny Litole
Sigor
ODM
NO

Wetangula, Moses Makisa
Sirisia
PNU
NO

Joyce Cherono Laboso
Sotik
ODM
NO

Murungi, Kiraitu
South Imenti
PNU
NO

Manson Nyamweya
South Mugirango
FORD-PEOPLE
NO

Margaret Wanjiru Kariuki
Starehe
ODM
NO

Nelson Ributhi Gaichuhie
Subukia
PNU
NO

Shaban, Naomi Namsi
Taveta
KANU
NO

Francis Thombe Nyammo
Tetu
PNU
NO

Alex Muthengi Mburi Mwiru
Tharaka
PNU
NO

Munya Peter Gatirau
Tigania East
PNU
NO

Mwiria, Valerian Kilemi
Tigania West
PNU
NO

Kosgey, Henry Kiprono
Tinderet
ODM
NO

Ethuro, David Ethuro
Turkana Central
PNU
NO

Munyes, John Kiyonga
Turkana North
PNU
NO

Josephat Nanok Koli
Turkana South
ODM
NO

Aggrey James Orengo
Ugenya
ODM
NO

Cyprian Ojwang Omollo
Uriri
ODM
NO

Yusufu Kifuma Chanzu
Vihiga
ODM
NO

Danson Mwazo Mwakulegwa
Voi
ODM
NO

Ibrabim Elmi Mohamed
Wajir East
ODM
NO

Hussein GabbowMohammed
Wajir North
ODM
NO

Mahamud Muhumed Sirat
Wajir South
ODM-K
NO

Adan Keynan Wehliye
Wajir West
KANU
NO

Wekesa B.A. Sambu
Webuye
ODM
NO

James Ondicho Gesami
West Mugirango
ODM
NO

Gumo, Fredrick Omulo
Westlands
ODM
NO

Thomas Luhindi Mwadeghu
Wundanyi
ODM
NO

Kilonzo Charles Mutavi
Yatta
ODM-K
NO

Yakub Mohammad Dor
Nominated
ODM
NO

Nyamweya George Omari
Nominated
PNU
NO

Abdalla Amina Ali
Nominated
KANU
NO

END.

Kenya: DOWRY BANNED, POLYGAMY ALLOWED-WE ARE FINISHED!

from Judy Miriga

Folks,

Changing life style and tradition of culture to conform with present generation of lifestyle in the millenium does not mean abandoning Traditional Values……

There were no weddings in those days, but dowry for bride price was……It now should just be retained as a symbolic gesture to seal and bond the marriage. “Mkosa mila ni mtumwa”…….Slave masters have a passion to change and tranform a slave to fit in their lifestyle and design………Watch out……..This is a conspiracy theory sired…..

We are on the road driving towards CHANGE, and passionate people must focus on how they are going to achieve what they believe in.

However, now that there are common place marriage through Church to perform and seal the Holy Matrimony, again, part of a Bride Price for symbolic gesture to appease the community’s spirit and avoid the curse of generation spirit, one cannot avoid to symbolize dowry as a Bride price not on monitary value of buying the bride.

However, when a marriage is done traditionally or over wedding, it is oath taking bond, given under oath……But incase there are unavoidable reasons that the two has to part ways, again, the two must seek legal redress for separation before they can commit to get married elsewhere…….Law is Law, there is no round about it, and Law must be obeyed.

It is against the law to just walk away from the marriage before legally separating as, settlement for divorce must be completed before one is free to go their ways as they freely wish to get engaged sexually away from their bond of marriage.

Consequently, if anyone walks out and gets married elsewhere in a binding marriage, before an official legalized divorce has been performed, commits Adultry, a crime punishable by the Law of land.

If the meaning of marriage cannot be protected and preserved by any Government worth its salt, then that Government has no business representing public interests……I do not see why there is a controversy about marriage……..The union between a man and a woman is clear-cut and there is no debate about it…….those who choose otherwise have no reason basis to cause conflict of interest or create a controversy for the same. But if Slave Master want to swagger the wife and husband to enjoy loose ended life to sample variety left and right, have a reason to build scapegoating……..

CHUNGA…..!

A domestic home (family), is the backbone of a community; a community is the backbone and strength of a Nation. A Nations Partnership for Unity of purpose with other Nations of the world, harmonizes conducive environment for peaceful coexistance sharing diverse interests of purpose for greater prospects in meeting challenges and competition for improved social lifestyle prospects…….and as a matter of concern, Trading is Link shared in Business of GIVE and TAKE…….You give what others do not have in exchange to get things in return to acquire things one do not have……..Long ago it was known as BARTER TRADING……the reason monitory (Money) exchange was created as a valuable means buy and sell commodities or services sold or rendered.

As a matter of fact, Government have a duty to preserve and protect its people’s security and interest, nurturing peaceful coexistance lifestyle with its Nation from destruction and against conflicting forces of diverse interest that could interfere with its peace and cultural values, honor and virtues, but provide negotiable atmosphere where its people and Nation can grow and prosper as they open doors and focus to meet other National communities.

There must be limitation of freedom, and Government has a duty to help assist regulate these freedom to make sure people do not break the laws, to avoid rules of the Jungle.

People go to school to get an education to do away with the rules of the Jungle. I expect a more sober debate from Policy makers or otherwise, it is time they must be shown the doors, if they cannot remember through which door they got to Parliament.

When Leadership and Integrity is lacking, this is what we get…….instead of the mind doing the business of thinking, it is in the business of lower industrial area of the bottom……..!

To have a right is not a guarantee to break laws, and laws and policy must compliment human values, dignity and virtues, without which, it is not the Law or Policy of the Land.

Thank you all, and have fun as you enjoy your weekends while celebrating Southern Sudan Independence.

Congratulation and Cheers to the people of South Sudan, and may God give Salva Kiir with all its leaders as well as all people of South Sudan, wisdom and strength to improve lives under Peace, Love and Unity…

Cheers everybody…!

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

– – – – – – – – – –

From: Jagem K’Onyiego

Oduya Eric,

Stop Panicking!! For sometime now, I have been following your postings and almost making a false conclusion that you are a very cool guy who can defend your territory well. Oooh!! Was I mistaken? Now, you just read this Bill and you are sounding like you have gotten scared out of your wits. No, No Brother; LAZIMA UKAE NGUMU KAMA GUMO.

During the promulgation of the New Constitution, he of the Kitendawili, aka “Dumakwiri” (Odharia in some Lingwa) quiped that “Sasa ndiyo Kazi inaanza”. I hope you did not forget this.

This new Constitution you must remember is meant to protect you and me from being torn to shreds by Vultures and Hyenas who swoop on things and want to eat more than their fill particularly where they have not Killed the pray.

Imagine for a moment that, if you want to marry, today, Ladies parents can give some “unmeetable” demands. It is as though they are selling their daughters to some Oil magnate residing in the Baltic sea, or somewhere in Siberia, where they will never ever meet their daughter again; ever!!!.

The surprising thing is that once they are paid money, I say pay because it is no longer Dowry, they still keep seeing their daughter and almost every end Month they continue to demand Money Money and more Money. This is not healthy for the relationship of the newly weds. Sooner or later it will degenerate and turn from Love to Hatred.

The banning of this “Selling price” for daughters coundn’t have come at a better time. Do not worry that if, say, you have daughters, like me and Miguna Miguna, that they will marry off and leave you a poor man. This notion is misplaced. Daughters will always come back to help their Parents, since they have that motherly instinct.

As for men the Bill is a Master piece for now, though it can be refined further. This is what I have been talking about here in the forum as to the Ligalization process of my “Favourite” Traditional Practise,….Polygamy. By the way don’t you think that Okapu Janeko had heads up, when he brought up this topic. Janeko really has some crazy paraphanelia in that Okapu of his.

Jagem

From: Ericson Oduya

Good People,

We are finished; this bill will weaken the marriage institution and if we are not careful the family values will be eroded to nothing. Could we have Maendeleo ya Wanawake standing up to be counted.

http://www.the-star.co.ke/national/national/30816-bill-outlaws-dowry-allows-polygamy

Warm Regards,
Eric.

Bill On Dowry, Polygamy And ‘Come-We-Stay’
Samuel Otieno And Dorothy Ruto

14 August 2007

Nairobi — The way Kenyans view marriages, dowry, divorce and come-we-stay relationships will change significantly if a proposed new law is enacted.

