Monthly Archives: September 2009

Joe Wilson

Date: Fri, 11 Sep 2009 10:52:58 -0700
From: “Nita Chaudhary, MoveOn.org Political Action”
Subject: Joe Wilson

Dear MoveOn member,

Yesterday, ignoring the calls from leaders within his own party, Rep. Joe Wilson refused to apologize on the House floor for shouting out “you lie!” during President Obama’s big health care speech.1

In fact, he recorded a new YouTube video defending his attacks on Obama’s health care plan and requesting donations for his re-election campaign!2

This is the kind of disrespectful and dishonest behavior we’ve come to expect from right-wing mobs and talk radio hosts recently–but it’s simply unacceptable for a member of the United States Congress.

Fortunately, we’ve got a great opportunity to replace Joe Wilson in Congress. Rob Miller is a Democrat and an Iraq war veteran, and last year he won 46% of the vote against Wilson despite raising half as much money.

Grassroots progressives are teaming up to help Rob Miller take on Joe Wilson, raising over $750,000 in less than two days. They’ve set a goal of raising of $1 million–can you chip in $20?

https://pol.moveon.org/give/miller.html?
id=17214-5885054-CXmOqnx&t=10

While Wilson initially apologized to the White House for his outburst, by yesterday he was already backpedaling. He refused calls from leaders of both parties to apologize on the House floor and claimed that he had been “overwhelmed” with supportive phone calls.3

And the conservative media is defending Wilson. Rush Limbaugh said on his show yesterday that Wison shouldn’t have apologized.4 Sean Hannity, who had Wilson as a guest on Fox News, told him, “You’re right and the president is wrong,” and urged viewers to donate to Wilson’s campaign.5

This is mean-spirited right-wing politics at its worst–and we’ve got to fight back. As President Obama said Wednesday night, “I won’t stand by while the special interests use the same old tactics to keep things exactly the way they are. If you misrepresent what’s in this plan, we will call you out.”

Let’s help Rob Miller take on Joe Wilson. Click here to chip in:

https://pol.moveon.org/give/miller.html?
id=17214-5885054-CXmOqnx&t=11

Thanks for all you do.

–Nita, Michael, Kat, Peter, and the rest of the team

Sources:

1. “Wilson Refuses to Apologize on House Floor,” Roll Call, September 10, 2009.
http://www.rollcall.com/news/38373-1.html?CMP=OTC-RSS

2. “Joe Wilson YouTube: ‘I Will Not Be Muzzled'” Talking Points Memo, September 10, 2009.
http://www.moveon.org/r?r=51906&id=17214-5885054-CXmOqnx&t=12

3. “Joe Wilson: ‘I Have Been Overwhelmed’ By Supportive Phone Calls,” Talking Points Memo, September 10, 2009.
http://www.moveon.org/r?r=51904&id=17214-5885054-CXmOqnx&t=13

4. “Limbaugh Wishes Wilson Had Not Apologized,” Media Matters, September 10, 2009.
http://mediamatters.org/limbaughwire/2009/09/10#0044

5. “Rep. Joe Wilson Talks With Sean Hannity, Stands By His Comments,” The
Washington Independent, September 10, 2009.
http://www.moveon.org/r?r=51905&id=17214-5885054-CXmOqnx&t=14

References

Visible links
. https://pol.moveon.org/give/miller.html?id=17214-5885054-CXmOqnx&t=10
. https://pol.moveon.org/give/miller.html?id=17214-5885054-CXmOqnx&t=11
. http://www.rollcall.com/news/38373-1.html?CMP=OTC-RSS
. http://www.moveon.org/r?r=51906&id=17214-5885054-CXmOqnx&t=12
. http://www.moveon.org/r?r=51904&id=17214-5885054-CXmOqnx&t=13
. http://mediamatters.org/limbaughwire/2009/09/10#0044
. http://www.moveon.org/r?r=51905&id=17214-5885054-CXmOqnx&t=14
_
MOVEON.ORG POLITICAL ACTION, http://pol.moveon.org/.

“You lie!”

Date: Thu, 10 Sep 2009 09:51:00 -0700
From: “Justin Ruben, MoveOn.org Political Action”
Subject: “You lie!”

Sign the petition

Last night, President Obama challenged Congress to “meet history’s test” and finally fix our broken health care system. He pledged to seek common ground between Democrats and Republicans, and assured them all: “My door is always open.”

Republicans responded by heckling, booing, and hissing. Rep. Joe Wilson (R-SC) screamed out “You lie!” as the President defended his health care plan against false right-wing attacks.

We can’t afford to let right-wing extremists like Joe Wilson hold health care reform hostage. As Obama put it, “the time for games has passed. Now is the season for action.”

Let’s send a message to Congress, demanding swift action to pass real health care reform. Clicking here will add your name to the petition:

http://pol.moveon.org/passhealthcare/o.pl?
id=17208-5885054-ixkN4Zx&t=8

The petition says: “Don’t let right-wing extremists hold health care reform hostage. Pass President Obama’s plan, including a strong public health insurance option.”

The plan the president outlined last night was comprehensive, ambitious, and deeply progressive.

It would help the hundreds of millions who already have health insurance by making coverage more competitive and more secure. No one would ever be turned away because of a pre-existing condition or dropped because they got sick. And you’d never again have to worry about arbitrary caps on how much insurance would pay for your care.

For those without insurance, Obama’s plan would finally offer quality, affordable coverage–including a strong public health insurance option that would keep the private insurance companies honest. And across the board, his plan would rein in skyrocketing health care costs for consumers and businesses.

Thanks to President Obama’s leadership, the path is now clear. But it’s up to Congress to act. Sign the petition now to make sure they’re not held hostage by right-wing extremists. Clicking here will add your name:

http://pol.moveon.org/passhealthcare/o.pl?
id=17208-5885054-ixkN4Zx&t=9

Thanks for all you do.

–Justin, Lenore, Steven, Kat, and the rest of the team

Want to support our work? We’re entirely funded by our 5 million members–no corporate contributions, no big checks from CEOs. And our tiny staff ensures that small contributions go a long way. Chip in here.

References
Visible links
. http://pol.moveon.org/passhealthcare/o.pl?id=17208-5885054-ixkN4Zx&t=7
. http://pol.moveon.org/passhealthcare/o.pl?id=17208-5885054-ixkN4Zx&t=7
. http://pol.moveon.org/passhealthcare/o.pl?id=17208-5885054-ixkN4Zx&t=8
. http://pol.moveon.org/passhealthcare/o.pl?id=17208-5885054-ixkN4Zx&t=9
. http://political.moveon.org/donate/email.html?id=17208-5885054-ixkN4Zx&t=10

MOVEON.ORG POLITICAL ACTION, http://pol.moveon.org/.

MINISTER KETER TOLD TO LEAVE MULTINATIONAL TEA COMPANIES ALONE

POLITICALLY MOTIVATED AND SPONSORED PUBLICITY LIKELY TO HARM FUTURE INVESTMENTS BY MULTINATIONAL COMPANIES IN THE TEA SUB-SECTOR OF THE ECONOMY.

Business News By Leo Odera Omolo In Kericho Town.

POLITICALLY motivated and sponsored publicity aimed at maligning the multinational tea companies operating in the South Rift of the Rift Valley Province has sparked off a lot of controversy in the tea growing regions of Kericho, Bureti,Boimet and Sotik..

Residents of the larger Kericho region have now come out in full force with an appeal to the government to restrain some of its Ministers from using these economically important multinational tea companies as their “punching bags” for gaining political mileage.

The resident said, they have read malice on the part of unnamed politicians in the region following the recent series of maliciously damaging remarks against James Finlay’s Tea and Flower Company Ltd, one of the major tea manufacturers in the region.

Residents and parents at the Marinyn Secondary School, which is privately owned by James Finlays Tea Company, and which is situated close to their Saosa Tea Estate and Factory are irked by the report that the school has the highest number of girls pregnancies.

They said, however, that the high cases of girls pregnancies is not a new and an unusual phenomenon in the region, and furthermore, not the exclusive preserve of the Marinyn Secondary School alone, but a common feature in most of the mixed secondary schools within the Kipsigis region, where the girls and boys are mixing together in one class

Some of the boys are also adult men capable making sexual advances to their classmate girls. There is no point in politicians vilifying or condemning this school. After all , the school was the second best in the last year’s KSCE exam the district.

These pregnancies could as well be attributed to abject poverty of the girls parents, most of whom are low-paid farm workers engaged in tea plucking manual jobs. There is also, in addition, the presence of a large number of farm workers, who are teasing and seducing the school girls attending classes in unsecured school compound.

There are other schools with worse record of poor performance than Marinyn Secondary Schools, and many of such schools re located within the vast Belgut constituency. The high profile and personal interests placed on this particular school by politicians, and ,particularly the are MP, is only pointing out to the direction of a hidden agenda and ulterior sinister motive.

According to the residents, a prestigious media house, whom one of the top directors hails from Belgut, has been drafted into slanderous campaign because of its perceived disagreement with an individual serving selfish interests. A batter of journalists and TV cameramen were recently sent Marinyin school specifically to discredit its leadership.

Also, for the purpose of distorting and concocting stories against this particular firm and its facilities One local politician in Kiptere area, who requested for hi anonymity, told this writer that he believed the current farce is meant to divert the public attention from more serious issues affecting the constituency. For instance, school bursary fund and other devolving money from the government meant for development projects, have so far not been funded, despite the money having budgeted and allocation done. No cheques have been forthcoming to the schools.

It is believed by the residents that the bad blood between the area MP and the Tea company is said to have started when the company refused to engage the MP in a very lucrative transport business with the Finlay company in partnership with his friends. At one time, had wanted to supply the Finlay with firewood and electrical wood polls at an alleged highly inflated prices.

The hostility between Keter, according to a source in Finlay Tea Company, came to light when the MP rudely rejected a company cheque of Kshs 10,000. The company had sent the money as its donation. The cheque was conveyed to the venue of the fund drive by a junior manager from the company, but the MP and his friends dismissed the donation, saying it was delivered by a junior manager instead of its top brass bosses. This was viewed as disrespectful to the political leadership of the area and the cheque was out rightly rejected and returned to the firm with a stern warning about the shape of things to come.

Within a month, Keter, in the company of close to 16 civic leaders from both the County Council of Kipsigis and Kericho Municipality, attended an education day rally held at Kaproret Stadium, which is owned by Finlay Tea Company. A lot of vitriol and scathing criticism were directed at the Tea Company by one speaker after another , and it was at this meeting where it was resolved that the MP would mobilize his constituents to stage street demonstration and match into the tea estates, to seek and destroy the tea picking machines. The group claimed these machines would kick thousands of their people out manual tea plucking jobs.

But courtesy of the Provincial Administration and district security committee ,the protest match did not materialize. This was also due to timely intervention of the Road Minister, Franklin Bett, whose dynamism and political magnanimity worked well in averting what could have been otherwise a violent protests match into the tea industry. The government also got the wind that the workers were reluctant and not willing to take part in work stoppage not called by their union.

The strike was planned to take place while the firebrand Secretary General of the Kenya Union of Plantation and Agricultural Workers, Francis Atwoli, was out of the country attending an ILO meeting in Geneva, although a branch secretary of the union at Kericho town okayed the action, which could have been termed as “Industrial Unrest”. It later emerged that this union man was a lone ranger who had acted without the workers consent. Other sources said the government intervened.

Immediately after this, a consultative meeting between the stakeholders; in this case, the union, Keter’s group and the management of the multinational tea companies had a meeting. The meeting took place in Hon Bett’s Nairobi office and was chaired by Bett himelf, whose Buret constituency in Bureti district is also covering part of the Tea Estates.

At the Nairobi meeting, all had agreed that a team of MPs from the Kipsigis region would soon tour the tea estates to assess the situation, particularly the damage that could be caused by the mechanized tea plucking system to the workers. It was also agreed that Keter himself, as an interested party should be excluded. Three months have lapsed. without such a mission.

Again, while commenting on the ongoing Mau Forest controversy, Keter was recently quoted by a section of local press as saying that the illegal Kalenjin settlers ,particularly those facing eviction from Mau, should be given the land on which the tea plantations and bushes stand, because it belonged to their ancestors and it was taken from them by force by the British colonial rulers.

Historically, the pioneer white settlers, who started tea plantations in Kericho region in 1908, in small experimental scale ,and later led to full blast tea growing in the region, and the beginning of the manufacturing in 1922, got there decades long before the current generation were born, and there is no way the massive land grabbing in Mau water tower could be linked to the tea estates.

