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Archive for October 1st, 2009

The Talk of Kenya: What Does Obama Have Against Us?

Posted by jambonewspot on October 1, 2009

By Nick Wadhams / Nairobi Thursday, Oct. 01, 2009

Not since the days of President Daniel arap Moi, a classic African “Big Man,” has the U.S. been so tough on Kenya. The latest salvo came on Sept. 24, when Washington threatened to ban 15 senior officials from the U.S. for their failure to push through reforms after bloody post-election violence in early 2008. Even worse for a cash-strapped Kenya, the U.S. promised to scrutinize the government’s requests to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank. This is not the close friendship that Kenya had in mind when Barack Obama, a man whose father was born in Kenya, won the U.S. presidency. Kenya declared it a national holiday when Obama’s victory was announced, and his visage is ever present here — on gum wrappers, in airline magazines and, briefly, on a beer label.

But some in Kenya’s government believe that “Brother Barack,” as he is known, has not reciprocated the love that they feel for him. Nor has Obama made good on their hopes that his Kenyan ancestry might lead him to give their country some kind of preferential treatment. Instead, Obama seems determined to use what influence he has in the way a parent might withhold love from an errant child. “I sometimes think Obama’s roots in Kenya can actually be a problem,” Prime Minister Raila Odinga said in a recent newspaper interview. “Kenya is always being held to different standards compared to neighboring countries.”

The U.S. government, in fact, has been among the loudest countries in voicing its displeasure that Kenya’s coalition government — which formed after the violence and is led by President Mwai Kibaki and Odinga — has not yet prosecuted the instigators or made a dent against corruption. “There may have been a belief in Kibaki’s circles that Obama was sympathetic to them, and they can’t understand why he’s delivering all this bad news,” Mwalimu Mati, head of an anti-corruption organization called Mars Group, tells TIME. “On the Odinga side, supporters are saying, ‘Why on earth is Barack Obama being so hard on us?’ “

Kenyans’ belief in a connection with Obama is very real. His election victory was greeted with street celebrations and ecstatic parties. The Kenyan media cover his every interaction with local officials exhaustively. Much hand-wringing and speculation ensued, for example, when Odinga was uninvited to a lunch with Obama during the meeting of the U.N. General Assembly last week. It turns out that Odinga’s invitation was a clerical error.

Now, however, Washington’s potential ban on U.S. entry for 15 Kenyan senior officials is the latest — and most blatant — sign that Kenyan leaders may have misjudged their Brother Barack. Letters written by Assistant Secretary of State Johnny Carson were delivered to 15 senior government leaders who were deemed to be moving too slowly on reforms. (Their names were not released.) Chief among the government’s failings has been its inability to prosecute the government officials who are believed to have orchestrated the violence. In the letters, Carson wrote, “I am writing to inform you that your future relationship with the United States is linked to your support for urgent implementation of the reform agenda as well as opposition to the use of violence.”

Obama’s actions strike a distinctly sharper tone than that of the Bush Administration, which was critical of the government’s handling of the violence. Indeed, if the travel bans are enacted, Kenya would join the company of Zimbabwe and Sudan in being countries with officials who are not allowed entry to the U.S. And the last time the IMF and World Bank suspended loans to Kenya was in the late 1990s, under Moi’s dictatorial rule. All this comes at a trying time for the country. The Kenyan economy has been hobbled by the post-election violence and a punishing drought. Staff who conducted a recent census have been unpaid, and the financial crisis has robbed many people of their income, meaning fewer tax receipts.

On Wednesday, in an attempt to defuse Kenyan and U.S. anger, the much-criticized chief of the Kenyan Anti-Corruption Commission resigned. (Outrage had followed Kibaki’s decision to reappoint Aaron Ringera earlier this month despite his failure to confront corruption.) Though Ringera’s resignation was considered a good sign, the Kenyan government’s primary response to the letters was to accuse Obama of a breach of protocol for writing to the 15 officials directly rather than to Kibaki. Instead of acknowledging the slow pace of reform, Foreign Minister Moses Wetangula suggested that actions like the U.S.’s could “precipitate the hardening of the mood over the reform process.” Then Kenyan officials blamed U.S. ambassador Michael Ranneberger, who was given the task of announcing that the letters were sent. Ranneberger was summoned to a meeting with Wetangula, where he was told to turn over the names of the letter recipients.