The place of dowry in society could be weakened considerably, as the Marriage Bill 2007 proposes that it should not affect the validity of marriage in any way, unlike in the present set up where dowry is seen as a binding factor.

DOWRY BANNED, POLYGAMY ALLOWED
Friday, 08 July 2011 00:02 BY FRANCIS MUREITHI

Payment of dowry is illegal but polygamy is allowed. Those proposals are included in the new Marriage Bill released by the Commission for Implementation of the Constitution yesterday which seeks to introduce sweeping changes in the institution of marriage.

The Bill will legalize ‘come-we-stay’ arrangements. “Where it is proved that a man and woman having capacity to marry have lived together openly for at least two years in such circumstances as to have acquired the reputation of being husband and wife, there shall be a rebuttable presumption that they were duly married,” says article 7 of the Bill.

Thousands of people live together as married couples, especially in urban areas. If passed, this proposal will greatly assist those women and children who have in the past been disinherited on the death of their husbands and fathers because there had been no formal marriage. And for prospective in-laws who have commercialized dowry by demanding cash payments of up to Sh2 million, the Bill provides that there will be no legal provisions for a family or anyone to demand payment.

The proposed law defines dowry as “any payment of stock, goods, money or other property made or promised in consideration of an intended marriage.” It therefore applies both to payment of bride price, and to the dowry brought by a bride to a new husband.

Article 54 provides that “An agreement to give dowry, whether made before or after the commencement of this Act, shall not be enforceable as a contract and the breach of any such agreement shall not give rise to any remedies for breach of contract.”

An attempt to recover dowry will not even be admissible in court. Article 55 states, “no action may be brought for the return of dowry whether in whole or in part.”

On polygamy, the Bill provides that if you are in a monogamous marriage, the status quo should remain. Men presently in a recognized monogamous marriage cannot convert to polygamous status.

However, unmarried men have the option of entering a monogamous or polygamous marriage. At the time of marrying, the groom can indicate that the marriage could be potentially polygamous which would give him a right to get married to other women.

No limit is placed on the number of polygamous marriages a man can enter into although the Bill states, “No married woman shall, while her marriage subsists, contract another marriage.” If the spouses agree, a polygamous marriage can be altered to a monogamous marriage. The Bill bars those already in polygamous marriages from dumping or entering a monogamous marriage with just one wife.

The Marriage Bill seeks to consolidate the various laws relating to marriage such as the Marriage Act, the Hindu Marriage and Divorce Act, the Mohammedan Marriage and Divorce Registration Act, African Christian Marriage and Divorce Act and the Subordinate Court (Separation and Maintenance) Act.

It clearly states that marriage shall be between a man and woman. A couple interested in getting married shall give the Registrar 21 days notice and indicate whether it will be a monogamous or potentially polygamous marriage. Where the intended husband is already married, the names of existing wives should be indicated in the notice. A marriage may be contracted in civil form, under customary law, Islamic form, Hindu ceremonies or Christian rites.

Those marrying will have to sign three marriage certificates—one for the district registrar or Kadhi, one for the husband and one for the wife. Presently, couples sign two copies, one of which is left with the registrar.

The Bill further states that unless the parties are legally separated or divorced, either spouse shall have the responsibility to provide the other with accommodation, clothing, food and other necessities.

Either spouse will have authority to pledge the other spouse‘s credit, to borrow money in his or her name, or to use any of his or her money which is in his or her possession or under his or her control.

Either spouse will have authority to convert movable property of the partner into money, and use it, so far as that credit or money is required or used for the purchase of necessities for himself or herself and any children of the marriage. In doing so, the spouse is required to have regard to the other spouse‘s means and way of life. Penalties for infringing this Act include being imprisoned for five years, or a Sh20,000 fine, or both.

USA & Kenya: Obama family reacts

From: Leo Odera

The family of President Barrack Obama in Kenya has reacted angrily over a new book to be release next week.

The book, authored by Sally H Jacob, a senior reporter with the Boston Globe, made a startling claim that the father of the US President, Barrack Obama Snr planned to give up his son for adoption.

Obama family spokesperson , Malik Abong’o Obama, described the new book as “fabrication, malicious and apolitical ploy aimed at derailing President Obama’s presidential re-election for the second term bid.”

The book, entitled, The Other Barack; The Bold and Reckless Life of President Obama’s Father” authored by Sally H Jacobs a senior reporter with the Boston Globe will be released officially next week by Public Affairs Press in the US.“Every Tom, Dick and Hurry is writing the Obama family just to make money out of it, the added in an interviewed published this morning by The NAIROBISTAR.

Malik who is the first son of the late Barrack Obama Snr with his first wife Grace Kezia is the US President Obama’s step-brother and lives with the families, which include his grand step-mother the 88-year old Mama Sarah Obama at Nyang’oma village, Alego Kogelo in Siaya district.

He went on disclosing that the author of the book Sally H Jacobs “come here to get a comment from us and we told her to go and do whatever she wanted to do because that was her right. We told her that as a family we did not approve her intention neither did we agree with such statements.”

Malik made a startling disclosure that the family had told Ms Jacobs to get the approval from the Prime Minister Raila Odinga before seeking any view on Obama Snr from them.

Malik’s reaction and remarks about the new book were dismissed as “inconsequential and mere public relations gimmicks the late Obama’s contemporary and age-mate who knew him pretty well.

The older Kenyans interview felt the contents of the new book are the best ever written about he background and profile of the late Obama Snr.The book, they said had captured the true history picture of the late Obama Snr and will, shade the light of his hidden life-style and corroborate it ,and the same time gave an insight portrait of Kenya’s most celebrated top economist.

Barack Obama Snr old Kenyan -fiends and school-mates at Maseno High school, but who preferred to remain anonymous have advised Obama’s first son Malik to hold hi gun and wait for a while and only to air his to comments after reading the book and going its contents on page by page.

The author wrote in part.”Barrack Obama Snr was born in 1936 at Kanyadhiang’ village, Central Karachuonyo in what was then known as South Nyanza district {Now Rachuonyo north district}.

He later received a scholarship to study economics at the University of Hawaii at Manoa in the US through the airlift program organized by the then leading nationalist and freedom fighter he late Tom Mboya.

Obama Snr married fellow student Ann Dunhum in Maui, Hawaii, though he did not aware her his new Kenyan husband was already married back home in Kenya until much later.

President Obama was born on August 4,1961. His mother Ann Dunhum quit her studies to care for the new born baby while Obama Snr completed his degree.

President Obama’s parents separated when he was only two year old and were officially divorced in 1964.

On his return to Kenya in 1965, Obama Snr was hired by an oil company and also served as an economist working with he Ministry of Transport and later the Finance Ministry.

His decline began soon after the late Tom Mboya was assassinated in 1969 THEREAFTER Obama Snr was fired from jobs after the other and began to drink.

He had a serious car accident, spent almost one year in hospital, and by the time he visited his son in Hawaii in late 1971,he already had deformed leg. He died in 1982, at the age of 46 in a third car crash in Nairobi.

Commenting on the new book one of several others written by different authors in Europe and the US, Malik Obama said,” There are people who are out to spoil our good name. This is a political ploy to demean President Obama’s second presidential bid. We know there are some political forces working behind the scene to support the boo which is being used to fight President Obama,”

Ends

Kenya: Mercy Keino: sexually molested and murdered!

From: Tebiti Oisaboke

Kombo;

This is our Kenya and it will always be Kenya as it been before. Kenya is a country where capital crimes are committed by the “money controllers” leaving behind a trail of incriminating evidence and all the wananchi are told by the investigating authorities is that, “we are investigating or looking into that case”. And that will be the end of it and won’t be heard of again. There are many such cases which have happened before and they have died a silent natural death. They never bother to give out updates on how far the investigating or how close are they in zeroing-in on the culprits. It just dies away like the deceased victims. That is why I said before that we have a long way to go and we haven’t embarked on the trip yet. Honorable MPs who are supposed to be our defenders on cases such as this one never pursue it any further and beyond the initial investigation phases. They just stay away and concentrate on how to rake in more of the tax payer’s money. I haven’t heard anything from Hon Charles Keter who is Mercy’s MP say anything further than what he said on the day she was laid to rest. Same goes to champion Wamboi and many others whose lives were brutally terminated by the “land owners”. Hon Mwau’s case is also slowly dying down as the dust settles down.