It also came to light during my survey, that some unpatriotic manager, serving with the tea companies, and some disgruntled former managers, who have since retired from active services of the companies, are the ones secretly working in collaboration with the likes of Keter. These managers wanted to be promoted to the higher ranks through short-cut, using dubious academic qualifications.

The Belgut MP is also being accused of misusing his ministerial position to intimidate those who cross swords with him. But fears persist that the Minister’s open hostility to the industrialists could harm the economy and scare away potential investors.

Another important politician, the chairman of the United Democratic Movement, {UDM} Lt.Gen [rtd}John Koech, has repeatedly made a passionate appeal to his fellow Kipsigis politicians to leave the tea companies alone , saying these firm were playing pivotal role not only of creating employment opportunities for the locals, but also contributing immensely towards development of the Kenyan nation.

Education officials in Kericho said they were puzzled by such an abrupt visit to the school by Keter. ”We had no idea as to what was happening”. The MP, they said seemed to have a hidden agenda and perhaps a bone to chew with the Finlay tea company, than the simple school issues and the alleged rampant pregnancies of girls in that school and their staff.

The visit came hardly a week after the team from the Standard, consisting top journalists and TV Cameramen, had spent the whole day at the school earlier last week, giving credence to the allegation that the journalists were partly hired to discredit the Finlay Tea Company. The Principal of the Marinyin School, Mr Ruto could not be reached for his comments. And also unavailable for the same was the Company CEO, Mr. Hutchinson.

leooderaomolo@yahoo.com
– – –
From: Leo Odera Omolo
Date: Thu, Sep 10, 2009 at 10:26 PM
Subject: MINISTER KETER TOLD TO LEAVE MULTINATIONAL TEA COMPANIES ALONE

HON. KIRAITU MUST STOP THIS CONDESCENDING ATTITUDE.

From: Francis Tome
Subject: HON. KIRAITU MUST STOP THIS CONDESCENDING ATTITUDE.

Date: Friday, September 11, 2009, 12:38 PM

Dear Sir/Madam,

I am not about to question nor impute improper motives on the courtliness, astuteness and loquaciousness that the so called learned friends cum MPs exhibit in parliament in matters both legal and non-legal. However, I vehemently loath the air of importance surrounding these feathered legislators riding atop the cirrus clouds. In their presumption, any member of parliament not schooled in matters legal has to take leave from the floor of the house when substantive legal issues are raised. At best these lawyers cum MPs behave as if parliament is the precincts of lawyers and any MP who is not a lawyer is looked down upon.

It is therefore not surprising at all that Honorable Kiraitu Murungi on Tuesday 11th September 2009 adopted a discourteous attitude and with a peremptory tone told off an MP who had stood on a point of information whilst Kiraitu was making his contribution on the floor of the house regarding the legality of the re-appointment of retired justice Ringera and his two deputies. Kiraitu opined that the MP in question was unschooled in legal matters and that he was therefore unfit to inform him on any legal issue.

As expected, the speaker himself, a lawyer of repute, took this scathing remark as frolicsome, had a hearty laughter and allowed Honorable Kiraitu to rumble on. This is not only impolitic but also boorish and uncouth effrontery on fellow parliamentarians. Unfortunately, our non- lawyer MPs have had to put up with such condescending attitude from the obstreperous lawyer legislators courtesy of the speaker`s lackadaisical attitude whose appetite for the unpaliarmentary language from the learned friends is seemingly insatiable.

Many are the times I have empathized with non -lawyer legislators who are viewed as being in the August house by default. In fact, beneath the veneer of the rhetoric by the so called learned friends is the laconic message that they are unfit to be in parliament.

It must be clear to these MPs that in this age of information technology, one can easily acquaint himself with the necessary legalese. In fact, Knowledge, whether in jurisprudence or not, is from womb to tomb. One does not have to go to a law school to interpret basic legal matters. Any Tom, Dick and Harry can clearly see through their cagy discourses nay cacophony. Moreover, the fact that more and more people are opting to represent themselves in courts of law instead of enlisting the services of lawyers is a pointer to the fact that have basic legal knowledge necessary for survival. The legislators who are lawyers (whether practicing or not) must stop behaving as if parliament is only meant for lawyers.

TOME FRANCIS,

BUMULA CONSTITUENCY.

Kenyans ought to respect Tanzanians

From: Damian Gabagambi
Sent: Friday, September 11, 2009 9:44 AM
Subject: Kenyans ought to respect Tanzanians

Read on!

KENYANS OUGHT TO RESPECT TANZANIA

If defending our great country means the death of the federation, so be it!

By Mobhare Matinyi, Washington DC

THE recent rhetoric from Nairobi on the sensitive issue of East African integration has been obscene and inane to say the least. Some of our neighbor’s politicians and journalists have bragged about the subject so much that they have completely forgotten the truth that they are among the icons of disunity and disintegration in Africa.

What irks me more is the tone of the arguments that seems to be derived from the simplest mind one can find on earth. How dare a Kenyan refer to Tanzania as a dirty poor country while 50 percent (19 million) of Kenyans live in abject poverty?

To the contrary, 36 percent (14.4 million) of ;Tanzanians live in poverty, and that is why we have programs such as MKURABITA. We don’t deny our poverty, we fight it. If they are rich, why don’t our integration tutors salvage their own poverty first?

Tanzania’s economy is a fraction of Kenya’s economy?! Please give me a break. Last year, Kenya had a Gross Domestic Product (GDP) based on purchasing-power- parity of about $61.22 billion. Tanzania’s was $51.03 billion. So is this $10 billion difference such a big deal? Let me tell you Kenyans, your GDP is less than what the US investor Warren Buffet keeps in his pocket. In March 2008,the Forbes magazine estimated Buffet’s worth at US $62 billion in its annual ranking of the world’s richest people.If this difference is so significant, why can’t the Kenyan government stop their men from sending their wives to practice prostitution to earn a living? I am not kidding, in 2006 the CNN international correspondent, Christine Amanpour traveled to Kenya as part of a special documentary on AIDS and HIV called Where Have All the Parents Gone? You can visit the link: http://www.cnn. com/2006/ WORLD/africa/ 07/17/amanpour. africa..btsc/ index.html

Let me directly quote from the CNN website: Tribesmen told us the appalling story of sending their wives out for prostitution, in order to afford food. But along with the food, they bring AIDS back to their tribe and their village.

Now, if Kenya is so rich, why does such humiliation exist? One may think there is a point in the whole blawling and whining, but there isn’t! It’s just arrogance. Mind you, Kenya has more external debt ($6.7 billion) and domestic debt ($3 billion) than Tanzania’s $4.4 billion and $1 billion respectively. Even worse, Kenya has more trade deficit ($4.4 billion) than Tanzania ($2.6 billion), and Kenya’s last month inflation rate was 28.4 percent compared to Tanzania’s 11.8 percent. And so is the noise about Tanzania’s labor force, which is almost twice that of Kenya. The Kenyans claim that ours is unskilled and theirs is skilled because they speak ‘better broken English.’ Japan is the second richest economy in the world, Germany the third, and now China is the fourth. Do they speak better English than Tanzania?

English is t he language of our former colonial masters that Kenyans still embrace, that’s it. We have our own language that Kenyans are now working hard to take a refuge in.

Swahili brought unity among us, and we are very proud of our language, not our master’s language.And who said that common market must include land, replacement of passports by shoddy national identity cards, and permanent residence?

Europeans are sober and have been around with their European Union for a while now. Do you think they are naïve for excluding these three things?

The fact of the matter is: Kenyans and the rest, that includes Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi, want to quickly off load their problems on our motherland. That will never happen as it is inconceivable. Only an imbecile can fail to grasp the reasons why Kenyans insult our United Republic of Tanzania, the one and the only in Africa. We are proud of our country and we are ONE.

For many years, Kenyan governments, one after the other, have inculcated in their people the se nse of disunity and inequity. From the day Kenya got independence, Kenyans have never been one people. Kenyans go by their tribes -Kikuyu,Luhya, Luo, Kalenjin, Kamba, Taita and many others.

That makes all the noise we are hearing about the importance of
integration totally nonsense. Since when did a Kenyan know better about unity than a Tanzanian? To be frank, most Kenyans are not only arrogant, but misanthropic. I don’t understand who certified them as integration tutors?

Kenyans grew up in a jungle-like society where nobody cared about anybody. For example, Kenyan police and prison officers are known in Africa for inhumane practices. In one incidence in 1997, a journalist was forced to wipe up human excrement with his bare hands. Please this link to see the story of a journalist, Evans Kanini: http://asiapacific. amnesty.org/ libra…pen& of=ENG-2F4 Kenyan society is unfriendly, pompous and arrogant,which makes it very incompatible with Tanzanian society, people who are peace-loving, humble and friendly. Let me ask Kenyans – between the two societies, which one should emulat e the other? Or in which would you like to live?

Because Tanzanians decided to experiment with socialism after independence, the western nations fought back by investing heavily in Kenya to discredit our ideology. And since Kenya decided to embrace their colonial masters, they had an easy road when it came to industrial development and large-scale farming.

Again Tanzanians, on the other hand, we decided to help our southern Africa brothers and sisters to fight for their freedom. Kenya at that time was the darling of the west and even kissed the Boers feet. It was disgusting.

Last but not least, Tanzanians, we had to uproot the Butcher of Africa who invaded our country, Dictator Idd Amin Dadah. Since he had the blood of his own people on his hands, removing him from power in Uganda was an automatic obligation for us; we did it with pride.

These historical events put economic pressure on us, and as a result we finished the 20th century somehow behind Kenya. However, with our social and political attitudes that took time to nurture, with our=2 0massive land and countless natural resources, we are far better placed to take off in the 21st century than Kenya.

Immodestly and shamelessly, after rejecting the first idea to form the United States of East Africa in early 1960 as advanced by Mwalimu Julius Nyerere, and after breaking up the former East African Community in 1977, Kenyans are suddenly becoming the ‘uniters.’ Yes, we know that Kenya wants markets for her industries that contribute 16.7 percent to the GDP so that our ‘less-developed industries’ that contribute 18.9 percent to our GDP can die; and we know that with a 40 percent unemployment rate, Kenya wants an alternative source of employment from any means, thanks to Kigali for waiving working permits recently. The list of needs for Kenyans has hit the roof and that includes water, energy, minerals, natural gas, food crops, cash crops, livestock, national parks, Mount Kilimanjaro, the whole of Lake Victoria, even Zanzibar, and a home for their robbers.

Kenyans also want an opening to release the pressure of their social inequality built by constant tribalism and discrimination. And, the political tension has just added the fuel to the fire. With Kenya’s annual foreign investments now below one-tenth of Tanzania’s (over $500 billion now), with corruption mounting day-by-day, with degradation of rule of law and increase in absolute poverty, Kenya is about to implode.

Come the year 2025, the Kenyan population is estimated to be over 51.3 million – where will all these people suffuse? Kenya is largely a desert country in the north and the fertile land is mostly owned by the white settlers and by few African elites. No doubt Kenyans need land from us. By the way, our population in Tanzanian by the year 2025 is projected to be 57.4 million. That’s wonderful because we have enough land for everybody. Don’t touch it.

In fact Mwalimu Nyerere warned in 1958 (well before independence) that privation of land is dangerous for poor Africans. Kenyans didn’t get it, and Mzee Jomo Kenyatta said: KENYA NI KAMA NG’OMBE ALIYECHINJWA, MWENYE KISU KIKALI ATAKULA NYAMA KUBWA.” Literally means: “Kenya is like a slaughtered cow; whoever has a sharp knife will eat a big steak.” Now you are eating it!!! Kenya is infamous in Africa for human trafficking and a high crime rate. On every major tourism and travel website of the world, people are warned of the crime in Kenya. Not long ago a wave of armed robberies crossed=2 0the border into our country, and Tanzanians have not forgotten. Thanks to our security organs, our land is safe again.

The Nairobi newspaper, The East African, this week reports that a London based think tank, known as the Institute of Public Policy’s Research (IPPR), has placed Kenya and Uganda> among the 20 weakest and failing states of Africa together with Somalia, Rwanda, Burundi and Zimbabwe while Tanzania has been praised.