The government’s treatment of Ranneberger reflected just how unwilling it was to acknowledge that Obama might think badly of the Kenyan leadership. Ranneberger, a longtime Africa hand, was accused of turning an otherwise sympathetic Obama against Kenya with misinformation. “We appreciate the way Hillary Clinton has treated us with respect and decorum,” government spokesman Alfred Mutua said in a recent interview, referring to the Secretary of State’s visit to Kenya this summer. “She achieved more in two days than what the U.S. mission in Nairobi has achieved in the last two years by intimidation and threats. Our perspective has always been that the right information is not getting to Obama. It was very clear to us when Hillary Clinton was here and expressed surprise at how much had been achieved.”

Ranneberger is indeed outspoken — he recently opened a Twitter account, USAMB4REFORM — to tweet his thoughts on Kenya. “Despite warnings by some, I will still speak out supporting reforms in Kenya,” read one. “President Obama and the Kenyan people demand nothing less!”

While there was some public annoyance with Washington’s action, the government’s attempt to appeal to Kenyan nationalism may have backfired. Regular Kenyans seem to think that Brother Barack was only doing his familial duty. An unofficial television poll after the news of the U.S. letters broke found that 82% of respondents disagreed with the Foreign Ministry’s move to summon Ranneberger. And no one is more critical of Kenya’s leaders than Kenyans themselves. “The government’s attitude has been that this can’t be happening unless somebody’s inciting Obama and that it’s got nothing to do with them,” says Mati, the anti-corruption activist. “They are truly in denial.”

SOURCE: TIME

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Blow your nose and kiss goodbye to Sh2,000

Posted by jambonewspot on October 1, 2009

It is now illegal to blow your nose in the city of Nairobi and you could go to jail for it. If they don’t get you for blowing your nose, they will get you for spitting on one of the city’s many rubbish heaps and rivers of sewage.

And if they don’t catch you on any of that, you will certainly find yourself behind bars for crossing the road while talking on the phone.

In a raft of new by-laws, the City Council has also criminalised making noise.

The by-laws are contained in a brochure issued on Thursday. Those found spitting will be jailed for three months or pay a fine of Sh2,000, or both.

The same sentence will be imposed on those arrested for blowing their noses without using a handkerchief or tissue.

Making noise

According to the City Inspectorate Department, making noise of any kind in the City will result in arrest.

Council spokesman Wilfred Marube said the new by-laws will guide residents who according to him were not aware that such rules exist.

“We have to make the city more habitable,” he said, adding: “Most people through poor ethics have made this place (Nairobi) look bad.”

He did not say whether proper planning of the city, cleaning up the garbage and sewage, managing traffic and clearing slums would not have been more sustainable solutions.

Motorists will not be charged parking fees on weekends and public holidays, with the exception of Saturday, when the charges will be levied up to 2pm.

Speaking while releasing the by-laws on Thursday, Mr Marube said most residents ignored city regulations and this has forced city fathers to impose stiff penalties.

Four major by-laws were announced which include parking, solid waste management, Fire Brigade and general nuisance. The latter was said to be the most violated.

“General nuisance is really affecting the operations of the City Council,” he said.

Hawkers and touts, who make noise for a living, thought the new rules are a nuisance.

“We get our daily bread here,” said 29- year-old Samuel Maina, a tout at Globe Cinema roundabout. “We are not making noise. The council must know that we are self-employed.”

Ms Anna Naliaka, a hawker in Ngara, said that the new laws would not help them in any way.

Building sheds

“They should think of building sheds for us. Maybe they (City Council) want to raise more money from fines. They want to finish our business.”

But Mr Tom Chenu, a banker said the laws would help curb matatu madness which, he called a major nuisance.

“If only they could be implemented,” he said but warned the new rules may just make City Hall workers more corrupt.

“The City Council askaris may make a killing out of this,” he said. “They will demand bribes. If one is caught spitting, he’ll pay an askari Sh200, which I think the askari will not refuse. That will be like an ATM to the askaris.”

Dancing, singing, and guiding or directing drivers into parking spaces is also illegal as is falsely shouting “Fire!”.

Scattering waste in the estate is also an offence, and home owners are expected to have a rubbish container with a lid.

The council is also proposing to sell your car if it is towed for failing to pay parking fees and you fail to pay towing charges and fines.

SOURCE: DAILY NATION

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Ledama Olekina 2012: Is he the one?