Its very easy to arrest those who killed Mercy since their DNA was on her body. How in the world has anyone been arrested and charged with her murder? How long does it take to do a DNA test in Kenya and we already know who and who was at that mid-night party? Just get their DNA and find a march from that one found on Mercy’s body. However, since Kenya is a country where the politically powerful and “money stinking folks” can commit crimes and buy their freedom, the small guy has no power to fend for themselves since the law is not on their side as is the case in other countries. God forbid, evils like these will be history come 2013 when the country will be completely transformed by the political landscape being changed with the birth of the new county level governorship.

Going with the initial evidence which was given by those who were interviewed and gave statements to the police, most of knew right away that those were fabricated stories of which they were dictated on what to say and not to. They painted her with all kinds of a whole lot of fabrications just to make her look bad and that it was her fault to have died the way she died. Most of these witnesses were compromised or threatened not to give evidence. Its all upon Hon Keter to put the chief spy and his lieutenants on toes so that they can act on this case and apprehend Mercy’s killers so that her family may get the justice they so much deserve. Hon keter should be the middleman between the family and Spy Ndirangu’s lieutenants. Please give this case a double push to get a break through.

May God bless Mercy’s soul and find her JUSTICE!!

TOI

— On Wed, 7/6/11, Elijah Kombo wrote:

I have studied the police reports in detail. I have examined the results. I have collated previous police reports on murder cases. I have just looked at the recent investigation on Ocampo six by Kenya Investigators.

I have now come to a conclusion that Mercy Keino was sexually assaulted and murdered in cold blood when she threatened to go public! Mercy was not drank as we are made to believe. She was dragged, sexually abused and murdered! The stories we have heard are all false, untrue just like the Ouko cover-up!

Mercy was not known to be a down syndrome case but a committed Christian girl who only wanted to socialize at a party. It is not common to have a committed christian girl like Mercy to be drank until intoxication. I don’t believe the evidence those drankards gave to the police. It was a lie, and white lie. We have had cover-up cases. If Ouko’s murders have never been prosecuted until today, what do you think of a poor village girl! I dont agree with testimonies those at the party brought forth. Money must have changed hands, after-all girls who were at the party went for handouts from the rich businessmen.

When will the killer be revealed and charged?

Kenya: Suba region is the richest area within the Homa-Bay County

News Feature By Leo Odera Omolo In Mbita Town.

Sub-region, which is part of the Homa-Bay County, the largest in the greater Southern Nyanza is potentially and versatile in facilities which could rack in millions of shillings in terms of revenue collection if such resources could be properly developed.

Suba region is covering areas like Mbita and the newly created Gwassi administrative districts. This region along with its abundance resources is capable of making he vat Homa-Bay County one of the richest among the 47 counties countrywide.

It potential source of the resources and revenue include tourism, fishing and fish trades, hidden minerals, pre-historic sites and its proximity to the cross border trades across Lake Victoria and the neighboring states of Tanzania and Uganda.

Mbita and Gwassi parliamentary constituencies are parts of the eight parliamentary constituencies, covering Kasipul, Kabongo, Karachuonyo Rangwe, Homa-Bay and Ndhiwa, which forms the larger Homa-Bay County. The region needs only he good governance to be put n place at its administrative headquarters, which is located at Homa-Bay Town. The regional headquarters can now be accessed by good tarmacked roads via Rongo and also via Kendu-Bay in Rachuonyo North district.

The pre-historic sites on the twin islands of Rusinga and Mfangano could also be accessed by roads using the ultra-modern Ndori-Luanda-Kotieno road in Bondo that links Kisumu and Mbita Towns. Here the visitors could be ferried in a von voyage 40 minutes journey of crossing the narrow Nyanza Gulf using well maintained and serviced Mbita Ferries.

The Mbita Ferries, a company which is owned and managed exclusively by he local entrepreneur maintains two ferries with one sailing across while the other one stand by in case the one sailing across the channel is stalled in the middle of the lake.

The yet to be fully developed tourist attraction sceneries include Ruma National Game Park in Lambwe Valley, pre-historic sites on Rusinga and Mfangano Islands, Gwassi and in Rachuonyo. It is also a versatile region for lovers of birds watching and fishing leisure.

Ruma National Game Park is rich in abundance game animals of all species, and it is the home of the rare Roan Antelope, a very special species only found at the Simba Hill Game Reserve in Kwale district at the Coast and also in the famous Kruger National Game Pak in the Republic of South Africa.

The park is also housing other wild animals species like elands, reed-bucks, water-bucks, bush-bucks, Rothschild’s giraffes, tofi, the rare waiter antelopes which is only known in vernacular language as “Nyambaja”which resides on the summit of the nearby Ruri Hills and only occasionally come down to the plains in search of drinking waters during dead hours of the night. But only seen by the locals and visitors during the drought and dry spells of time when grass on the hill tops are burnt down by poachers.

However, the “Big Five” namely elephant, lions, rhinos are missing from the list f the wild animals currently stocked in the park. But the fifth which is evasive leopard is there with a few herds of the fiercest buffaloes, which rarely comes out of Bungu-Ruma forest. There are other predators like Hyena.

Next to Ruma National Game Park is the Gwassi Hills which reputed as being full of tree with medicinal substances and herbs. The beauty and value of the Gwassi Hills have in the recent years been vandalized due to intensive human settlement and farming. However, a Kisumu based NGO, the OSIENALA working in collaboration with foreign based financial agencies has made frantic efforts to save the Gwassi Hills with an intensive reforestation program, which has seen millions of tree seedling being planted on the hills and illegal settlers, sent packing.

Also located near Nyandiwa Trading Centre in Central Gwassi is the famous pre-historical site known as “Nyamgondho Wuod Ombare”. In this place mystery human foot-prints and those f domesticated animals could be seen on the rocks, especially during early morning hours when the lake waters are so clean.

The foot-prints are related with the mythological story of an estranged wealthy woman who rebelled against her foster husband and walked back into the lake where she had earlier on been fished out by Nyamgondho a fisherman after some alleged serious family disagreement. The woman is said to have run back to the lake and disappeared with all her worldly wealth including her domesticated animals.

The newly to be instituted County government must go out full blast and source the funds with which t could support the local entrepreneurs to establish luxury hotels and the beaches on both Rusinga and Mfangano islands, Gwassi, Kaksingiri and Rachuonyo North districts along the shorelines of Lake Victoria a part of tourist attractions.

Another pre-historic site s the two rocks resembling the fighting bull which stands a few kilometers off Wanyama beach in Rusinga Island. The stories go that the bull christened Nyama-Gi-Ware, representing the families of two brothers who are ancestors of the Waware and Wanyama sub-clans. One bull as the stories goes belonged to Mnyama while the other one belonged to his brother Ware. It is being alleged that the bull had fought fiercely until they enter into the lake waters while locked their horns and turned into permanent rocks erected inside the lake.

At a place called Soklo Kipenji, which is an island located off the Mirunda and Malela beaches I Lambwe Location, the story goes that the rock island is inaccessible by any human being. Travelers sailing from Rusinga Island to Homa-Bay town are always getting a forewarning not to ask about this mysterious island as their canoe, boats or dhow passes by the uninhabited island. A common and popular say goes that I the early 1930 two British tourist had made an attempt to land at the rocky island and all disappeared without trace to-date. Even local fishermen keep a safe distance from the rocky island while on their fishing expedition in nearby areas. The place, the local fishermen says even birds such as fish eagles and other kept away from.

Other potential spot for the possible development of tourist attractions includes the volcanic Lake Simbi Nyaima in Central Karachuonyo, which is also the center of attraction to lesser flamingoes and other migratory birds during certain period of the year.

Homa-Bay County is also endowed with abundance mineral resources such as the now disused Awuoro Mines in West Kisipul, Limestone in Lambwe Valley, the suspected uranium deposits in Gwassi and other parts of Suba region, gold, copper and nickels.

The region therefore required men and a woman of the highest caliber to man it is resources to generate revenues and good governance to be in place.

Ends

KENYA: OTIENO KAJWANG’ HAS SWITCHED FROM DEFENDING HIS OTHERWISE SAFE MBITA PARLIAMENTARY SEAT TO CONTEST THE HOMA-BAY COUNTY SENATE; IS IT A BLUNDER OR POLITICAL SUICIDE?

News Analysis By Leo Odera Omolo In Kisumu City.

The sudden change of heart, which has seen the Immigration Minister Gerald Otieno Kajwang’ in a surprise move to contest the Homa-Bay County Senate seat instead of defending his otherwise safe Mbita parliamentary seat, has thrown political thinkers in the region into a total confusion. Political pundits were quick in suggesting that the Minister’s move is a “big blunder or a political suicide”, that could see the Minister’s early ext from the local political derby in the region.