The same newspaper also reports that Kenya and Uganda have been again kicked out of any prospects for Millenium Challenge assistance while Tanzania continues to enjoy the disbursement of $698 million, which is the highest ever. As usual, Kenya scored poorly in rule of law, immunisation rates, health expenditures and fiscal policy.. In the corruption perception index prepared by Transparency International (TI), Kenya ranks 147th while Tanzania ranks 102nd among 180 countries. The World Bank Institute (WBI) groups Kenya together with Afghanistan and Somalia on criteria such as control of corruption, rule of law, and political stability.

Before thinking about integration, Kenyans should have first been retrospective. Tanzania, we are not trying to interpose the integration process, but we are defending the present interests of our country for our future. We have much more to lose than to gain in this insane idea of weird integration. The perfervid rhetoric will not hamper us from defending our invaluable country. We have uncovered your trick to inveigle us into a trap. Your belief that Tanzanians are senile is incorrect and whatever you are trying to maraud will never be bequeathed. Tanzanians are not ready for any Kenyan jingoism, and we are not ready to witness the death of our national ethos for the sake of a fake unity withpeople who slaughter each other. We don’t see any reason to be roped into this kind of federation now.Be placid, and listen to us and maybe it will happen several decades from now! If defending our country means the death of the federation, so be it. We will not yield to your invidious pressure. It took us time to build this wonderful nation you are seeing today; we know for sure that whatever we lose today will be irrecoverable tomorrow, so beware. The ideas of identity cards instead of passports and permanent residence are only means to an end, an d that is, grabbing our land and resources. No, no, no! It is so rejecting that we even got to this stage of discussion, but we hope that our leaders are reading the writing on the wall.

Kenya, just like Tanzania, is impecunious, but the difference is there is hope in Tanzania while in Kenya everything is dead. You’d better blame yourself! Swahili people say: Usivione vinaelea, vimeumbwa hivyo.

Long live Tanzania, the land of opportunity and the home of the patriots.

HAS THIS MP BEEN PROSECUTED FOR ASSAULT

Dear All

This MP was caught on camera throwing stones and beating somebody right in front of a policeman. How come he was not prosecuted for assault? Are the police seriouse? How about public outcry? Where is the media on this?

Sad sad sad. As long as such things are allowed to thrive, the people of Kenya will still be living in a jungle. The rule of law is just but a theory in Kenya.

See the link below for the video


http://www.ntv.co.ke/News/-/471778/654906/-/rq1k4kz/-/index.html

Barack

– – –
From: barack abonyo
Date: Thu, Sep 10, 2009 at 6:09 PM
Subject: HAS THIS MP BEEN PROSECUTED FOR ASSAULT

Grassroots news from Central Rift!

Central Rift grassroots demonstrate to highlight corruption in CDF and Latf Funds

Following disruption of grassroot meeting organized by Central Rift Bunge la Mwananchi in Nakuru town on 21st August 2009 by the Kenya Police supported Municipal council askaris, the people decided to hold a public demonstration on the 4th September 2009. To view pictures visit this link


http://www.bungelamwananchi.org/index.php?
option=com_content&view=article&
id=183:bunge-la-mwananchi-central-rift-anti-corruption-demo-
held-on-4092009-in-nakuru-town&
catid=1:latest-articles&Itemid=50

Democracy from below in practice!

George Nyongesa
Bunge la Mwananchi
PO Box 456, 00606, Sarit Centre, Nairobi
Website: www.bungelamwananchi.org
Alternate Email: mwananchibunge@gmail.com
Tel: +254 720 451 235
– – –
From: George Nyongesa
Date: Thu, Sep 10, 2009 at 6:21 AM
Subject: Grassroots news from Central Rift!

KIBOS SUGAR HAILED A HEAD OF PRIVATIZATION

BY JEFF OTIENO

Farmers and transporters in the sugar industry have hailed Kibos Sugar and Allied Industries for being in comformity with what they’ve yawned for years in terms of their demands.

The fast growing miller with a workforce of 2700 workers has come up with an aggressive policy frame work which has sent other millers to go to the drawing board.

Resilient Kibos Sugar pays a staggering Kshs. 25m to farmers and transporters per week in transport and cane deliveries.

As privatization beckons around the corner, key industry players views the miller to be having a head start. With a capacity of 1650 tonnnes per day, Kibos is the only miller which has conformed with a ministerial directive to install a weigh bridge close to farmers to avert spillage and unnecessary hefty transport costs.

In the entire country it’s only the giant Mumias Sugar which manufactures electricity with a mark of 28 megawatts to the national grid and has also finalized ambitious plans to manufacture mineral water in its quest to diversify income.

Few months to come Kibos will produce 25 megawatts out of which 22 will go to the national grid and 3 for its own consumption. Already they produce 3 megawatts for their own internal consumption.

“We’ve hired a foreign consultant firm to do the study and soon we will hit the road,” said Raju Channan the company Managing Director.

With the newly launched ultra modern multi million weigh bridge in Awasi Nyando District, the company has sent cold shivers in the spines of other millers and other industry players who view their abrasive approach as reminiscent to “a coup”.

Currently they pay farmers an impressive Kshs.3, 050 per tonne weekly. In a desperate bid to compete them, other millers a fortnight ago followed suit and increased their payment from a paltry Kshs.2,700/= to Kshs.2,850/= per tonne albeit with little change in the litmus.

With most of the millers owing farmers whooping millions of shillings and with the Government having no quick remedy in place in terms of rescue mechanisms, Kibos is set to call shots at least for now.

Some three sugar board members names withheld recently confided to this writer that even the controversial moribund Miwani Sugar factory should be given to Kibos Sugar to revive it as per their initial bid where they were found to be the highest bidders.

“What’s the basis of having huge chunks of land lying fallow for ages yet our people are dying of hunger and we’ve got potential investors who have shown commitment and capacity to run it,” they argued.

“Our local politicians should give investors time to operate devoid of coercion,” they thundered.

Kibos is ready to offload 30% shares to the locals given the chance to run the once vibrant miller.

Currently, the once giant firm is deeply embroiled in endless controversies with one local influential politician with no idea to run a sugar company, said to be interested through a consortium, no wander the stalemate to resuscitate it for now a several years to the chagrin of locals.

Although its machines have been dismissed by experts as out dated and defective, Miwani has got thousands of nucleus, no wander the perpetual wrangles to own it.

With its ultimate revival, it will open flood gates economic wise for the natives of Kano and its environs.

Most natives of Kano and in the neighboring Kalenjin constituencies are now opting to plough their lands to plant the lucrative sugar cane which they say is labour intensive but of higher value compared to other crops which only benefits middle men.

END.
– – –
From: JEFF
Date: Thu, Sep 10, 2009 at 2:23 AM
Subject: KIBOS SUGAR HAILED A HEAD OF PRIVATIZATION

THE IMPRESSIVE DEVELOPMENT, PEACE AND TRANQUILITY ACHIEVED IN UGANDA SHOULD SERVE AS THE ROLE MODEL FOR OTHER SUB-SAHARAN AFRICAN NATIONS.

Personal Observations By Leo Odera Omolo, a Veteran Kenyan Journalist who was recently in Uganda.

The time is ripe for the ever politically squabbling Kenyan leaders to spare their valuable time and visit the neighboring Uganda to learn about what could be achieved within the shortest possible period of time under good governance.

The remarkable and highly impressive development should be emulated not only by Kenya, but all other member states of the East African Community. In fact these nations should use Uganda as the role model for their future development activities

Uganda, an East African landlocked nation, whose economy has gone through myriad of problems, and suffered from political upheavals, bloody military coups, poor management of the resources, misplaced development strategies, and political turmoil ever since it attained its political independence in 1962, is today the role model of fast and serious development in East Africa.

It is worth taking into account that Uganda’s economy was raped and ruptured under the bad governance and despotic leadership for close to two decades between 1966 and 1986. But the coming to power of the hitherto unknown and unheard of NRM movement has completely changed the political history of the country.

The NRM has put to rest and consigned to the dustbins of history, all the past dirty politics and poor leadership, which was full of political intrigues that ruined the country. The good governance and the accompanying pragmatic policy of transparency and accountability is believed by many to have transformed Uganda and contributed immensely to its achievement..

The country has undergone thorough, serious economic and infrastructural transformation, from a subsistence economy, to a booming internal trade, vibrant agro-based economy and visible advancement of its infrastructure. Those who are in the know, and privy to information about Uganda’s success story ,which is unequaled in the Eastern African region, are rightly attributing this trend of milestone achievements to the good governance by the ruling NRM.

The kind of development that is in place in the neighboring Uganda should be emulated by Kenya. Instead of having close to 146 fledgling tribally oriented political parties, they should follow Uganda’s good example and form a mass movement in the pattern of the NRM, and its workable structures. Or else cut the number of the registered parties, most of them only serving as agent of confusion, down to two or three, stronger viable ones.

It was a remarkable experience for me when I visited the Ugandan capital on August 20th for a three days stay.

This is the town in which I started my journalistic career in 1957. I worked for the defunct UGANDA ARGUS briefly as a sports writer. I also played competitive soccer at both Nakifubo and Lugogo Stadiums. The latter was next door to my house at Nagulu Estate, and only a two minutes walk.

My Luo tribesmen working in Kampala and its environs had formed a strong football league based on sub-clans. The strongest teams, which were christened “Majimbo” league were Alego Ragar, Rusinga, Uyoma, Nyakach and Karachuonyo. I turned up for my Rusinga Island home team, and I was proud to play soccer in that conquering team. The venue for the Luo league matches was Lugogo on Sundays and Saturdays.

Kampala at that time looked like an exclusive Luo colony. There were too many of us. And the league matches were full of agitation, at times ending up in violent confrontations. On one or two occasions, I turned up for the police team and played in the forward position along side one of the best forwards ever produced by Uganda, Grace Siruwagi. He was an instructor based at Sambya Police Training School, which was located within the City. This ever polite policeman was also turning as the centre-forward for the Ugandan team in the regional Gossage Cup tournament, also involving teams from Kenya,Tanganyika and Zanzibar.

The Ugandans of those days loved soccer, and even the Kabaka of Buganda, Mutesa II, used to turn up for the Mengo team at the matches played at Nakifubo. A good number of Kenyans played for Uganda team. One of the notable ones was Owiti, and the late Job Henry Onyango Omino.

There were many others who also played for other countries. One William Ong’weya, an accomplished centre-forward, turned up for the Tanganyika Gossage squad, and helped the team clinch the prestigeous Gossage Cup in 1953.

But the Uganda soccer wizard of all time was Ali Kitosa. He was a very temperamental player, always having a rough time with referees. He was arguably the equivalent of Kenya’s legendary soccer king, Shem Chimoto and Tanzania’s Abdalah King Kibadeni.

My first visit to the Ugandan capital in the same year, I was on a mission to interview some political personalities for the defunct DRUM magazine and its then popular East Africa’s edition. But then, I found myself in love with the “Pearl of Africa”, and stayed on, after accomplishing my assignment.

This was during the famous Non-African Trade Boycott campaign, spearheaded by Buganda Kingdom, a protest in demand for the return of the Kabaka Mutesa II [King Freddie], who was then exiled in the United Kingdom by the British colonial administration. The near violent campaign was led by a flamboyant politician called Augustine Kamya.

Already in his middle age, Mr. Kamya was joined by the young technocrats, who included the youthful Indian trained lawyer, and a firebrand in the name of Abubakar Mayanja. The then Governor of Uganda, Sir Andrew Cohen, had issued a stringent order restricting the fuel stations, most of which were owned and managed by Indians, not to sell fuel to the pro-Kabaka Bagandas and their supporters. This created an artificial shortage of petrol in Kampala, sparking off a lot of smuggling rackets in fuel trade.

No Africans were supposed to purchase any shop goods from shops in Kampala, and in other towns within Buganda region,which were owned by non-Africans, mainly Indians, Goans and European, and relatively the same applied to those shops owned and run by the Arabs.

Sir Andrew Cohen was later replaced by the former Chief Secretary and long-serving colonial Education Minister in Kenya, Mr. Walter F. Coutts [later Sir Walter Coutts}. This is the man who eventually handed the insignia power to the late Dr. Apollo Milton Obote, when his UPC/Kabaka-Yekka combined forces, and defeated the late Mr Benedict Kiwanuka’s DP party. They formed the post-independence government, headed by Kabaka as the ceremonial President, and head of state, while Dr. Obote retained the the powerful office of executive Prime Minister and virtually the head of government.