Posted by jambonewspot on October 1, 2009

Ledama Olekina has already declared his candidacy for the highest seat in the country of Kenya. He is young, charismatic and so far, a burst of fresh air. Some have said he stands no chance in 2012 and allude to the power brokers in Kenya as the barrier to his prospects. They contend that he is relatively unknown by Kenyans and would probably ellicit a “Ledama who?” response. Which brings me to a certain Barack Obama and I believe he is the President of the United States. Obama was hardly a household name outside Chicago and if my facts read true, he did not even finish his first term in the United States Senate. I know…I know its probably far fetched to try and draw parallels to these men but on the same token, who knows what path has been charted for Oledima? Let us see what happens and may other young people stand up. So Kenyans, is he the one?
This is a letter extracted from his website. www.ledama.com  
Ledama talking to Wananchi during one of his meet the people tour. Photo Courstesy of www.ledema.com

Ledama talking to Wananchi during one of his meet the people tour. Photo Courtesy of www.ledema.com

My Friends,

I have spoken to many of you, read your comments on Facebook, emails, your letters, blogs and elsewhere. And the message is one: WE have grown weary of the politics of usual and now want to look at the future.

The youth, who make up 65% of the Kenyan population, have yet to hold a place in Kenya’s political process. And if you do not feel valued in the process, how can you see value in your country? It is time to value all opinions—all generations, all tribes. And it is time to put our trust in each other and in the future of Kenya.

The policies of divisiveness implemented by the current coalition government have put our country in an uncertain position. Serious human rights issues and problems continue to be ignored by the leadership in Kenya. Our politicians—consumed by money and influence—have become petty, bitter and so partisan they cannot even sit down and discuss, much less resolve, the many problems that face us today.

This must change. We must change.

For the past months, I have contemplated how I could best advance the cause of change and development Kenya so desperately needs. But with a love for my country and great faith in my fellow countrymen and countrywomen, I am willing to commit myself to bringing change to Kenya. But I cannot do it alone. Bringing about the change we seek is up to all of us. You and me.

I continue to hear from many of you about your frustrations with the high cost of living in Kenya today, a lack of food, a failing (but no less expensive) education system, inadequate health care, high energy costs and the reported high level corruption in the judiciary, legislative body and the executive branch of government.

Rather than fix problems ourselves, we have created a greater dependency on foreign aid. And that has put our country in a very desperate place.

But that is the past. The past is a different country. The future is Kenya.

Change, however, can’t happen by itself. All of us, you and me, must come together to transform our politics to fit our future. The change Kenya deserves—WE deserve—can only come from like-minded people who believe in a better way … and are willing to work together for it.

In 1995, my community of Narok came together to raise much-needed money to send me to college in America. Ever since, I have come to believe in the spirit of community development and grassroots initiatives. I have learned that meaningful change always comes from the villages and the community spirit that thrives within them. There’s no reason why we can’t nurture that spirit throughout our entire country. Because when we come together as one, we can accomplish great things in life.

My work in my community in the past ten years has borne clear evidence to this testimony. Hence, in the midst of the most-corrupt regime our country has ever had and the constant challenges we face in Kenya today (ranging from ethics to outright starvation!), I still have great faith and hope about the future of Kenya.

Because I believe in you and me, I have begun the process of registering a new political party in Kenya, one that commits its efforts to improving our collective future. On May 1, 2009, I will be setting up a presidential exploratory committee, which will be made up of like-minded individuals. And for the next four months, I will be talking to all of you across Kenya, to listen and learn more about the challenges we face as a developing country, the opportunities that lie before us, and the role a presidential campaign can play toward the betterment of our country.

On November 11, when I officially turn 35 years old (the required age of eligibility for the presidency of Kenya), I will end my initial discussions and share my plans for 2012 with all of you. This day will mark the beginning of a rigorous and rewarding journey to the future of Kenya.

Meanwhile, please join us as we begin this hard work together by contributing your ideas and resources on what the future of Kenya will look like.

Please continue to sign up to become an organizer of this movement of change in your community. Thank you for your encouragement and prayers. I look forward to meeting you in person.

In the words of our people, “Enaisho Ookule,” may you remain with blessings and always walk in beauty into the future of Kenya.

Optimistically, resolvedly and humbly yours,

Ledama Olekina

 

More on Ledama’s vision for the country on www.ledama.com

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Marriage is as political and as complex as a coalition

Posted by jambonewspot on October 1, 2009

By LUCY ORIANG’ Posted Thursday, October 1 2009 at 17:48

 

SEVERAL YEARS AGO, I ASKED a friend to write an article for an International Women’s Day special edition. I still laugh whenever I recall her first sentence. “Marriage sucks,” she wrote. The rest of it was just as colourful: The worst part of it is that your mother, who should know best, is the first to push you in that direction. And when the going gets tough, she is the one who will pressure you into sticking with it.