For Kajwang’, the man who had done very little in his Mbita constituency in terms of development to wine the voters in all the eight parliamentary constituencies would be an up-hill task.

Residents of Mbita says this is Raila’s secret scheme aimed at locking out of regional politics the people of Suba origins who are believed not to be in his favor.

Local pundits, however, maintains that the move has some political connotation and intrigues involving a scheme suspected to have been hatched with the blessing of the Prime Minister Raila Odinga with express purpose of creating a safe parliamentary constituency for the entry into the August House by a young son of his father’s long serving aide, the late Mbewa Ndede.

The late Mbewa Ndede, was among several Luos who were rounded up by the KANU regime under the retired President Daniel Arap Moi and taken to the Nyayo House Torture Chambers, tortured and later prosecuted for being members of the outlawed “Mwakenya” underground movement.

The late Mbewa Ndede was convicted on his own plea of guilty and sentenced to five years imprisonment with hard labor. He completed his jail sentence and after his release from prison he succumbed to injuries which he had sustained during the interrogations at the Nyayo House Torture Chambers and died. The rumor making the round have it that Raila Odinga wants to compensate the family by supporting the youthful Eng T.J.Mbewa an engineer working with the Roads Ministry as an engineer.

Insiders have informed us that Raila Odinga is interested in sponsoring one wealthy NGO executive in the name of Phares Ogweno Ratego a resident of Rusinga East Location. On June 19th this year Raila Odinga attended the burial of one Mrs Turphena Agutu Okombo in Kolo village, which is close to the homes of both Ratego and the nominated MP Millie Odhiambo, Before flying out to Ndhiwa where he and President Mwai Kibaki and other government leaders were in attendance during the burial the same day of Mzee Michael Ojode Oteno, the father of the Assistant Minister for Internal Security Joshua Orwa Ojode at Ratang’a Central Kwbwayi in Ndhiwa district.

MIllie Odhiamb is by far the most favorites of the voters in Mbita due to her consistency and enormous and regular contributions in parliament on issues of national importance. She is has yet to made up her mind as to whether should be running for the County women Senate seat or in the Mbita parliamentary seat. Kajwang’ decision to switch position from defending her parliamentary seat to the wide open contest of the County Senate seat is viewed by local political pundits a an act of gross miscalculation and an act which could easily cost him his long an rewarding political career.

The Immigration Minister was among the youthful politicians who had branded themselves as the “Young Turks” who together with other joined hands with the late Jaramogi Oginga Odinga and vigorously campaign for the re-introduction of political pluralism system, which saw the death of the old KANU monolithic one party system.

He won the Mbita seat during the first multi-party election in 1992, and has repeatedly successfully defended his seat ever since. The Minister, however, had a lackluster performance and poor track record of development, something which could not augur well in his ambition to become the Senate representative of the Homa-Bay County, which is covering eight parliamentary constituencies and perhaps the largest in this region.

He will therefore join the race for the Senate seat with less than 10 per cent support and backing from his home constituency to battle with others in areas unknown to him.

The Homa-Bay County Senate seat covered areas like Gwassi, Mbita, Ndhiwa, Rangwe, Homa-Bay Town, Karachuonyo, Kasipul and Kabondo.His chances of galvanizing votes in Kasipul and Kabondo constituencies is ruled out. This is because it was Otieno Kajwang’ who was used by Raila Odinga and spear-headed the controversial ousting of the influential Ker Meshack Riaga Ogalo, from the mantle and leadership of the moribund Luo Council of Elders from his office. And as such the residents of the two constituencies where Ker Riaga Ogalo has enormous influence will definitely vote against Kajwang’.

He is unknown to the voters in Ndhiwa constituency, and known not to be getting well with the people of Suba origins from both Gwassi and Mbita. He is said to be banking on the support of the residents of Gembe and Lambwe Valley his home turf locations. Gembe area includes Mbita Town, which is has a mixture of residents from the various Luo- sub-clans operating in town as traders and government workers and fishermen.

Kajwang would face much more awkward situation f the Ndhiwa MP Joshuia Orwa Ojode, whoi is an Assistant Minister for Internal Security make up his mind to contest the same Senate seat as it is being rumoured. Ojode would join the race with a solid support and backing of Ndhiwa residents, and area which he has turned into ne of the most vibrant area in terms of socio-economic development. Before Ojode was elected to represent Ndhiwa, the agriculturally rich region was considered as one of the most backward areas in the greater Southern Nyanza region.

Ojode and Kajwang’ are sworn political rivalries ever since the latter was named it full cabinet slot by Raila Odinga during the formation of the grand coalition government and Ojode was relegated to a junior position of the deputy Minister. Ojode had previously served as an Assistant Minister for education during the brief period of KANU/LDP merger under the retired President Daniel Arap Moi. He was re-appointed an Asistant Minister under President Kibaki’s Narc government, but following the out of the 2005 constitutional referendum voting which pitted Kibaki on one side and Raila Odinga on the other side, Kibaki which resulted on the government under the slogan of Banana and Raila’s group Orange symbol, Kibaki kicked out government ministerial positions Raila and his supporters. The President offered Ojode a full cabinet position in the Ministry of Forestry and Wildlife. But the latter turned the appointment down in solidarity with Raila and his colleagues.

Surprisingly when Rail and Kibaki formed the current coalition government of PNU/ODM, Ojode was relegated to the junior position of the deputy Minister. The abrasive Ndhiwa MP took an offence and considered himself as having been short-changed by Raila, who in turn brought to the government Kajwang’ who is a green horn and also Dalmas Otieno who only joined ODM the other days shortly before the 2007 general election. Otieno prior to this was the National Vice chairman of KANU, but ditched KANU in eleventh hours to secure an ODM ticket which enabled him to win Rongo Seat.

After the formation of the coalition government Ojode has stayed away fro all the public functions involving the Prime Minister leading to suspicion and insinuations from other quarters that he had turned out to be a sympathizer of PNU, the accusation which the Assistant Minister has vehemently denied. Unlike the position of the Homa-Bay County governor, the Senate seat has attracted very a handful aspirant. They are the former Kasipula Kabondo MP William Oloo Otula and a Ndhwa politician –cum-business man Hilary Ocheng’ Alila, who is also the ODM coordinator of youths in Nyanza. Alila is a successful businessman operating in both Nairobi and Kampala Cities. His candidature has drawn large support from mainly youths and women. In the case of the governorship position, the bruising battle is expected between the three leading contenders, namely Eng Phillip Okoth Okundi, the immediate former Rangwe MP, Dr. Mark Matunga, the leading computer technologist working with Microsoft International.

Other who have declared their interests in the County governor’s position included the incumbent Rangwe MP Martin Otieno Ogindo, a Mbita businessman Opiata Ogada and others who are considered as” big jokers”.

Rumor, however, persist that Raila Odinga is not comfortable with the people of the Suba origins, and that “Agwambo” is still nursing the old wound of the ideological battle between his father the late Jaramogi Oginga Odinga and the late charismatic leader and KANU secretary General Tom Mboya that saw Odinga being edged out of KANU and post-independence cabinet of the late founding president Jomo Kenyatta. Many people in this region want Raila Odinga to forget politics of four to five decades ago and work with the people’s choice of leadership in this region for the better A and success of the ODM as the way forward.

An incident which occurred in few months leading to 2007 general election could be a testimony to this claim. Sammy Wakiaga a civil servant and a prominent Nairobi based businessman was heading for a landslide election victory over Otieno Kajwang’ in Mbita constituency on an ODM ticket. But what emerged later was that Raila Odinga had prevailed upon Wakiaga to step down and wait for other job opening up in the event of the ODM forming the government. Wakiagais said to have reluctantly chicken out of the race giving the room for Kajwang’ to retain his seat comfortably. Wakiaga has since then kept a low profile and always steered clear of local political derby.