I still maintain a belief that the Kabaka made a hasty decision of merging the Kabaka Yekka with the UPC. This was obviously the beginning of the turbulence that cost the Kabaka his monarchy, and death in exile. First of all, Obote was for a unitary system of government that did not recognized the tribal kingdom, and Kabaka Mutesa was very much aware of this, but his desire to have Benedict Kiwanuka, a staunch Catholic, out of the way made him form a loose alliance with Obote, an accomplished enemy of the tribal monarchy system. And the Kabaka paid the prize for this political blunder.

If the moderate Benedicto Kiwanuka’s DP had won the 1962 general election, the Kabaka and other monarchs would have retained the status quo, even after Uganda became an independent nation within the British Commonwealth. But Kiwanuka, an accomplished democrat and a moderate politician, who had served briefly as the Prime Minister of Uganda during the internal self government, was robbed of victory due to this amorphous alliance.

The Non-African Trade Boycott relatively succeeded in pressurizing the British Government to return the Kabaka.

In my research for stories for the DRUM magazine, while at the same time I worked for the Uganda ARGUS, I brushed solders with the early Ugandan nationalists who were involved in the struggle for independence, particularly the late Joseph [Jolly] William Kiwanuka, an addicted soccer lover and administrator per excellence.

Others were Mr Kamya, Mr.Mayanja, Humprey Luande, the trade unionist, Sam Odaka, another prominent lawyer Mr Binaisa, Omwanika Amos Sempa, who was later to become the first Finance Minister for the Independent Uganda, legislator David Ochieng, Kalule Settala, Sir Tito Winyi, Owiny Dollo, Adoko Nekyon, the Kingo of the Sebei, Mr. Chemonges, Katikiro of Buganda at the time, Michael Kintu, Kiyabazinga of Busoga, and many others…… I cannot mention all of them in this article

It was also during the famous Supreme Court case of the famous Kabangala Sassude, in which a tenant tricked an Asian landlord to sign a fake land transfer paper and grabbed his business premises in the heart of Kampala. He tricked the Asian owner by making him sign a paper written in Luganda vernacular, which said he had already paid for the purchase of the building located on upper market, Kamala road.

In Nairobi about the same time, Dr. Obote had a nasty clash with the late CMG Argwings Kodhek, the first Kenyan African barrister at law, who headed the defunct Nairobi African District Congress. It was at the time when the colonial administration only allowed Kenyan politicians to form district political association, but not the colony-wide mass political movement, due to the then prevailing emergency regulations.

Obote was a close political associate of Mr. Mboya, though in later years, he changed sides due to changed political ideology that was geared to the scientific socialism, and became much closer to the late Jaramogi Oginga Odinga, a sworn political enemy of Mboya.

Obote was a founder member of the Nairobi People’s Convention Party {PCP}, which was led by the late Tom Mboya. This was in 1958, only a year after Mboya and Argwings-Kodhek had battled it out in a bruising election contest for Nairobi area African constituency seat, in the then White Settlers dominated colonial Legislative Council, which Mboya won with a majority votes of 396.

An accomplished writer, Obote and the late Elijah Omolo Agar were involved in writing and editing PCP fiercely anti-colonialists and anti-settlers weekly newsletter UHURU, and he had on several times scathingly criticized Mr. Argwings-Kodhek in one of the paper columns, and also at a meeting at Kaloleni Hall.

At this point Mr, Kodhek told Obote point blank to pack up and go back to Uganda to help his then perceived to be backward Langi tribesmen, in his native Uganda, whom the Kenyan lawyer alleged, were still walking naked in a primitive manner, and were allegedly starving to deaths, instead of engaging himself in Kenya’s internal politics.

Obote took the lawyers remarks for an insult and packed his luggage and left for Kampala. Within months, he had joined William Kiwanuka’s then Uganda African National Congress, in what was seen as a political marriage of convenience. The marriage did not last, and there was a big split in the Kiwanuka’s party with Obote slashing a large number of its members, and taking them to UPC, which he and others had formed as a splinter group, following disagreement with Kiwanuka..

I returned to Kenya and got involved in journalism and stopped frequenting Uganda, except on the Independence celebrations of October 1962 and the OAU Summit of 1976, of the Heads of State and Governments, which was chaired by President Idi Amin.

While attending this important annual conference, the bad news came from Nigeria that the military had staged a coup and removed General Yakub Gown from power. Gowon was in attendance with the Nigerian national flag flying on his table, as the head of his country’s delegation. The news was broken to him by Idi Amin and it struck him like thunderbolt. Although wearing a composed face, Gown looked dejected and distraught and immediately withdrew from the Hall.

My next visit was when I triumphantly entered into Kampala in the company of Tanzania troops that had sent Idi Amin packing. Indeed I was among the first few foreign journalists who were to arrive after Idi Amin had been sent packing and fled northward. I had traveled with the Tanzanian forces via Mutukula border post and camped briefly with them in a makeshift field military camp, located around Mpigi, for a few days before the fall of Kampala..

The other early arrival was that of Mr Tony Avigan of the BBC and other agencies.. We became so scarred when information came about that Amin had been seen in Masindi and also been spotted at Mbale Town, in eastern part of the country, and that he was busy mobilizing the remnants of his crack troops to stage counter attacks. But this particular information did not materialize. It was later established that the information about counter offensive that filtered in was a big hoax..

Thereafter, I only relied on Ugandan news through reading its dailies, such as The New Vision and Daily Mirror, which always arrived in Nairobi streets in later afternoon hours, and via Radio Uganda..

Some weeks before the fall of Kampala, I was somewhere in a hideout in Eastern Uganda, reporting to the BBC under an assumed name, and that the priest was immediately seized by Idi Amin’s notorious State Research Bureau officials and taken away for interrogation..

Uganda was a sealed off country at the time. No foreign jpurnalists were allow to work in that country. But I was free to come in and out under an assumed name, and I was filing a lot of stories on daily basis after crossing the border into Kenya, which included the progress in the war front. I was frequently in the air through the BBC’s Network Africa in the evenings, and Focus On African in morning time under the name pf Simon Peter Onyango. Truly to my journalistic prowess I remained a phantom up to-date.

This year, I came to Uganda for this year’s 3rd EAC Media Summit, and I was very much impressed by the tempo of development activities in the countryside and also in the capital City, Kampala.

During my brief stay, I received heartening news that the tea production in Western Uganda has also gone up three fold after years of neglect, during which time the tea bushes had overgrown. The tea crop had became unproductive and uneconomic during the reign of Idi Amin Dada’s murderous regime [1971-1979].

I have always been concerned about the of tea industry in Uganda. This is because between 1965 and 1969, I worked for the Brooke Bond Tea Company in Kenya as their public relations manager, based at the Kenya Tea Company Ltd, at Kericho. During this time I was a frequent visitor to Kabaale, Port-Portal and Hoima-regions ,where the tea is grown in abundance. Brooke Bond Tea of the UK had some economic interests in Uganda grown tea.

What impressed me most is the fact that tea crops are no longer the exclusive rights of the multinational foreign companies, but even small scale rural farmers in the tea growing zones have became out growers. They are minting million in foreign exchange, accrued from tea exports, which they have ploughed back on the land and wisely invested in other fields of development activities.

This is reflecting in the true picture of the NRM government, which has been in office ever since 1986.

It is a concerted effort to ensure that the national cake is distributed equitably to all the regions. The government, has also facilitated the local peasant farmers and armed them with incentive agricultural policies that has enabled them to venture into tea growing. This is a clear evidence of equitable and distribution and sharing of the national cake .

Traveling west and south west of Kampala reveals a lot. Enormous developments have taken place along the Kampala –Masaka-Mbarara roads, a testimony that Uganda has moved further ahead of its neighboring countries, particularly its traditional trading partners of Kenya and Tanzania..

But the latest discovery of huge deposits of oil and natural gas in Lake Albert, and in other part of the Bunyoro kingdom, will definitely push Uganda ahead of many countries in the region.

It is also shameful that foreign journalists visiting Uganda have always fallen into foul traps of the of destructive elements and political demagogues which fed them with only concocted stories of the seemingly politically insignificant LR A rebellion, and war in the north. But these scribes either deliberately or with ulterior motive designs, and totally ignored writing about anything that Ugandan people have achieved through years hard work and sweat in their beautiful country, in terms of development of the economic infrastructure and other social aspect.

As the English saying goes, “Give vredit where it is due”, the international media owe Uganda a lot. They should write to portray the true picture of what is in place. The current political leadership in that country, particularly President Yoweri Museveni and the team of his hard-working Ministers, top officials involve in policy and decision making government all deserves a pat on the back.

But let me not loose sight and forget to thank the Ugandan electorate for their wise choice of legislators and policy makers, who have contributed enormously and made the country a fast developing economy. Many thanks also to the rural peasant folks, who through their sweat, have turned Uganda to be the new hub of food security in his region.

Transport mode is the cheapest and most affordable, one need only a short ride into the countryside on a motor bike taxi to witness what has been achieved. I challenge my fellow scribes to visit Uganda’s countryside and witness for themselves what has been done, and what kind of development are on the pipeline, envisaged to take place in the near future.

Ends

leooderaomolo@yahoo.com

About the author.

Leo Odera Omolo is a veteran Kenyan journalist-cum-author who is operating in Western Kenyan lakeside City of Kisumu. He writes on various topics, features and news to several publications at home and abroad, and at times operating in both Tanzania and Uganda. He can be reached by phone through Nos –0722 486181,0734 509215 and 0572500827 [landline]. Correspondences should be addressed to P.O.BOX 833, KISUMU-Kenya….

– – –
From: Leo Odera Omolo
Date: Wed, Sep 9, 2009 at 10:12 AM
subject: THE IMPRESSIVE DEVELOPMENT, PEACE AND TRANQUILITY ACHIEVED IN UGANDA SHOULD SERVE AS THE ROLE MODEL FOR OTHER SUB-SAHARAN AFRICAN NATIONS.

New video from R.E.M. and MoveOn

Date: Tue, 08 Sep 2009 09:49:15 -0700
From: “Nita Chaudhary, MoveOn.org Political Action”
Subject: New video from R.E.M. and MoveOn

Dear MoveOn member,

Last week we asked MoveOn members to share photos showing how they and
their loved ones are suffering under our broken health care system.

The responses simply blew us away. We showed the photos to recording
artists R.E.M., and together we produced this incredibly powerful video.

Watch the video and share it with your friends today.

With the news that some in the White House are considering a “trigger”1–a
delay tactic designed to kill the public option–it’s more important than
ever to get the word out that we simply can’t afford to wait for real
reform.

watch the video and send it to your friends today:
http://pol.moveon.org/healthcare_cantwait/?id=17196-5885054-DFuV4ox&t=8

Thanks for all you do.

–Nita, Laura, Matt, Kat, and the rest of the team

Source:

1. “White House Floating ‘Snowe’ Trigger,” The Atlantic Politics Channel,
September 2, 2009.
http://www.moveon.org/r?r=51839&id=17196-5885054-DFuV4ox&t=9

References

Visible links
. http://pol.moveon.org/healthcare_cantwait/?id=17196-5885054-DFuV4ox&t=7
. http://pol.moveon.org/healthcare_cantwait/?id=17196-5885054-DFuV4ox&t=8
. http://www.moveon.org/r?r=51839&id=17196-5885054-DFuV4ox&t=9
. http://political.moveon.org/donate/email.html?id=17196-5885054-DFuV4ox&t=10
________________

WAPIGANAJI CCM WANAPIGANIA NINI?

Nimejaribu kujiuliza kuwa hawa ndugu zetu ambao wamebatizwa jina la “Makamanda” wa vita ya ufisadi walioko CCM wanachopigania hasa ni nini? Ujumbe wao unaotufanya tusimame nyuma yao na kuwaunga mkono hasa ni kitu gani? Kama kuna mtu ambaye bado ni dhaifu na hajaamua kuchagua upande hawa wapiganaji watamshawishi vipi ili awaunge mkono; wanamuahidi nini?

Ninajiuliza maswali hayo na mengine mengi kwa sababu ukiondoa madai makubwa mawili bado najaribu kutafuta ujumbe wa wapiganaji wetu ili niweze kuelewa kama wana nafasi ya kushinda au watakuwa na athari ya kuvutia mikutano na kuuza magazeti na majina yao kutangaa lakini itakapofika muda wa kura wakajikuta wanatupwa nje ya ulingo.