She might even resort to emotional blackmail, telling you that you would never have been born had she walked out of her own marriage. The message finally sinks in. It is the destiny of women to suffer bad marriages. You do not ship out, whatever the provocation. You put up.

The worst part of it is this: As you age, you morph into your mother. You complain about this and that aspect of the man’s conduct — men are never right, as all women since Eve know — but you stay on “for the sake of the children”. Joy’s story came to mind this week with the news that the Cabinet had been pondering new laws that might well give a new definition to marriage in Kenya.

As expected, the proposals have kicked up a storm even before they get to Parliament. In an ill-disguised attempt to pass the buck, the Cabinet meeting last week deferred a decision in favour of further consultations. I don’t blame the ministers. At the best of times, external intervention in marriage is like walking on quicksand. Crafting laws to govern it calls for Solomon’s wisdom, and it is not given to many.

Marriage is as political, and therefore as problematic, as any coalition government. Some of the worst crimes are committed within that setting. Women, who tend to hold the shorter end of the stick in these matters should be jumping up and down at attempts to bring sanity into the oldest institution.

There is a king-sized problem to contend with though: Real life rarely fits into convenient pigeon-holes. Take this woman, whose husband died in the 1998 bomb blast. Only then did she discover that she had been in a love triangle all along. Every time she had a baby, her secret rival dropped one too. What use is the law in such instances?

It is supposedly illegal to marry a second wife without divorcing the first one if you had a church wedding. Yet the story is told of a top-flight pair of legal hawks that has lived together for decades and had children without bothering with the due process of ending one marriage before proclaiming another.

INDEED, THE WOMAN IN QUESTION — a tough cookie when it comes to human rights — is said to have once arrived at the doorstep of the wedded wife and demanded her “husband’s clothes”. If possession is nine-tenths of the law, she has the upper hand and the wife’s rights have been reduced to legal fiction.

The Marriage Bill, Matrimonial Property Bill and the Family Protection Bill are collectively a hybrid that is enough to give any right-thinking Kenyan a grand headache, let alone the notorious Cabinet. Matrimonial territory is difficult enough to navigate behind closed doors.

It presents a nightmare scenario for the prosecutor who wants to stick out their neck: Just consider the number of domestic violence cases that fall on the rocks despite clear evidence of injury and the risk of death.

What this legal cocktail gives with one hand, it seems to take away with the other in some instances. It just goes to prove how hard it is to create a marriage of convenience between the law and human feelings, which don’t respect the straight line.

We are told, for example, that wife inheritance and arranged marriages will be a thing of the past should the law be passed. But who will police it all? In the next breath, we learn that come-we-stay marriages will be recognised as long as you have been in the relationship for two years, and then dowry (do they mean bride price?) is given the nod.

I like the idea of a minimum marriage age, which would be 18, to negate traditions that allow parents to sell off daughters who might not even have reached puberty. But then many young women are sexually active before that age and may even be mothers.

In what appears to be a nod to gender equality, the better-endowed partner will be required to provide for the other. What if your man is one of those who just cannot keep it zipped up? Will you end up financing the lifestyle of a freewheeling maniac who makes a career of seducing anything in a skirt? You were right all along, Joy. Marriage is just too complicated. No wonder the Cabinet chickened out.

oriang.lucy@gmail.com

SOURCE: DAILY NATION

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Why I Don’t Want to Go to Heaven

Posted by jambonewspot on October 1, 2009

New America Media, Commentary, Edwin Okong’o, Posted: Sep 28, 2009

Review it on NewsTrustReview it on NewsTrust

When I was a child, I wanted to go to heaven. But today, after nearly 15 years in the United States, I’m absolutely sure that heaven is not for me. Before I explain my decision, let me tell you a little bit about my upbringing.

In our village of Makairo, Christian believers – and who wasn’t a believer – described the Promised Land as an Eden of milk and honey, fruits and sweets. But that seemed a perfectly reasonable description of the world I had been born into.

At first, I couldn’t imagine a place more beautiful than my ancestral home in the Gusii highlands of southwestern Kenya. The sun never failed to rise, even in the rainiest of the seasons. Everything grew big: bananas, avocados, passion fruits, sweet potatoes, corn, flowers. Unending plenty. There was a creek to swim in every mile or two.

Oh, but as in any Eden, there was a snake. My father cracked the whip in ways that made Kunte Kinte’s whippings in the movie “Roots” look like a joke. Corporal punishment was routine in my world, including in school, but not with my father’s punishing intensity. Could there be a place, I used to wonder, without such suffering?