Kajwan’ who hail from Waondo sub-clan, which is not related to the Suba group is said to have joined the anti- .groups within the ODM and that is why is just about to vacate his parliamentary seat in favor of TJ Mbewa a member of the Karachuonyo sub-clan from Kobuya, but not in genuinely in favor of Ms Millie Odhiambo or Phares Ratego as such hoping that the this strategy will also work against the populist Dr Mark Matunga another Suba from Mfangano Island who is vying for the County Governor position, and who appeared to have already galvanized big support from the two Suba districts, namely Gwassi and Mbita. Major Luo sub-clans who will be voting for Country Senator, governor and other regional representatives ickude, Jo-Gwassi, Jo-Kakisigiri, Jo-Rusinga, Jo-Mfangano, Jo-Kanyidoto, Jo-Kanyikela, Jo-Kwabwayi, Jo-Kanytamwa, Jo-Kabuoch, Jo-Kanyada, Jo-Gemn, Jo-Kagan, Jo-Gongo, Jo-Kochia, Jo-Karachuonyo, Jo-Kasipul and jo-Kabondo.The region covering an area which is close to 140 kilometers in length and about 60 and 70 in width. The area stretches from Sondu-Miriu nd goes up to Mfangno Island and other mall islands scattered Lake Victoria. The region consist of people from diverse background grouped together in eight districts and it would be an up-hill task for anyone who does not control home turf votes to win any of the County positions.

Ends

Kenya: KRA collects Sh635 billion

from Elijah Kombo

Oisaboke – Well said. Let the other MPs pay up and then we will say job well done.

But we must congratulations KRA for ensuring that the MPs pay up. Its was a good threat from Njiraini. But now the challenge remains with the Spenders. Previsiouly KRA performed/delivered but the Spenders misused the funds. We also saw the KRA commissioner together with other parastatal chiefs fund one presidential candidate from tax payer’s money.

Kombo Elijah

— On Tue, 7/5/11, Tebiti Oisaboke wrote:

Mike;

We will hold on to our congratulations for a job well done until the last of Speaker Marende’s audience students pay up their dues. And then we all sing HOSANNA!!! job well done. Overall you are leading in the right direction.

TOI

Kenya: Police and Drug Rings

From: Judy Miriga

Folks,

This is Sooo painful my head goes round and round I am not able to put myself together reading this brutal drug baron acts……

Kenya Police with the Government need thorough clean up……any mother or father will be sick reading this heartless and unthinkable brutality metted on your baby, the loved ones……I cant imagine, it doesnt seem to me like a true story…..

All these are happening because of bad compromised leadership……Any responsible leader, a parent or a manager would not let such happen before their very eyes without putting a stop to it.

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

– – – – – – – – – – –

Saturday, 02 July 2011 00:01 BY MIGUNA MIGUNA

I have a confession to make. When I read about the grisly murder of the University of Nairobi student Merci Keino, I cringed and cried so loud those near me might have thought I had gone crazy. I was. I am a proud father of four lovely young girls aged between fifteen and seven. I could only think of my girls when the news about Mercy’s death broke. So, readers should forgive me if I take her death personally. I do.

And for that reason, I am extremely upset with the ever fumbling and incompetent Kenya Police. I have read with more anger Police Commissioner Mathew Iteere’s plea that ‘Mwau aides should be charged.’ Gracious Lord; that’s the institution Kenyans expect to conduct investigations and apprehend Mercy’s killers?

By law, only the police have the mandate to conduct criminal investigations and apprehend criminals. But on that newspaper report Iteere is pleading with God-knows-who to arrest people that had staged a shooting and then lied to the police about it. Hallo? Why has it taken more than one week to lock up those scumbags?

Everyone who saw Harun Mwau’s vehicle after the alleged shooting knows that the damn thing was staged. It was staged so poorly that even the two actors couldn’t perform the skit. Everyone could see the driver’s smirk when questioned how the six bullets could have struck very close to the car handle, with some bullets exiting on the passenger side door without touching either the driver or the body guard. They had no answers on how the driver’s window could be completely shattered with glass falling onto the seat where he sat during the ‘shooting’, yet he emerged unscathed.

Moreover, Iteere himself had declared that the way the shooting was supposed have occurred defies all laws of velocity (or was it ‘the law of munition’?).

The police only need ‘probable and reasonable basis’ to believe that a crime has been committed for them to arrest and charge a suspect. In the Mwau incident, there were a zillion ‘reasonable and probable cause’ to believe that the two actors had manufactured the story and lied to the police. Those are two charges right there. A third charge is the illegal use of firearm. A fourth one is ‘conspiracy to defeat the course of justice.’ Others would naturally follow after their arrests.

This brings me to the unforgivable cold-blooded murder of Mercy Keino. Why do I insist it was a cold-blooded murder? The story, as narrated by the local media, is pretty straight forward. A beautiful young female university student is invited out by her cousin. They arrive in Westlands late evening and are ‘welcomed’ by two studs who, by all accounts are either pimps or drug enforcers. They meticulously interview the two young women, taking their personal details and identity documents. That’s clue number one.

At that point, a cautious, streets smarts girl would have started being suspicious. But Mercy is a rambunctious, naïve beauty who is eager to have a good time on a Friday evening. So, the two pimps or enforcers flag a taxi (a second clue) and take the girls to a ‘private’ party.

The party is warming up when they arrive. Curiously, the women outnumber men one to three. That’s clue number three. Clue number four is the age-bracket of the ‘girls’; all range between nineteen and twenty five.

But there is ‘business’ to discuss with the middle-aged to elderly ‘business suits’ already seated and others arriving (clue number five). Alcohol is flowing like the great Nile. Clue number six. The only wrinkle is that Mercy is a teetotaler, yet alcohol is integral to the execution of the ‘business’ at hand. Clue seven.

Although the women outnumber men, the place is clearly swarming with heavily built security; armed and unarmed. This is the eighth clue.

Discussions veer towards the delicate and murky details of ‘transatlantic shipments of precious cargo.’ Whispers and codes used. Mercy is completely lost and starts getting restless. She wants to leave, NOW! That is the ninth clue.

But there is a problem; the ‘boss’, who has just arrived, cannot allow Mercy to leave. He thinks Mercy is dangerous. She has seen and heard too much. She is a risk the ‘business’ cannot take. He commands her to resume her seat and politely reminds her that she has two choices: ‘you either cooperate or you will become past tense.’ Mercy – naïve and boisterous – dares the ‘boss’ and attempts to leave. A scuffle ensues and Mercy is forcibly confined. She pretends to relax and engages in small talk. A few minutes later, she suddenly runs towards the exit.

The muscle men quickly grab her and force her back inside. Mercy has become a captive. By this time, she has resolved not to cooperate. Flashing before her is her fiancé and the wedding they had planned for December this year. ‘I can’t do this!’ she kept screaming. She took furtive glances at her cousin who was herself too scared to come to Mercy’s aid. Mercy is all alone now. The ‘bss’ has had enough. He orders his men to ‘feed her.’ She is forced to drink a cocktail of alcohol and other substances. This is clue number ten.

The effect was instant. The ‘boss’ gives a secret signal to his men. The exit suddenly opens for Mercy and she lunges at it. On reaching outside, the men tell her that they will call a taxi and ‘escort’ her home. She refuses but at this point, she has no options.

A sleek Mercedes ‘taxi’ dutifully arrives within minutes and Mercy is forced inside. What follows after this is well known to the underworld: rape, torture, strangulation and death. A few minutes later, the body is dumped on the busy Waiyaki Way. Clue number eleven.

Shortly thereafter, the ‘taxi’ is slowly driven into a hidden warehouse and its number plate removed. It is thoroughly vacuumed inside out and repainted. The number plate is transferred to another sleek Mercedes. Clue twelve.

A cover-up story is quickly manufactured and disseminated to senior editors in various media houses. Senior police officers are quickly roped in. Mercy is depicted as having been drunk, rowdy and reckless. A motor vehicle accident story has been carefully circulated. The media frenzy sets in. ‘It was an accident!’ they scream. The pathologist can’t tell the cause of death. That’s predictable. The story is latched onto by the inept and corrupt police and press. The police officer that witnessed the autopsy has been transferred. Clue thirteen.

This was supposed to be an open and shut case. Yet the police haven’t arrested anybody for aggravated assault, forcible confinement, unlawful detention, battery and torture. These are crimes disclosed by various newspaper reports. Additionally, the police should charge somebody with murder. But the witnesses are scared shitless. They are only repeating the cover-up stories they were fed by the agents of the ‘boss’.

Why haven’t the police searched and examined all homes, offices, apartments, rooms, hotels, motels, vehicles, warehouses, depots – anything connected with everyone who was at the party? What about the Nyoyo Stadium where that Okello guy supposedly delivered a ‘bag’ after midnight on the day Mercy was murdered? Has it been combed? If not, why? With their criminal negligence of the Samuel Kamau Wanjiru murder case, the Police Commissioner is proving to Kenyans that he cannot deliver. Let truth be told: Mercy refused to be a drug mule and for that she had to die. It’s as simple as that. There you are: I’ve done it for my girls!