Zafanana

Kitu kimoja hata hivyo naweza kukisema kwa uhakika zaidi ni kuwa kuna mfanano wa ajabu kati ya wanasiasa watetezi wa mafisadi (makuwadi wa ufisadi) na wale wanasiasa wanaowapinga mafisadi (wapinagaji). Kufanana huku ni muhimu kukuelewa kwani kimsingi kabisa kunafanya wapiganaji wawe na kazi kubwa zaidi ya kuushawishi umma kuhusu lengo na madhumuni yao hasa ni nini.

Wanafanana kwani makundi yote mawili yako kwenye chama kimoja; CCM imekuwa kama tenga lililobeba ndani yake matunda mabivu na matunda ambayo hayajaiva na pamoja na hao matunda wadudu wa kila aina wanaofuata uchafu. Makundi yote mawili yako kwenye tenga moja na hivyo moja linaweza kubeza jingine kuwa halijaiva sana au bado ni bichi au limeoza na lile jingine likalalamika kuwa linaonewa na kuwa kinachofanyika ni “chuki binafsi”. Lakini ukweli unabakia hadharani kuwa wote wawili wako kwenye tenga moja.

Wanafanana kwa sababu wote wanagombania nafasi ndani ya chama hicho hicho kimoja. Tumeshuhudia Dodoma wiki chache zilizopita jinsi gani makundi haya mawili yako kwenye muelekeo wa kugongana kusikoepukika. Lakini pamoja na mgongano huo tunaona kuwa makundi yote mawili yanagombania zaidi nafasi zao ndani ya chama. Hadi hivi sasa kundi la watetezi wa watuhumiwa ufisadi linaonekana kuongoza na kupata mashabiki wengi zaidi.

Ni nani kati yao atakayeweza kuwa na nafasi ya kutengeneza wagombea wa nafasi mbalimbali za uongozi hususan kwenye Ubunge ifikapo 2010? Itakuwaje kama kundi la makuwadi litapata kuunga mkono zaidi ndani ya chama na kundi la wapiganaji likajikuta linaungwa mkono zaidi nje ya chama? Jibu ni jepesi; makuwadi watakuwa na wagombea wengi zaidi chamani na hivyo kutuamulia viongozi wetu wajao ni kina nani.

Hata hivyo kufanana ninakozungumzia mimi siyo kufanana kwa aina hiyo. Ni kufanana kwa kile wanachogombania mwakani ni nini hasa. Makundi yote mawili yanagombania kuchaguliwa tena.

Baada ya matukio ya kihistoria ya Februari 2008 yaliyosababisha kujiuzulu kwa Waziri Mkuu kwa kuhusishwa na kashfa ya Richmond mpasuko mkubwa umetokea ndani ya CCM. Mpasuko ambao hauwezi kuisha kwa vikao, mazungumzo, makubaliano au muafaka wa aina fulani. Mpasuko huu ni mkubwa sana kwani makundi mawili yanayoshindana hayawezi kurudi nyuma hata kidogo kwani kufanya hivyo itakuwa ni sawa na kujitia kitanzi wao wenyewe.

Kundi la watetezi wa Lowassa haliwezi kurudi nyuma kwani hawa wanaamini kabisa kuwa kitendo cha Lowassa kubanwa na kamati teule ya Bunge kilikuwa kimekusudiwa, kupangwa na kufanikishwa na watu mbalimbali miongoni mwao ni Spika wa Bunge la Muungano Bw. Samweli Sitta na aliyekuwa Mwenyekiti wa Kamati hiyo teule Dr. Harrison Mwakyembe pamoja na wajumbe wengine wa kamati hiyo.

Hivyo kundi hili la Lowassa, mashabiki wake, wanufaika wa utawala wake, mashabiki na marafiki wake wa karibu waliapa toka wakati ule kulipa kisasi na kuhakikisha kuwaangusha wahusika wote na hatimaye kusababisha mchakato mpya utakaomsafisha Lowassa na wenzake na kitendo kile wanachoamini kuwa ni cha “uonevu mkubwa”. Kama nilivyodokeza siku chache baada ya matukio yale kundi hili halitokoma mpaka Lowassa atakaposimama tena akiwa safi na akiwa kiongozi. Chini ya hapo hakuna mapatano.

Kundi la kina Mwakyembe linaamini kabisa kuwa lilifanya kazi yake kwa uadilifu na weledi na halikumuonea mtu yeyote na zaidi kuwa wangeweza kufanya makubwa zaidi kama wangetaka. Hawa wamejipanga wakati wowote kumwaga “mchele kwenye kuku wengi” endapo itabidi iwe hivyo hasa pale hatima yao ya kisiasa itakapokuwa mashakani. Kundi hili linaamini kabisa kuwa Ofisi ya Waziri Mkuu ilihusika moja kwa moja na suala la Richmond na kwa hilo hawako tayari kumuomba msamaha mtu yeyote.

Hawa nao mashabiki wao, wapambe wao na wale wanaowaunga mkono hawako tayari kurudi nyuma wala kusalimu amri. Sasa hawa wamepania kabisa kutetea viti vyao vya Ubunge na nafasi zao katika chama.

Hivyo basi tunaweza kuona kuwa pande hizi mbili haziwezi kupatana kwa kadiri ya kwamba kila moja inaamini kuwa iko sahihi katika mtazamo wake wa matukio ya Februari 2008. Hawawezi kukaa meza moja; hawawezi kujadili sera pamoja na kwa hakika kwa upande wao hakuna mapatano yoyote na wale wa utetezi wa kundi la ufisadi isipokuwa ushindi tu.

Ushindi hauji chee

Hapo kwenye ushindi ndio tatizo. Kama nilivyoanisha katika makala zangu kadhaa zilizopita ni kuwa vitani ushindi hauji mezani bila kumlazimisha adui kusalimu amri. Ushindi katika vita unakuja kwa kumzidi adui uwezo na kumuweka kama kwenye kabali hivi na kumlazimisha anyanyue mikono kuomba radhi na kuingia katika meza ya makubaliano ya kusitisha vita kwa kusalimu amri.

Ili upande mmoja ushinde ni lazima uwe na ujumbe, mbinu, na zana na utaalamu wa kutosha kumshinda adui. Nasikitika kusema kuwa upande wa watetezi wa Lowassa na wale wanaowatetea mafisadi (kama wanaomtetea Mkapa) umejipanga vizuri zaidi, ujumbe wake unagusa wanufaika wengi wa ufisadi na kwa hakika wana uwezo na zana za kuwamaliza wapinzani wao.

Ndio maana hapa nimeuliza hawa wapiganaji wetu wao wanaujumbe gani zaidi ya zile mbili tulizozizoea na ambazo ukweli wake unakubalika katika akili za Watanzania wengi? Ni zipi unauliza..?

Kwanza kuna ujumbe kuwa mafisadi wanaeneza fedha na mikakati ya kuwang’oa katika viti vyao vya Ubunge. Hili tumelisikia kwa muda na lina mantiki ndani yake. Kwamba, wale walioathirika wanataka kuwaangusha wale waliowaathiri ni sehemu ya siasa. Ninachokiona ni kuwa watetezi wa ufisadi wanatumia sayansi na sanaa ya siasa kuwaangusha wabaya wao. Katika hili mbinu na njia mbalimbali zitatumika hata zile ambazo ni kinyume cha sheria.

Sasa wapiganaji wetu wamekuwa wakilia na kulalamika juu ya hili. Lakini wataendelea kulia lia huku hadi uchaguzi mkuu utakapofika ili kiwe nini? Sawa mafisadi wanataka kuwaangusha kwenye majimbo ya uchaguzi wao walitarajia nini? Hivi walifikiri baada ya matukio ya Februari wangetumiwa zawadi ya maua na keki kutoka kwa walioangushwa kwa fedheha na aibu?

Wanachofanya makuwadi wa mafisadi si kingine bali kutumia siasa kulipa kisasi na Dodoma ilikuwa ni mwanzo tu. Watapiga tena.

Ujumbe wao wa pili ni kuwa kuna mafisadi na mafisadi ni lazima washindwe. Sasa ukweli wa huu tunaujua kuanzia enzi za kipindi cha “Mikingamo” na matangazo ya “Liangalieni limbukeni hili”. Mafisadi wamekuwepi nchini kwa muda mrefu na wamekuwepo ndani ya CCM kwa muda mrefu (na siyo wanne tu kama mmoja alivyotaka tuamini).

Sasa kutuambia kuwa mafisadi wanasambaza fedha na vipeperushi n.k kwenye majimbo katika mbinu ya kuwaangusha wapiganaji kunaweza kutufanya tuwaonee huruma lakini hiyo ni sehemu ya siasa. Kama watetezi waliweza kujipanga vizuri hadi kuweza kuleta hoja nzito dhidi ya Spika kwenye mkutano wa Halmashauri Kuu na kwa kutumia njia za kisiasa basi hatuna budi kukubali kuwa hii ni sehemu ya siasa na makuwadi wa ufisadi wako tayari kutumia mchakato wa kisiasa kutimiza malengo yao.

Pia kutuambia ukweli kuwa ufisadi na mafisadi wapo na wana nguvu na wako tayari kufanya lolote ni ukweli ambao wengi wetu tunaufahamu.

Wananchi wanahitaji na wanastahili zaidi ya jumbe hizo mbilli. Watanzania wanataka kujua hawa wapiganaji zaidi ya kupigana ili kuokoa meli zao kabla ya uchaguzi ni kitu gani kingine ambacho ni kikubwa na wanakipigania ambacho kitawafanya wananchi wawaunge mkono na kuwarudisha Bungeni?

Je, wao wapiganaji wanatumia vipi mchakato wa kisiasa kuwazidi kete makuwadi wa ufisadi? Je wanafanya kila kinachowezekana kuhakikisha kuwa makuwadi wa ufisadi na wenyewe hawarudi Bungeni na kushika nafasi mbalimbali?

Ninaamini katika mvutano huu ni ushindi wa upande mmoja tu utakaosababisha mjadala kuisha ndani ya CCM. Hadi hivi sasa wanaoelekea kushinda ni watetezi wa ufisadi na dakika ni hizi za majeruhi. Je, wale wapiganaji wetu zaidi ya kuhutumia mikutano ya kutupa jumbe zao mbili wana kitu gani zaidi wanachogombania ndani ya CCM na kwenye Taifa ambacho kitatufanya tuamini kuwa kitu hicho ni cha thamani zaidi kuliko fedha na ahadi za makuwadi wa ufisadi?

Ni kitu gani wapiganaji wetu wanagombania hasa ukiondoa wao kuchaguliwa tena kwenye Bunge la 2010?

Yona Fares Maro
I.T. Specialist and Digital Security Consultant

– – –
From: Yona Fares Maro
Date: 2009/9/8
Subject: WAPIGANAJI CCM WANAPIGANIA NINI?

Honesty, Tyranny, And Uganda’s Acholi Calamity


http://www.blackstarnews.com/news/135/ARTICLE/
5988/2009-09-08.html

By Milton Allimadi
September 8th, 2009

[Global: Presentation at UNAA On September 4, 2009]

Presentation made on September 4, 2009 by The Black Star News publisher at the Uganda North American Association (Unaa) meeting in Chicago, Illinois.

In attendance were also from Uganda: Dr. Ruhakana Rugunda, Ugandan minister and permanent representative to the United Nations; David Wakikona, Minister of State for Northern Uganda Reconstruction; Member of Parliament and leader of opposition in parliament, Ogenga Latigo; a former Uganda minister of state for defense; Walter Ochora, the Gulu District Commissioner, in Uganda; and other officials. Cegun’s Lucy Larom’s presentation focused on genocide in Acholi and the spread of Hiv/Aids through targeted rape.

Bothers and sisters, fellow Ugandans, thank you all for coming to this very important Uganda forum.

It’s not the northern Uganda forum. I have never heard of any country in the world called northern Uganda. I don’t know where that is.

I wish someone could tell me. Anybody who knows of a country called northern Uganda please raise your hand and let me know.

So it’s very important to lay the groundwork from the get go. There is no such thing as northern Uganda.

We have a Ugandan problem. Part of the reason why it’s lasted for such a long time is because we allowed it to be cast in our minds as a northern Ugandan problem.

Just by agreeing to that terminology alone it means that we have also contributed to the prolongation of this tragedy.

I come from a media background so obviously words are very important to me.
When you hear terms like IDP; IDP could be a place where you go to spend the night if you’ve missed your bus. ‘Internally Displaced.’ As if those individuals had a choice; as if they displaced themselves intentionally to live in those camps for 23 years.