From: Cosmos Omondi
Subject: NOSE BLEEDING & Death, kenyan detective??

Date: Saturday, June 25, 2011, 5:37 PM

Oduor,

Presently, to be sincere, the war on drugs can only be successfully won in a few democracies like the US soil. But in places like Kenya the drug network is so complex that if we genuinely commence fighting it today it will take us a generation. 99% of the current crop of leaders will have go out of the scene.

Why do I say this? Remember when Sonko threatened to spill the beans in parliament, everyone in the house shivered – that could only happen where the high and mighty are touched.

Drug affair is so bloody so that for us to successfully manage it (near the stage where the US is) then we’ll have to agree as a country on many issues. If not then many of those trying to unearth anything related to it will continue dropping dead mysteriously!

Omosh.

On Sat, Jun 25, 2011 at 11:08 PM, maurice oduor wrote:

Cosmos,

Heheheheheeee !!!!

You don’t want us bringing up the Wanjiru case? I understand your vested interests here. Good luck pursuing Njeri. Have you even made an initial contact? That’s the most difficult part right now.
Talk to people like Mheshimiwa to help you out.

About that cop: he was ailing? Did they say what ailment? In North America his body would have been treated as a radioactive substance, for example. His family and people who had come in contact with him would have been quarantined. Remember Ebola?

Courage

From: Cosmos Omondi
Date: Sat, 25 Jun 2011 22:50:59 +0300

Nyandoto,

Report according to 7.00pm news are that the police officer was ailing.

Oduor,

When bringing in Wanjiru’s case as an example be careful coz am watching you.

On Sat, Jun 25, 2011 at 8:32 PM, maurice oduor wrote:

Daktari,

You are very right. There’s almost no care at all in the way crime is investigated in Kenya. Investigators don’t wear gloves or masks; the crime scene is not secured and evidence is contaminated left and right.

From what I’ve seen of Kenya’s investigative techniques, they’re still where Canada and the US were in the 40s and 50s. Take the Wanjiru case. There are rumours that he might have been killed in the house and then the body thrown out over the balcony. If that rumour is true and someone cleaned all the blood droplets in the house, Luminol, a chemical used by the FBI and Police in the US, would have detected this in seconds. Luminol will detect blood even if you clean it off with bleach/Jik.

Our investigative skills are pathetic and that’s why a lot of crimes and murders go unsolved.

Courage,
Oduor Maurice

From: paul nyandoto
Date: Sat, 25 Jun 2011 17:13:57 +0000

Humans,

This detective`s death in Kenya is a mystery. Have the press been told all the symptoms or the press has just released outline they collected from relatives, but not doctors. If this samaritan was healthy and never was sick then he must have been killed: So if he was killed then how?. Where did he eat that day, has he been sick. Kenyan policemen are also known to be doing work without gloves, neither do they put on mask etc.

Biological war fare substances like smallpox, plague, tularemia have been cultivated and even modified in laboratories to kill very fast if needed. The three I have mentioned can be aerosolized and through respiratory droplets can easily enter your breathing system and cause death. But according to the daily nation reporter today the symptoms given and the time it took to death I personally do rule out smallpox and tularemia, it is impossible for them cause such a quick reaction unless modified.

BUT; BUT: PLAGUE (septic plague) fits the symptoms almost 100%, unless all are not told on the report by the daily nation or some highly virulent virus (ebola). Other alternatives are radioactive substances. I think much will be released later incase they do a good investigation on his life, path and finally on his body. Some kenyans have also been extraordinary rich within a very short limited time that nobody can account for their wealth. They must have been involved in some extra activity business which have very high risk if not drugs. I hear some have been probed for drug trafficking but nothing found. Then we are left with: illegal biological cultivation, transporting illegal radioactive materials to Iran etc. There are evidences that some radioactive substances are being taken to Iran through Kenya etc.

Paul Nyandoto

Kenya: Any future government Must address this

From: Eric W. Mburi

People,

I have always wondered what next after all the liberation Kenya has undergone since independence.But one thing bothers me a lot. Who will guarantee economic liberation for all Kenyans?We have gone political liberation until the other day when Kibaki wanted to appoint public officials arbitrarily, he met the full force of the people rescinding his decision and eating humble pie.

Now have we ever wondered how we can achieve the same.

How do we ensure that those who can not afford food still must eat as a government?

How do we ensure that those who can not afford housing are still housed?

How do even ensure that those who can not afford to pay for electricity but which they must use get the same paid for them?

Are we going to say we are fully capitalist of partial socialist to ensure everyone gets what he/she is supposed to get irrespective of their capacity and ability to get the same with finances

How does the government plan to carter for basic needs for people who can not afford them in a fully Capitalist economy?

The government must be forced to guarantee the equality of all citizens regardless of religion,gender,culture,demographic disposition or otherwise even if we achieve political liberation the above can easily course discontent and rebellion against the government.

Statistics have always shown that some 10% of Kenyans own 90% of Kenya’s wealth.How then is the government expected to deal with this in equality?

Some legislation should be enacted that the government at all times need to fully guarantee equality to all their citizens: basically, in the case of Kenya,that no one shall go hungry/nor sleep in the cold for whatever reason, and if so happens the government is held accountable for the same.If this was in place,then we would not be having IDPs as of now.

For me this is what any prospective presidential candidate must address and urgently

Kenyans must demand for the recognition of this right and for which the government must be held accountable

Ja’kamburi

Kenyans alarmed as lightning kills 20 people within one week

Writes Leo Odera Omolo

TWENTY Kenya were strike dead by lightening at different locations and districts within last week alone.

Experts maintain that this is the highest figure ever reported in the country’s history of natural calamities ever since 1960/1961.

On Sunday, he residents of Minjeiwa village in Keiyo South district in Elgeyo/ Marakwet County within the North Rift gave a tearful send off a 46 year-old mother and her seven children.

The entire family of eight was wiped out plus their two sheep when the thunderbolt struck their grass thatched house last Saturday evening as they assembled waiting to be served with the evening meals.

All the eight were burnt beyond recognition, while utensils were strewn all over the compound. The only living things were chickens. All the eight victims of catastrophic death were buried in mass grave.

A neighbor who heard the deafening blast rushed to the compound and saw the house on fire. When he peeped his eyes through a window, he saw the bodies were on fire.

Alice Chemurgor, a 46 year old, was living alone with her seven children after separating from her husband a couple of years ago. The husband did not attend the funeral. And in according to the Kalenjin customs people killed in search tragedies are buried immediately after which a cultural cleansing ritual will be performed by the elders from both families of the failed marriage.

Last Friday, three pupils at Toku Primary School, South Kanyajuok in Kamagambo South Location, Rongo district in Migori County were also struck dead by lightning. The thunderbolt injured more than 30 other pupils when it strike heir classroom during the late afternoon down pour. The injured were rushed to Rongo sub-district Hospital and to other medical institution within the nearby districts where most of them were treated for burns and discharged.

The Rongo MP who is also Kenya’s Minister for Public Service, Dalmas Otieno, visited the school lat Saturday and consoled the bereaved families. The Minister and the residents of the area later conducted an impromptu Harambee fund drive and raised money for the assistance of the bereaved and the injured pupils families to secure medical treatment.

Las Sunday afternoon at abut 6.30 pm lightning strikes once again and killed a man. Mzee Obura and his son was taking shelter in a house at Pala, in Pala Division, Ndhiwa district, in the County of Homa-Bay when the tragedy occurred. His body has since been taken to Homa-Bay district hospital morgue. His son received treatment at Ndhiwa sub-district Hospital.

Also killed in the previous week were three pupils of a primary School in Nyamira district within the Gusii County, and one pupil died in Trans-Mara East district when he was strike by the thunderbolt as he walked home from school during dressings.

In Silibwet in Kirinyaga district, a school girl was last Sunday struck dead and he companion seriously hurt while they were walking home after attending church service.

Other incidents involving lightning death have been reported in Trans-Nzoia, Mt.Elgon, Baringo, Bomet, Trans-Mara, Gucha, Kisii, Nyamira, Rongo, Homa-Bay, Bungoma, Kakamega, Molo, Kericho,Bomet, Bureti,Keiyo, Marakwet and other areas which are located on the highlands west of the Rift Valley and areas close to the Equator. It is also common within the locations and villages neighboring Lake Victoria. But Kenya still comes third after Zimbabwe and Zambia. The highest incidents recorded in 1984/85 were 166 people struck dead in Zimbawe. During the same period more than 220 died in Zambia while Kenya lost 186 lives during the same period under review.

Incidents of lightning tragedy usual occurred during the beginning of the short rains I the month of August and September, and also at the beginning of long rains which comes between April and July.

EndsKenya:

Kenya: Mercy death “mystery”

from Samuel Akhwale

The sad thing about Kenya is that there are so many who know the entire truth behind the so-called “mysteries”, but choose to keep quiet about it.In this age of technology, all one needs is to open a phoney email account, then post the information on the web to lift the veil off these killers of our future generations.On the Radio Maisha program,”Tukuza” yesterday was a boy who was testifying that he grew up in Mombasa, and by class 6 he was using heroin,that he needed to purchase it for a minimum of Ksh.1000/- daily.

We need to take courage as a nation and confront the drugs menace head on before it is too late.This culture of silence is what made the late Hezekiah go to the grave with all he knew about the late Minister Ounko’s death.It is my former Bishop,Boniface Adoyo who used to say “Don’t waste death”;Since we will all die anyway, ensure you die having left behind information that will help those being left behind.If you know that Kabogo or Mwau is a drug dealer, pass that information to the US embassy or anyone who will take steps;keeping it to oneself never helps.That is why I am not happy with her firends who are keeping quiet.If they give the numbers of who is sending the threatening SMSs the owners can be traced.If I was in their shoes I’d run to the US Embassy for assylum the way the Muites did in the eraly 1990s.

It is sad Mercy is gone in very suspect circumstances, but let her killers know that there is a righteous judge who will one day judge the deeds of all men done in this body, whether good or evil.

– – – – – – – – – – –

From: tebiti42 @ . . .
Subject: The Inefficiency of our police force

Miguna

I can not agree with you no more than what you said in your well articulated article. You covered everything a concerned Kenyan should have done. You hold the same sentiments as I did the first time I bumped into this sad and very disturbing news of a young and promising girl being brutary murdered and dumped on a busy highway so as to make it look like she was hit by an unknown motorist. Your story is so immotional and has made my tear glands to overflow. The very first day I read the story which has been changed a million times just to protect the so called big dude who was said to have had a conflontation with the late Ms. Keino moments before she boltted out in protest of whatever late night “business” meeting, I immediately responded back and said that our beloved sister was killed by drug dealers under the order of their boss who was present. She was murdered by Mungiki goons and drug peddlers. What kind of business meeting should a honorable MP attend in the wee hours of the night, whose largest number of audiences was young girls half his age? The MP should have been home in bed thinking about government policies to enact in the chamber and not running the streets like a moron. Or he could have been somewhere else in the company of other policy makers or city shackers and movers but not at the venue where he was, of all the places. They do their dirty part time jobs in the midddle of the night and when their names are blacklisted in the dossiers of foreign countries as drug Kingpins, they claim that they are being victimized because of their billions. The ball is now in commissioner Iteere and his lieutenant’s toes to have this issue resolved and if in any case he fails to excute his duties in apprehending and prosecuting the culprits of this case, then he can do Kenyans a favor and quit the office of police commissioner so that we can have a vetted chap who can give us justice where its due. The case is a straight foward shoot and even someone like me who has never taken any climininal justice classes can tell you who killed Mercy. What about Iteere and his guys? Mercy’s spirits are still crying down on you folks seeking justice brother commissioner. All she needs is JUSTICE!!! On my earlier posting, I had said that her death will or should not go down in vain. Please, Please as my brother Miguna Miguna has strongly appealled to you and your guys in his strongly worded article, please do the needfu and give Mercy’s family some JUSTICE!!!

Finally, these mid-night drug busness should seize otherwise, if left to continue they will cost you your manpower; you alredy lost one last who just collapsed and perished while on the line of duty. How many more do you have to loose before you say enough is enough and enough to take action? Many officers have either been transfered or shot dead by the influence of drug barons. Very soon, our beloved country will be transformed into a new Mexico in Africa. We don’t want to be called Kenyan-Latinos when travelling across the Atlantic just like most Nigerians are. We need you to pull up your socks and our Commissioner John Ngunjiri #2 who is collecting taxes in arrears from the “land-owners”. Why don’t you do the same? I can assure you, we will cover your back!! Just protetect the poor and defenseless people in Kenya. If you have seen recent political developments at Jogoo Hse, Nrb you might get my point.
Happy 4th to you commissioner

TOI
Unedited due to lack of time

From: Lister Nyaringo
Subject: The Inefficiency of our police force

http://www.the-star.co.ke/opinions/miguna-miguna/30135-get-off-your-fat-asses-i-say-to-the-kenya-police-

Kenya: Look MPs, it’s a new day and you are no longer demi-gods

from Judy Miriga

Folks,

God answers Prayers……Pray without ceasing…….and God will grant you desires of your heart……..

No one will resist People Power, it is a force to recorn with……..and the New Constitution is equal to People Power…….

My Heart Bless the Lord……

May you all be Blessed…..and thank you in all ways…….Divided we fall, United we stand and win…….No house standing without strong foundation will stand the raining storm……..But God is the Greatest, He is the Author of Creation, life and power all belong to him……Give him all the Glory and Honor……..!

With all the pending Revenue Collection in taxes from the MPs and including from their businesses, we have enough money to manage and run the country efficiently without borrowing………and No MP will get a ticket to run Public Office, until and unless they clear their debts……….in otherwords, they must have a Clean Bill of Record…

Hehehehee……..!

Cheers People…. !!!

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

– – – – – – – – – – –

Look MPs, it’s a new day and you are no longer demi-gods
Posted Saturday, July 2 2011 at 19:18

I don’t know whether to laugh or cry. Perhaps I should mourn. I am in a funk because Kenyan MPs have — once more — taken my breath away.

I am now totally convinced that MPs passed the new Constitution in utter ignorance. Why? That’s because they don’t seem to have a rudimentary inkling of this transformative document.

As we say in colloquial English, they “don’t have the foggiest”. If they did, members of the august House would have paid taxes pronto — period.

That they owe taxes is unarguable, and a no-brainer. The matter is black-and-white — there are no “ifs”, “ands” or “buts”.

Perhaps MPs would do well to remember that “the love of money is the root of all evil”.

Until last August, Kenyan MPs bestrode the country like colossi. In law and in fact, MPs were the alphas and omegas of society.

No other social status was more coveted than being an MP. MPs acted with impunity. Their word was law. They would steal, cheat, rape and murder — and get away with it.

This has been true since independence in 1964. But, in law, that changed last August — when the new Constitution neutered MPs.

The problem is that MPs don’t know that they’ve been neutered. Most “honourable members” have actually not read — or understood — the new Constitution.

They talk too much, and read too little. Like some kids, they have ADHD — Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder.

There’s more. MPs didn’t read the new Constitution before passing it because they were too busy “demagoguing” it.

This was equally true of both camps — Yes and No. The No camp demagogued the Constitution to stop it. The Yes camp demagogued it to get it passed. There were demagogues everywhere — on both sides.

MPs on both sides were given “red meat” by their ideologues.

That’s why most MPs failed to read the “fine print” of the new Constitution. They say “a little knowledge is a dangerous thing”.

Article 210(3) of the Constitution is unambiguous on the iron-clad obligation of officials to pay tax. How did such a “minor detail” escape the attention of our dear MPs who make the law?

Even as a matter of basic morality, the recalcitrance by MPs to pay taxes is a public relations nightmare.

How can the poor market woman who sells meagre vegetables to make ends meet pay taxes while the MPs exempt themselves?

Then there’s the temerity of some dim-witted MPs to threaten dire consequences should the taxman enforce the payment of taxes.

Judiciary to comply

Several MPs — who could barely articulate their objections — threatened to “gum up” Parliament from passing necessary laws to implement the new Constitution. What are they going to do now that CJ Willy Mutunga has asked the Judiciary to comply and pay back taxes? Do the MPs believe that Chief Justice Mutunga and the courts will rule in their favour?

Kenyan MPs have for long suffered from hubris. What they don’t seem to understand is that August last year was the “red line” between the old order and the new order. The new Constitution cut MPs — and all senior officials — down to size. There are no longer “imperial overlords” in Kenya, not even the Head of State.