How do you willingly go to live in a facility where you know that the assured outcome is death? From lack of sustenance; lack of food; lack of hydration; lack of medical facilities. So let’s stop the nonsense. You know sometimes honesty is good. Let’s be honest. We travelled from allover the world to come here.

So why are we still pretending? Let’s abandon these terminologies of nonsense and let’s deal with the issue head on and recognize it for what it is. The tragedy is not only because of the vicious and brutal Lord’s Resistance Army. If we accept that; it means we are not being honest. We all know that. Even the government officials that are here today. They know that not to be true.

They know that the Uganda government and military are also a problem. So why don’t we recognize that. Why don’t we accept that and be honest about that. [Audience clapping]

Honesty is good sometimes. It allows us to deal with issues head-one and move forward. Let’s be honest. This video we just saw right now [Propaganda by Invisible Children promoting the Feingold/Brownback Bill which contains a section that would authorize the U.S. to militarily support the Ugandan Army in pursuing the LRA]. It would be difficult to recognize who made that video. An outside organization or the Ugandan government.

Let’s be honest. How can you show us a video that is celebrating the Ugandan military as if it’s not a part and parcel of the tragedy? That’s not being honest. Does somebody agree with me or not?

Let’s be honest. When you have a tragedy such as the Ugandan situation let’s recognize that the LRA has contributed massively to this calamity; as has the Ugandan government by maintaining those camps for such a long time when everybody knew what the outcome of maintaining people in those kind of living conditions–what the outcome would be.
Who can deny that? So, that’s why people like Olara Otunnu have a good point when he says that you know the outcome of those kinds of living conditions, and you allow it to persist for 23 years; can you blame somebody then for believing that that was a calculated policy? Of course not. I would not blame somebody for believing that.

Let’s be honest. The Ugandan problem is not very peculiar to Uganda after all. In fact, it’s not even a Ugandan problem. Forget about northern Uganda. It’s a problem of lack of accountable leadership in Africa. It’s not unique to Uganda only. Where, rather than building institutions of governance and leadership, we substitute this with one-man or one-party rule.

So, let’s start with presidential term limits. Let’s be honest. It’s a question of illegitimacy of government. And when a government feels that it is not legitimate, it survives by any means necessary.
There is no question of ‘is there rule of law?’ when government itself is in essence unlawful.

We talked about issues of transparency. Very good. I like the honorable minister’s honesty [David Wakikona Minister responsible for reconstruction in northern Uganda had spoken about transparency regarding the spending of the proposed $600 million for recovery]. By bringing up issues of transparency the honorable minister recognizes that there has been a problem in terms of embezzlement and corruption.

We all know this. We read the Ugandan papers. Even the government newspaper talks about corruption and embezzlement. So it’s good that the honorable minister talked about transparency.

And I hope that this transparency results in concrete measures such as for example having a website like the Federal government does in this country to show how stimulus money is being spent. So that we can see how the $600 million is going to be spent. So that one day no government official is going to come forward and tell us that the money is finished while nothing has been accomplished.

So by having a website that clearly marks how this money is being spent, where it’s going, we can monitor it in real time; just like it’s done in this country. There is nothing special about this country; there are things that we can adapt that can help us.

All of us here; we’re educated, we’re learned. And that’s why it’s disappointing when we come here — I’m saying this in an American City; and I recognize that; I realize that; and I take advantage of doing that. But that does not mean that others within Uganda cannot make similar demands in their own ways.

I can just tell by the reaction of the audience that it’s something that we all appreciate. We all believe that while one individual may indeed have a grand vision, nobody exists on this earth forever. He’s not shy about talking about his vision. So then what do we do the day after? That’s why it’s important for us to agitate to build institutions that endure and outlast individuals. Not only in Uganda but in Africa. As I started from the beginning, I said this is not a problem peculiar or unique to Uganda.

I also appreciate what the minister said in terms of let’s take advantage of this opportunity and not just come here and start listing a laundry list; pointing fingers, who did this, who did that, who’s bad.

That’s why I haven’t done that. I have just recognized the truth of the matter.

Which is that we cannot be honest without appreciating that the LRA bears blame for the calamity; and the Ugandan government and military also shares blame.
Let’s start from that premise and then we’ll be able to move forward with some honesty.

Sometimes as people outside Uganda you feel a bit helpless that you are not able to influence events or conditions in Uganda. In fact, that’s completely wrong. You can.

In this new media era and environment, with the Internet, you can influence a lot of things. And I will give you an example.
The Bill. The Feingold/Brownback Bill. The so-called Northern Uganda Bill. That Bill, once it came out and it listed all the items that it included, we started agitating.

Particularly we appreciated the part that calls for reconstruction and devotes money for that; but we completely rejected the part of that Bill that gives the United States the opportunity to team up with the Uganda military to go after the LRA. Can that be a solution? What would the US add to that dimension that the Ugandan military was not able to do in 23 years?

So we reject that segment of this Bill completely and absolutely. And if anybody is willing to sign that petition [which Invisible Children was circulating at the Unaa Convention] make sure you note that on the petition as well; otherwise don’t sign that petition until that segment whichrefers to military collaboration is removed.

My final example. In terms of, we’re reading a lot of stories about land issues and land grabs in the Acholi part of Uganda; not northern Uganda. What is the solution? Do we feel completely impotent and helpless when faced with these powerful multinational companies?
No! Have we forgotten the ruling in a recent case in a New York Court when Shell settled with Nigerian activists for $15 million for their collusion and collaboration with the oppression in the Delta region of Nigeria? The law is called the Alien Torts Statute and it’s being applied very effectively in the United States right now.

I have an article here from the Wall Street Journal [“Arcane Law Brings Conflicts From Overseas to U.S. Courts.” Wall Street Journal August 27, 2009] that explains exactly how people in countries such as Uganda can apply the same law to make sure that corporations that collude with any government, including in Uganda, regarding the oppression of indigenous people, can come to a United States Court and make legitimate claims.

Thank You.

Please post your comments directly online or submit them to Milton@blackstarnews.com

“Speaking Truth To Empower.”

Milton Allimadi, Publisher/CEO
The Black Star News Publishing Co.
P.O. Box 64, New York, N.Y., 10025
(212) 481-7745
Please visit also visit www.blackstarnews.com

– – –
From: milton allimadi
Date: Tue, Sep 8, 2009 at 6:59 PM
Subject: Honesty, Tyranny, And Uganda’s Acholi Calamity

Mobile Operators and Their Host Communities

Since the emergence of the mobile telephone, combined subscription has inched close to the 10 million mark and many more are yet to sign up. The potentials are still enormous given the fact that total population under the licensed territory (Tanzania) is close to 40 million people.

Good as it may sound that we can now connect to the world without the endless wait and shoddy services that characterized the pre-GSM era, when Ttcls monopoly hold sway. Despite all the rapid expansion and coverage in most cities nation wide, quality of service issues seems to the albatross of the mobile operators.

Quality of mobile phone services is commonly the most discussed topic outside politics and energy issues which we are daily confounded with. Even the National Assembly had already debated on it! While the national regulator, TCRA, in many instances and at different forums reinforced the importance of provisioning high quality services to millions of subscribers, the stark reality is that the situation seems to be getting worse by the day.

TCRA also initiated the consumer outreach and consumer parliament to resolve subscriber’s frustrations which had taken another dimension with subscribers forming associations and even going further to advocate service boycotts in protest against poor service delivery and in some extreme cases, initiated court cases against mobile operators.

In the midst of allegations, accusations and claims by operators and subscribers alike, what the entire population has failed to look at genuinely are some points that operators are raising.

Some time ago, TIGO had reasons to alert the public about its facilities that were maliciously damaged. Important components of mobile telephony technology are the radio equipments which are mounted on towers and mast all over the towns and cities. Fiber-optic cables also carry traffic crisscrossing the national boundaries .

Recently we all witnessed massive degradation of services across all the networks and despite all efforts, its seems the problem is beyond them. Most service disruption is directly link to the handiwork of vandals and community agitators. In many instances, workers and their sub contractors are denied access to the base station sites to service power generators and other equipments, fiber optics unearth from the ground and severed, diesel theft and generator vandals. The irony is that the communities that now turned vandals at some point clamored for the Base stations to be sited in their community.

Most of the demands of the communities are unrealistic, ranging from multiple payments for acquired site properties, road construction, powering of communities and even scholarships!!! These are not the duties of companies that pay all forms of taxes to government. Though some of the activities of the operators do impact the environment negatively sometimes, care should be taken to ensure strict compliance with environmental regulations to curb noise pollution from generating sets, spillages from diesel and used engine oil which can pollute source of community waters.

Community empowerment programs can be implemented through engaging locals as site security, civil repairs works and immediate remedial repairs whenever their activities impact on the communities negatively. Mobile operators should also leverage on site where some basic infrastructure that can support their services exists. They can leverage on the branch network of banks and as they roll out new Bank Branches, they make provision for tower erections on the properties on a rental basis. This offers some level of security. Implementation of integrated maintenance of cell sites, will also reduce numbers and frequency of site visits for maintenance purposes. Increasing the storage tanks for diesel will greatly help in reducing frequent top up visits which seems to be a lucrative target for community extortions.

With communities and vandals taking its toll on the operations on the mobile operators and high cost of subscribers acquisition in face of keen competition, it is only natural that the subscribers will be at the receiving end through poor services and high tariffs. Just like crude oil production where you need a maze of pipelines to deliver contents likewise the telecommunications services too. The base stations might look like a stand alone installation but operationally, they are inter connected and linked with many others elsewhere and when one goes down, it might lead to disruption of services or a near collapse in a locality .

So the next time you try to make that important call and it does not connect, it does not mean that the TIGO ,ZAIN AND TTCL are not alive to their responsibility but maybe area boys and your community people have just tampered with a diesel hose that feeds the generator which powers the base station in your community or they have just chased away telecoms workers from site and you are denied access to reach your loved ones via your mobile phone.


Yona Fares Maro
I.T. Specialist and Digital Security Consultant

– – –
From: Yona Fares Maro
Date: Tue, Sep 8, 2009 at 11:56 AM
Subject: Mobile Operators and Their Host Communities

Re: The Mau Circus Continues

from “elijah.agevi@ . . .
date Sep 8, 2009 10:59 AM
subject Re: The Mau Circus Continues

Dear Odhiambo,

Thanks for keeping us in the loop. And yes the Mau case can only happen in Kenya! Where else can one try to justify and delay such case as Mau? When shall will be strategic and decisive in our actions? What are we as a nation waiting for before we take the long over due action?

Have a good evening as the struggle continues.

Elijah Agevi

from OKELLO David Otieno
date Sep 8, 2009 9:43 AM
subject Re: The Mau Circus Continues

I suggest a very different approach towards this MAU issue..

Why can’t we the affected, go there and plead with those at the complex to come out, we talk to tham one-on-one, get them enlightened and understand why we want them out, then…the govet. come in and pays them….

We are not getting a solution and nature does not give time….

David


David otieno Okello
P.O. Box 27626-00100 Nairobi, Kenya
Tel: +254-770-045590
Cell: +254-722-485118

from Boniface Mwirigi Kiula
date Sep 8, 2009 8:36 AM
subject Re: [KENVA] The Mau Circus Continues

Sometimes I feel fed up with the nonsense of our political class. Okecth, thank you for highlighting the truth. KICC did not require funding with billions to revert to the state. It did not even require Pres. Kibaki himself to issue a statement. It only called for him to make a decision and send a minister to issue the decree and justice had been made.

Why do have a lot of talk on Mau, Wilson Airport, Sugar, Maize…everything? It is all because of self-serving politicians. A few more people ought to get fed up and say Kenya can be a better Nation and it requires you and I selflessly serving. Kiula B. M.

from odhiambo okecth
date Sep 8, 2009 3:08 AM
subject The Mau Circus Continues

The Mau Circus 8th September 2009

For a long time now, we have been discussing the Mau issue.

It all started when evidence of the destruction could not be down played anymore. The rivers were drying up; the cattle were dying for lack of water; our taps became dry for lack of water; KPLC started rationing power because they did not have water in their dams; our animals all migrated to other countries because we did not have water; Even the Wildebeests did not do their yearly tricks this year.

All these because Mau had been invaded and those who sold Mau off could not hide the ramifications of their act any more. We could all see for ourselves the effects of their rule.

But as all this happen, our leaders are busy planning for a kill; a kill out of our plight. As they do always, they know we are a Talking Nation, and they know how to deal with us, because they know we are gullible.