But MPs are having “separation anxiety”. They don’t want to “separate” from the old order. That’s why we must cut them down to size.

They need to learn from President Kibaki’s debacle over his unilateral attempt to jam a Chief Justice, Attorney General, and Director of Public Prosecutions down the country’s throat. The hoi polloi said “nyet”. He had to retreat.

There’s more bad news awaiting MPs. Life only gets bleaker for these mandarins. Their stature in society will diminish by a factor of 10.

First, there will be more of them after 2012 — they’ll be a thronging mob. County governors will be more important — by far — than MPs. In fact, each governor will have several MPs “under his boot”. By which I mean the county governor will be the “elected ruler” of the entire county. MPs will be the governor’s citizens, or subjects, as the case may be.

Then there will be the magisterial senators — the first in the rank of legislators. Senators will have more national visibility, status and power than the large crowd of MPs.

MPs will no longer be members of the Cabinet. This will take away the much coveted flag — and the power, money and influence that go with it. Nor will MPs have the power to set their own salaries. Remember how they’ve gluttonly voted themselves huge pay raises over the past 10 years. No more. But this is great news for Kenyan democracy.

Public thieves

An independent legislature doesn’t have to degenerate into a gang of public thieves. For the first time — after 2012 — MPs will have to concentrate almost entirely on legislating and overseeing the Executive.

This is the proper role of the legislature in a democracy. I will expect to see less bizarre and nauseating speechifying at public funerals.

I end where I started. We don’t need any more public spectacles — MPs better pay up or face the full force of the law. If you want to hold the country hostage by refusing to pass the necessary laws to implement the Constitution, be my guest. But be prepared for the people’s wrath. They say “you ain’t seen nothin’ yet”.

Kenya is not begging you to pay back taxes — it’s ordering you to do so.

The matter is non-negotiable. Wake up — it’s a new day and you are no longer demi-gods.

Makau Mutua is Dean and SUNY Distinguished Professor at the State University of New York at Buffalo Law School and Chair of the KHRC

AG Denies Delaying Crucial Electoral Bill
29 June 2011

Nairobi — The Attorney-General on Wednesday deflected the blame directed at his office for the delay in presenting the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission Bill, 2011, for assent.

“The delay is as a result of procedural steps between Parliament and the AG’s office before a Bill gets signed to become law,” the State Law Office said.

This Bill lays the foundation for electoral zones and setting up the electoral commission.

Kalonzo Hands Over Sh4 Million Tax Cheque

Peter Ngetich
30 June 2011

Nairobi — Vice-President Kalonzo Musyoka has paid his tax arrears amounting to Sh4 million to join a growing list of MPs complying with the taxman’s directive.

Mr Musyoka walked into Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) Times Towers offices at 12.55pm Thursday and paid Sh4,423,000 million after handing out four bankers cheques.

He said in Kiswahili “mumetusukuma” (you have really pushed us) as he was received at KRA boardroom by Commissioner Michael Waweru and Commissioner of Domestic Taxes John Njiraini.

Addressing the press, Mr Musyoka said he was happy that he was tax compliant.

“I am pleased to fulfill this obligation as a citizen of this country in accordance with the requirements of our new Constitution. I am now tax compliant and happy,” Mr Musyoka said.

The VP who had earlier walked from his Jogoo House office to Times Towers urged all Kenyans to pay their taxes.

“These taxes constitute the revenue that the government requires to provide public services and develop the physical infrastructure we need in order to realise vision 2030,” he said.

He called on the media to urge presidential candidates to declare their wealth before next year’s General Election.

“As you can remember, I was the first person to declare his wealth during the last general election willingly,” Mr Musyoka said.

Previous reports put Mr Musyoka and House Speaker Kenneth Marende at par, owing the taxman Sh5.1 million each. But the VP had dismissed the figure as a speculation.

Prime Minister Raila Odinga and MP Mutava Musyimi on Monday remitted a combined Sh5.4 million to the Authority in tax arrears as pressure mounted on MPs to pay taxes in the spirit of the Constitution.

Last week, Mr Njiraini warned that KRA would auction property of MPs and other top government officials if they don’t pay their taxes.

But in MPs defence, Mr Musyoka said such a move would be counterproductive.

“It is not proper for the taxman to punish or impose penalties by attaching assets of MPs,” he said.

On Thursday, Mr Musyoka added that to improve the living conditions of Kenyans, President Kibaki had also paid his taxes.

He said the President was the first person to pay but the issue was not publicised.

“As his deputy, I mean it, he did it sometime last week,” The VP said.

He declined to say how much the Head of State had reportedly paid as well as Mr Waweru who said the KRA Act does not allow one to reveal such information unless he gives consent.

“We are not allowed to divulge such information unless somebody has done that himself,” Mr Waweru said.

He said a number of MPs had also paid their taxes but declined to reveal the figure.

“Very many MPs have paid but they are not doing so due to pressure,” Mr Waweru said.

The KRA commissioner said judges will start paying their taxes as from July 1.

Kenya: Student Speak

from The Youth Agenda

Greetings,

Warm greetings from The Youth Agenda,

With the dawn of the new constitutional dispensation in the country, there comes a heavy responsibility of implementation and entrenchment of the culture of constitutionalism and rule of law. Young people need to seize their space and time in this historical moment and claim their position at the pinnacle of the new constitutional order.

Thus through the initiative, “Creating Learning Platforms for Reconciling and Recreating the Republic; Students Speak and Call for a Responsive Constitution”; the Youth Agenda has sought to mobilize and sensitize young people towards recreating their country by constructively getting involved in taking control of their constitutional rights and welfare. With a focus on youth in institutions of higher learning, the Youth Agenda sought to revive the voice of this critical group once referred to as the engines of reform, due to their role in calling and demanding for rule of law and good governance.

We are therefore pleased to inform you of the Launch of our publication dubbed ‘Student Speak’ which is a compilation of student views and reflections on constitutional reforms. The ‘Student Speak’ publication reflects findings from eleven Kenyan Universities during the constitutional review process in 2009 and also outlines the significant role young people can play in implementing the new constitution of Kenya, to being the driving force in realising the new constitutional order in the true spirit of constitutionalism. The full publication can be accessed on our website, ww.youthagenda.org

The ‘Student Speak’ Launch shall take place on Thursday 30th June 2011 at the Hilton Hotel from 7.30am.Your presence will be greatly appreciated.

Kenya: I was touched—in Kisumu

From: odhiambo okecth

One simple act of being responsible. That was it today at about 12.34pm in Kisumu around the Bus Stand.

A Man was chewing roasted maize and when he was done, he carelessly threw the cob on to the street. A Lady majestically walked up to him and ordered him to pick his shit; yes, ordered him to pick it up and throw it where there is a dustbin or carry it home.

I was impressed. I fumbled with my camera but the drama had seized. I walked to the lady and asked her her name; Consolata Aluoch she said. And I told her how happy and proud I was of her, because, my late Mother was also called Conseleta Aluoch.

I bet this is the Kenya we want. Kisumu is changing and I must appreciate what I saw. There is some order in how the Town is being run. The CBD is very clean and the Taxis that used to congest the streets have been designated to terminate their services at some point.

This is the Kenya we want and we are really looking forward to launching The Monthly Nationwide Clean-up Campaign in Kisumu on the 16th July at 7.00am at Jubilee Market.

Kisumu is going to be simply the best. Trust me.

If it is to be, it is up to me. A Clean Kenya Starts With me. A Peaceful Kenya is my Responsibility.

Partners;
Premium Partners;

A Better World- www.sofdi.com
REESI Hospitality Venture- www.reesi.co.ke
Gold Partners;

Silver Partners;

Akiba Uhaki Foundation- www.akibauhaki.org

Bronze Partners;

Phoenix Aviation Ltd- PHOENIX AVIATION LIMITEDMugumo Communications Ltd- www.mugumoltd.com


Peace and blessings,

Odhiambo T Oketch
CEO KCDN Nairobi
Nationwide Coordinator – Monthly Nationwide Clean-up Campaign
National Coordinator- Friends of KNH Maternity Unit
PO Box 47890-00100,
Nairobi Kenya.
Tel; 0724 365 557, 0735 529 126
Email; oto@kcdnkenya.org, komarockswatch@yahoo.com
www.kcdnkenya.org
http://kcdnkomarockswatch.blogspot.com
friendsofkcdn@yahoogroups.com
Facebook; Odhiambo T Oketch