Have you paused for a while to ask yourself why the Government wants Kshs 38 Billion to effect evictions on Mau?

To the Government, Kshs 38 Billion is some small money. Just take this walk down with me so that we can justify this Kshs 38 Billion which the Government wants to beg for as Kenyans are still living in camps; as more Kenyans go hungry because our politicians sold all our strategic grain reserves;

1] The police force that we will use to effect the Mau evictions are people in the pay roll of the government as we speak. They will not be new recruits and as such, they need no new considerations. They will just be doing what we pay them to do.

2] The officers tasked with handling this job are government employees. They need no new pay packages besides what they are earning currently. They will be doing what we are paying them to do.

3] The Rangers who will protect the forest after the evictions are people already working for the government. They will need no new pay to enable them do what we are already paying them to do.

4] The Ministry staff from the Ministry of Environment, Forestry, Lands, Water, Office of the Prime Minister and Office of the President are people already in employment. They will be doing what we are paying them to do.

5] The seedlings that we need to re plant at Mau should come from the Kenya Forestry Research Institute, a government body with personnel in employment as we speak. If they have failed in their mandate to do their work, we have many Friends of the Environment who are willing to give seedlings for free.

6] The lawyers who will be looking at the documents if need be are from the State Law Office, and they are officers already in our employment.

I do not need to list more of the basics. My concern is simple; what do we need this Kshs 38 Billion for if all the key players are people or institutions that we are already funding through the exchequer? We do not need Kshs 38 Billion to save Mau. It is the politicians that need this money to serve themselves.

What do we need this money for? Kenya is the only country where a billion makes no sense. They talk of a billion as if it was some piece of bread, and they care less, for we are gullible. Soon they will outgrow the billion syndrome and move to trillion, and all commissions and agencies they create to mint money will having there budgets in trillion.

Lastly, if someone causes you all this kind of suffering, do you say thank you to them by paying them off? I join Hon Bill Ole Ntimama in demanding action, action now and no payment to these people.

They can go back to where they came from.

Odhiambo T Oketch

Moving From Talking to Tasking

Note; Some people have gone to court over Ringera. They are playing the known script; go to court and make the issue sub-judice and forestall public debate. I would not be surprised if they were acting on instructions from the same Ringera.

Re: Complete Mount Kenya Takeover of Government

from Lee Makwiny 10:14 am (12 hours ago)
date Sep 8, 2009 10:14 AM
subject Re: Complete Mount Kenya Takeover of Government

Christine, we are watching. And they are fast to sack people from other tribes. But Kenya will be free soon. I also dont think its fair to lump up people since these are a clique. The only problem is that the common people from the region, even in this forum, will jump to their defense and justify all their actions.

from Ernest OYUGI 10:10 am (12 hours ago)
date Sep 8, 2009 10:10 AM
subject Re: Complete Mount Kenya Takeover of Government

pliz u may as well add the ENERGY SECTOR!!!!!!!!!
just list and seee………

from Christine Baraza 8:27 am (14 hours ago)
date Sep 8, 2009 8:27 AM
subject Complete Mount Kenya Takeover of Government

With the most current reshuffle, it is now a complete takeover of government by Mount Kenya natives and 2012 looks more and more bleak for anyone who thought that Reforms were on the way. Tribalism has been entrenched and the same tribalists are the ones crying tribalism-the latest convert to this cry is Minister Robinson Githae joining Uhuru Kenyatta, Amos Kimunya and Kiraitu Murungi.

Kenyans take a look. If you want to retain power-you need only to control two sectors of the country-The FORCES and the MONIES. Thats complete for the Mount Kenya plans and Kenyan may just forget that DEMOCRACY is coming to Kenya soon. Look at this list no kidding this is REAL

KENYA FORCES:
1.Police Commissioner-Mathew Iteere
2.APs Commandant-Kinuthia Mbugua
3.Director of CID-Simon Karanja
4.Director-NSIS-Michael Gichangi
4.Deputy Chief of General Staff-Julius Waweru Karangi

KENYA FINANCES/MONIES
1.Minister for Finance-Uhuru Kenyatta
2.PS Finance-Joseph Kinyua
3.Head of Budget-J.B Ngugi
4.Governor-Central Bank-Njuguna Ndungu
5.Chiarman KRA-John Waweru
6.Head of KAAC-Aaron Ringera

Its amazing that Mount Kenya leaders are crying Tribalism to hoodwink other Kenyans who are known to fear the word Tribalism. They are the REAL TRIBALISTS in this country called Kenya. Kenyans if we dont wake up then we are headed to the same same things that happened in 2012. Sycophants like Musyoka will sing Kibaki as Kenya GOES TO THE DOGS. Kenyans cant afford such levels of TRIBALISM. Please Kenyans lets wake up.Lets wake up..Let our leaders point out this TRIBALISM…Its Killing this beautiful country called KENYA.

From: ABBY OTIENO
Subject: Re: Tribalists Uhuru, Murungi and Kimunya
Date: Tuesday, September 8, 2009, 5:14 AM

i hve realised that, this politicians normally bring some issues to cover our eyes e.g the issue of mau is now kaput, now its ringera thingy, next will be jiggers, then hunger etc. so that we can go talking while they go grabbing.

From: Christine Baraza
Subject: Tribalists Uhuru, Murungi and Kimunya
Date: Tuesday, September 8, 2009, 5:12 AM

Its amazing how our politicians continue to beat drums of tribalism, while at the same time talking about fighting the same tribalism. This is called “Talking from both sides of the Mouth”. Uhuru Kenyatta, Kiraitu Murungi and Amos Kimunya went to Kipipiri and sounded an alarm to the Kikuyu Community over Ringera’s appointment that “their people are being finished” and thus they must fight back. Pose for a moment and wonder how many Kikuyus/Merus/Embus hold high offices in Kibaki government?

The entire Ministry of Finance has been Kikuyunized. The Minsiter is Uhuru Kenyatta, The PS is Joseph Kinyua, the Governor is Njuguna Ndungu, the head of Budget is Ngugi and the Chairman of Kenya Revenue Authority is Waweru. Has any other leader from any other tribe complained that their people are being finished? Does it mean that other leaders from other tribes are foolish? Not long ago Kibaki appointed Waweru as PS ministry of Youth/Sports replacing Mburugu and then appointed Ndirangu to replace Waweru as nairobi PC. Did any leader from any other tribe complain? Does it mean that other tribes are foolish?

I think its high time, other leaders called bluff on these tribalists called Uhuru, Kimunya and Murungi. To put it plainly Kenyans are tired of tribalism practiced by Kikuyu leaders at the expense of National development. Lets face the truth, Kikuyu leaders including Kibaki are the FULCRUM of tribalism in this country and its high time others came up and told them to stop this cancerous practice. They have no shame and if not stopped they will continue practizing tribalism, which they have practiced since 1963 starting with Jomo Kenyatta. Kenya must move forward and leaders must stand up against tribalism through speech but also practice.

Kibaki is an enemy of Democracy

Kibaki is an enemy of Democracy
Any leader who defies public opinion is not a friend of a democratic society but a dictator. This is what has compounded Kibaki’s Presidency of over six years.

The series of events that have taken place since President Kibaki was elected enmasse in 2002 portrays him as a very unreliable leader who does not listen to the cries of his subjects.

He doesn’t work on what is popular to the masses but soughts audience from a small click of tribal chieftains.

Quite often, the president has made decisions whose sanity puzzles the nation. Who doesn’t know that Mr. Ringera has done nothing to fight corruption, and that the Kenya anticorruption Commission needs an overhaul? Look what he has done?

President Kibaki is an enemy of meritocracy, in public service. His biggest undoing is his ethnic eye on national appointments and allocation of responsibilities in government.

We don’t care whether Ringera is a Meru, Luo or Kikuyu but as Kenyans, we want performers. This is the same impediment that bedevils the Country’s public service where an old guard; Francis Muthaura who has been ailing and past retirement age, his back as civil service head.

Does it mean the country doesn’t have young men and women with the skills to perform Muthaura’s job?

His second term in office was disastrous- questionable victory that led to blood shed, dysfunctional state house, tribal leanings, lack of national cohesion, betrayals, indecision, protecting corrupt friends, tribalism, greed, financial scandals, lack of empathy and compassion for the hurting nation.

President Kibaki does things as if he is Kenya and Kenya is his. He signed the Communication amendment Bill even after majority of Kenyans including the Prime Minister expressed displeasure over the many flaws that were in the Bill.

Because of tribalism, he appointed Uhuru Kenyatta to be in charge of our national coffers yet Mr. Kenyatta his poor in fiscal management.

We all know the goofs Mr. Kenyatta has made since he took over as Finance docket from Mr. Amos Kimunya.

The most worrisome thing is why the Finance docket has always evolved within the Mount Kenya region in Kibaki’s Presidency.

Kenyans expected a decentralized system where government responsibilities are rotated to reflect our diversity as a nation with 42 ethnic communities.

Truly, during Moi’s reign, the Finance Ministry was not a preserve for Kalenjins but for all Kenyans. We had Saitoti, a Maasai, Nyachae a Kisii, Kibaki, a Kikuyu, Obure a Kisii and Okemo, a Luyia, to mention but a few who served in this Ministry.

As a nation, we e are left wondering whether President Kibaki knows where we are heading as a nation unless he wants to take us back to Egypt and not the promised land.

Indeed, what tangible legacy will Kibaki leave behind since he is in the sunset years of his political life?

He will bequeath nothing especially to the young generation of Kenyans except tribalism, greed for power, maintaining the status quo, indecision, doing things his way and lack of leadership when the nation needs direction.

– – –
From: Joseph Lister Nyaringo
Subject: Kibaki is an enemy of Democracy
Date: Saturday, September 5, 2009, 9:08 AM

PLAN OF THE ABORTED BOMB ATTACK ON MRS CLINTON REVEALED IN KENYA

KENYAN NEWSPAPER HAS MADE A SHOCKING REVELATION OF HOW THE SOMALIA BASED ISLAMIST TERRORISTS HAD PLANNED BOMB ATTACK ON US SECRETARY OF STATE IN NAIROBI LAST MONTH

Writes Leo Odera Omolo In Kisumu City.

An influential and popular Kenyan weekly newspaper today made a shocking revelation of how the Kenyan police had discovered a secret plot to blow up three important installations in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi. The three important economic facilities targeted for bombing include the posh Hotel Intercontinental, where the US Secretary of State Mrs Hilary Clinton and her entourage were booked.

The SUNDAY NATION, in its front page headline article further disclosed that a group of extremist Islamic terrorists operating from the neighboring Somalia had plotted the bomb attack in Nairobi during the visit by the US Secretary of State Mrs Hilary Clinton last month.

The paper sited an unnamed senior security officer as its source of this information. It said the officer is working with the undercover counter anti-terrorism unit within the Kenyan police and as such cannot be identified, hence compromise his duty with the anti- terrorists unit.

It quoted the officer as saying that his unit had intercepted communications between the terrorists agents based in Kenya and their counterparts in Somalia on how the terrorists planned to stage simultaneous attacks at the Hotel Intercontinental, the Kencom – one of the busiest Bus terminals in the City centre, located outside the Kenya Commercial Bank headquarters, and the nearby Hilton Hotel.

Mrs Clinton stayed at the Hotel Intercontinental during her visit. She was accompanied by a large entourage of American top government officials, businessmen and others numbering about 300 people.

The plan, according to the paper report, was hatched in Somalia and only thwarted by the hawk eyed Kenyan security officers who are said to have intercepted secret communications between the Islamists plotters in Somalia and their accomplices in Nairobi. So far five people are reported to be in custody assisting the security men with their investigations.

The top security official, who the SUNDAY NATION says, his identity cannot be revealed without compromising anti-terrorism operations, had confided to the paper that the terrorists linked to the dreaded Al Shabaab group had wanted to embarrass the Kenyan and US governments, but their plans were thwarted before the attackers could cross the border from Somalia into Kenya.

“The threat were neutralized a week to the AGOA meeting in combined efforts by the military and other security agencies,”, the security official was quoted as saying this. The secret security dragnet in Nairobi netted five people; who are reported to be in police custody under intensive interrogation and investigations into their secret plot to blow up installations.

The report added,.”While in the past, the real target of the attacks has been Western interests, the Al-Qaeda leadership has since changed their tactics and made Kenya a new target. So serious is the threat that during the Agoa meeting, the Al-Qaeda intended to strike at the heart of the Kenyan capital during the rush hours of the day, expecting the blast to hurt as many people as possible”.

The security operations in Nairobi, according to the report, netted five crucial suspected terrorists, one of them said to be a woman. One of the suspects who carries the Danish traveling documents, is believed to be a Somali national. The other four, one of whom is a woman, hold Kenyan identification documents which are believed to be fake.

According to the security officials, the mastermind of the attack, were in constant contact with a Mr Saleh Nabban, one of the most wanted men by the US FBI. His personal assistant , a man identified as a Mr. Anus, is believed to have been coordinating the plot to attack Kenya during Mrs Clinton’s brief stay in Nairobi.

Mrs Clinton was in the Kenyan capital to officiate at trade talks between her government and the African countries, courtesy of the African Growth Opportunity Act :{AGOA}, an American law that promotes trade between the US and Africa..

Mrs Clinton arrived in the country on August 4 and left for the tour of other six African nations, which included Angola, Rwanda, Dr. Congo and South Africa on August 7. Other delegates were also booked at the nearby Hilton Hotel, where security network provided the same service of the same class with the Hotel Intercontinental.

And to reassure themselves ,Kenyan security apparatus and officials detailed officers from the elite presidential guards to her entourage, just to beef up the security services, provided logistic support to the US Secret Service and Marine.

The busy streets around the two hotels, and those buildings adjacent to the two hotels, and the Kenyatta International conference Centre, the venue of the meeting, had been closed to normal traffic as part of the stringent security measures put in place.

The information which had been received by the security network about the threat and what Kenyan officials did to stop the deadly plan was shared with US security agencies.

The presence of Al-Shabaab operatives in Kenya, the report says, was facilitated by helpers living mainly in the Mombasa, and Nairobi’s Eastleigh ,South B,South C and Kamarock estates.

The authenticity of these reports could not be verified immediately as the police are keeping a tight lip over the matter.

Ends

leooderaomolo@yahoo.com

– – –
From: Leo Odera Omolo
Date: Mon, Sep 7, 2009 at 2:13 AM
Subject: PLAN OF THE ABORTED BOMB ATTACK ON MRS CLINTON REVEALED IN KENYA

Kampala is the most peaceful city in Sub-Saharan Africa with no muggers and robbers

KAMPALA IS THE MOST PEACEFUL AFRICAN CITY, DEVOID OF SPATE OF HOLD UPS, VIOLENCE ROBBERIES AND OUTBURST OF GUN-SHOTS BY THE NIGHT.

Writes Leo Odera Omolo, a Veteran Kenyan Journalist who was recently in Kampala.

KAMPALA CITY, previously a small African town, which is built between seven hills, and which was once described by the British war-time Prime Minister, the late Sir Winston Churchill as the “Pearl of Africa” in the real sense of the word, it now true to its nearly century old description.

Kampala‘s score-card as one of the most peaceful Cities in the turbulent African continent is the highest and unequaled. It has emerged as the most peaceful city in the Sub-Saharan Africa.

The City is devoid of gun-totting violence robberies, security hold-ups, carjacking, mugging and violent attacks, which are featuring in other African cities led by Johannesburg, South Africa followed by the Kenyan capital, Nairobi.

Here is a busy city where a visitor, who is booked in one of the posh hotels in the Central Business District {CBD}, can easily afford to venture into the night and stroll around the streets unmolested. The visitor can stroll around and return to his or her hotel room without encountering any problem or being accosted by anybody. In fact Kampala is very much alive by the night.

Those privy to information about this beautiful African City say, the prevailing atmosphere and peaceful circumstances, which has drastically changed the face of Kampala, could be attributed to good governance by the ruling NRM, under the political dynamism and magnanimity of President Yoweri Kiguta Muyeveni.

The NRM, they said, has instilled strict discipline on every Ugandan and made the people to double their efforts in development activities. This is very evident in the heavily stocked shops, heavy traffic around the City’s Central Business District {CBD}, the old and new taxi terminals {which are the equivalent of Bus Terminals in Kenya}.

Kampala City has gone under serious face-lift in the last twenty years or so to an extent that any visitor who paid a visit to this City in the early 1980 would be at a loss, and might not even find his or her way to the hotels.

The mode of transport differes significantly from “Special hires to Motorbike taxis”, which are relatively much cheaper compared with the same rates in Nairobi.

Places like Lugogo stadium, near Nagulu suburbs, where this writer lived in the late 1950s can now not be recognized. Nagulu, Nakawa and Kololo have linked together and twined up with the City centre as one entity. An ultra-modern National Stadium is in its advanced construction phase. Another modern taxi terminal is place in Nakawa for the services of passengers traveling to the eastern towns of Kamuli, Jinja, Tororo, and Busia.

Anyone traveling by road on the Jinja road can enjoy cheap, but delicious “Mugonja” lunch of roasted chicken and boiled or roasted banana at Mukono by the roadside, where food merchants sell roasted meat, kabaabs, and other food and soft drinks. And here, a traveler can quench his or her thirst with cold mineral water or soda after the sweet tasting roadside lunch.

In what looked as an achievement of a milestone development, Kampala City is almost linking up with Mukono town, and it won’t take long before the city is linked to Lugazi Sugar Work, which has now colored its development with tea plantations on the hilly right side of the main Kampala Jinja road.

There is true testimony that Uganda is a land of plenty, where tea, coffee, sugar cane, maize ,bananas and fruits and all other important cash crops can be grown along side each other without much efforts in soil research work as it happens elsewhere. There are obvious significant signs that this is an agriculturally rich country, which can generate wealth from its most arable and fertile soil.

Besides the ultra modern road network within the City centre and its environs, several intimidating skyscrapers have sprung. In addition, modern buildings housing shops and offices, all point symbolize booming trade and businesses all around.

And even the old slums of Namongo, Sambiya, Kibuli and Miyonga and Kyadondo have disappeared and replaced with new buildings, whose architectural beauty is an envy of anybody.

The nightly outburst of gun-shots, which were the order of the days in the early 198o’s are now history. The gun-totting soldiers-cum-beggars who dominated Kampala streets and major roads in Uganda during the reign of the despotic Idi Amin and the discredited second presidency of the late Apollo Milton Obote are now things of the past.

A visitor can hardly see a member of the UPDF walking aimlessly in the City streets. The streets are patrolled by highly disciplined police officers who are well trained not to harass civilians in anyway.

Another area of high discipline can be seen in the work of Traffic Police. These ladies and gentlemen ask very few questions. They are hardly seen loitering by the roadside asking for TKK, like their Kenyan counterparts, who go to the road not to control traffic or deter any law breaking drivers and conductors, but for the purpose of money collection.

Matatus or taxis as they are called in Uganda are under strict rule to carry only 14 passenger

There are no conductors or touts at the taxi-terminals, and the passengers pay for their services directly to the Nissan Matatu drivers. There are no noisy making Matatu touts. Carrying extra passenger is forbidden, and any taxi driver caught with the offense faces court fines, which are almost equivalent to the price of the vehicle itself, so nobody is willing to take a chance.

The passenger therefore travel in good comfort, with each and everyone sitting up-right, on his or her seat. The passenger transport sector is the most discipline. The few fatal road accident are usually related to high speeding drivers. The speed limits is strictly observed by the drivers, that is why it takes between three and four hours driver from Busia on the Kenya-Uganda border to Kampala City centre.

An old Kampala friend told this writer that the country was rapped by political parties that ruled the country in its early stage of political independence. There was rampant tribalism, sectionalism and nepotism, where by the ruling class were bent on seeing only their kin were appointed on top jobs in the government and paratatal organizations.

Ends.

leooderaomolo@yahoio.com
– – –
From: Leo Odera Omolo
Date: Sun, Sep 6, 2009 at 7:06 AM
Subject: Kampala is the most peaceful city in Sub-Saharan Africa with no muggers and robbers

The “Kindest Cut” So they Say

From: Judy Miriga
Date: Sun, Sep 6, 2009 at 6:02 PM
Subject: The “Kindest Cut” So they Say

Folks,

This is totally and completely insane and an abuse of tradition and culture. I just wonder whatever got into this boys head. This is sexual organ abuse. It is taking some of our valuables and pride away from us. There is a way this organ completeness preserved The Luo Culture and Tradition. No one can understand unless the user of the equipment is consulted. That Clinic in Nyanza should be closed down with immediate effect since its motives are not genuine. It is up to no good. Furthermore it is operated by those who never had a chance to experience what it is to be whole.

The problem of Nyanza people and the reason to advancement of AIDs is as a result of poverty. To save Nyanza people, give them ways and means to food security and you will not see anyone with AIDs. Give them means to a healthy living and scourge of AID spread will be no more. Luos are hungry with no jobs. Translate that AID money to food money and create jobs with it, it will do Luos a great deal. There will be no more AID in Nyanza.

This Coalition Government should give Luos a breather. I am soon going balastic to complain and put up a case of Human Rights Abuse at the Hague. This sexual organ matter is not for one person to decide. Who knows what someone had put in the head of this young man? He may have done it under pressure or or caoxing. Any time a man makes such a decision, he should not it takes two to make a decision over this small human organ. I am just contemplating, this is must be some sort of some conspiracy.

It is a mockery and an Insult to the Luos to desplay themselves lying flat on the table as a Guinea Pig in the name of Poverty, to have their thing cut. There is nothing like “Kindest Cut”. Muraguri and Wanjiru are having a fields day, they are taking any possible chance to make a foolhardy on the Luos. Why would that boy have to display his thing for Muraguri and Wanjiru to make a show of? Ask yourself why a glaring camera? You young ones should also be careful what you go for. Check your history. Ask yourself, if it was soo bad, why Kikuyu Ladies ran to get married to Luo Men in droves? Something special is about the wholeness of the organ. Dont fool yourselves you young men out there………open your eyes wide and think deep. Luo women must begin to start owning part of their share and start talking. Make noise if you can. If you stay quite, ati you are playing gentle, the next thing the whole thing will not be there. Where will you go? Na utalilia nani?

I am just concerned why they are forcing this thing into the Luo Community. Last time the prisoners were forced to have a “Cut” and those must just be Luos. They will now round up Luo and put them in cells just to have them Cut. This is a serious crime. This thing must be a bad thing the reason why they are forcing Luos with it. And why must it be performed by a Kikuyu? What has Kikuyus have with Luos, wajameni? Nauliza kwa roho safi. Kibaya chajitembeza kizuri chajiuza. Just dont force it on Luos………how do we know those instruments used are not polluted, I am begining to have many queries in my mind. If it is not Museveni, it is Migingo, if it is not Migingo it is the Cut……what is all these. What is cooking? We want to know?

The young Kikuyu men are missing their women, they ran to go get married to Luo young men, they must skim and hatch a plan so their women go back to them. This is one of those plan.

I suggest that those with brains stay far far away from this trap. Make noise if someone is coming after your thing by force.

God Be with You all,

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

Writing about ‘cut’ led journalist to go for it
Posted Friday, September 4 2009 at 20:48
By NATION Correspondent

After writing an article on how male circumcision could reduce the spread of HIV, journalist Erick Otieno was so inspired he decided to go for it himself.

Otieno, 29, is one of the photojournalists featured in The Kindest Cut, a book and photo exhibition sponsored by Internews Kenya.

The project involved six print journalists who were given cameras and sent to Nyanza Province to report on voluntary male circumcision.
His brother

“I was not scared, no,” says Otieno, adding he has convinced his brother and several friends to follow his example.

Otieno, a reporter with The Kenya Times, says the session — a week of technical training and a field trip — helped him appreciate photography.
His project follows Francis Odiwo, 17, who decided to take up an offer of free circumcision for men in Nyanza.

The Luo community does not circumcise boys, so Odiwo had to convince his grandmother to let him do it.

The photo on the “Kindest Cut” invitation is of a sweat-drenched naked Odiwo with his back to the camera. The doctor is beside him, his surgical gloves covered in blood.

“I am feeling fine now,” he says, adding, recovery only took about a week.
When asked if he is uncomfortable that people are ogling the revealing pictures, he smiles and shrugs.“I’m glad,” he says, adding that he hopes they will help other men decide to go for the cut.

For every 1,000 men who volunteer to be circumcised, 250 new HIV infections are prevented, says Dr Nicholas Muraguri, director of Kenya’s National Aids and STD Control Programme.

The photographs and articles from the six journalists will also be posted on-line.

The Daily Nation’s Nakuru-based Wanjiru Macharia also participated.