Sokoro, my grandfather, had no doubt.

He was a man of great religious influence in the village. Sokoro was a holy man, the first one (so it was said) to bring a white man – a missionary, of course – to Makairo. Like most families in the highlands, we belonged to the Seventh-day Adventist Church (SDA). Sokoro read the Bible everyday. Ask my grandfather about Adventists and he’ll spin you a yarn so captivating you’d think he used to walk to school holding hands with Ellen G. White, the American founder of the Adventist movement.

My grandfather repeatedly told us during Bible study that, like the founder of the Adventist movement, Americans were extremely religious. In my imagination, America was gateway to heaven, a place people went for orientation to life in the Promised Land.

But as children we dreaded Sokoro praying during family Bible study meetings. His prayers lasted an eternity and we had to be on our knees. We used to joke that Grandpa prayed for everyone, including God.

The old man was said to be a successful businessman. He lived in Kapenguria, a town 200 kilometers from Makairo. Grandpa spent a few weeks every year in Makairo, where my grandmother and her children still lived.

There was no mistaking my grandfather when he walked up the path that led to our homestead from the main road. The walkway was the widest in Makairo. He had designed it wide enough so his children could drive their cars home when they were done with college and had good jobs. When he walked home, he always wore a suit and a newsboy cap. He carried a brown leather briefcase containing only a Bible. He needed no clothes. He had a closet in his house in Makairo. He walked with a cane, slightly hunched, but fast. To us, his grandchildren, he was a blessing, for his visits brought the only candy we would have in the year. I, especially, celebrated his presence because my father never hit me when grandfather was around.

As I grew older and began to wonder why my father was so abusive, I ran into an unfortunate irony: My grandfather, my role model and the man who brought joy to my life, was the reason. He had abandoned his children for another family. With him he took the key to the bank. His wife and children toiled on the tea field he owned, he came home a few times a year and took all the money supposedly to repay a loan he had taken to buy land for his sons. In a culture where a father ranks slightly below the Holy Trinity and is believed to have the power to condemn a son to eternal misery, my father and his siblings did not challenge him.

My father, who had been admitted to one of the best high schools in the region, dropped out after one year. In an era when Kenya was newly independent and high education paid immediately, some of my father’s classmates went to universities and became leaders of the new Kenya. Having missed out, he vowed to live that life through me, his firstborn. Unlike his father, he was going to give me everything to make it possible for me to succeed. When I didn’t live up to his high expectations he turned violent. “If 90 percent is the highest, why would they have 100?” he would ask.

Thanks to men like my grandfather, by the time I was born in the early 1970s, Gusii was an Adventist stronghold. But by the time I was six years old, Adventists had begun to lose numbers to the Catholic Church. One of the people responsible for the growth of the Catholic Church was an American priest named Fr. John Anthony Kaiser. He was the first white man I ever met. Fr. Kaiser lived in the Catholic mission in Kebirigo, a small town near Makairo. Because the Catholic faith was new in the area and lacked qualified priests, Fr. Kaiser presided over mass in several churches, including one two miles from Makairo.

Threatened by the rise of the Catholic faith, Adventists, who used to preach love and kindness, added a new line to their sermons: Saturday, the Sabbath, was the true seventh day – the day God chose to rest after six days of hard labor creating the world.

In private, small-group conversations, Adventist pastors and their flock became more forceful and explicitly. They called Catholics witches. I began to hear more about Armageddon from people besides my grandfather. The rise of the Catholic Church was a sign that the war that would test our faith had begun, they would say. It would be between the Catholics and us. They don’t respect our Sabbath. They worship idols hung around their necks. They go to church only for an hour.

“Can you believe they smoke cigarettes and drink booze after church?” one good Adventist would whisper, upon sighting a Catholic.

“In fact, they are already drunk when they leave church,” another would correct.

According to the prophecy, they say, the Catholics are going to lose the war and go straight to hell. In the beginning it might seem that they are winning. They will unleash terror on us and try to convert us. But if you stand firm and protect the Sabbath, God will intervene because he loves Adventists.

My mother rarely went to church and my father was a heathen in denial. He only listened to sermons if he was at funerals, which in our customs are held in the yard of the deceased. But my parents considered themselves Adventists. My father also believed that heaven belonged to children, and he had Matthew 19:14 to support his belief. “Let the little children come to me … for the kingdom of heaven belongs to them,” he would say over and over when he was drunk. He commanded that my siblings and I go to church every Saturday.

As I grew older, I began to stray from the Adventist movement. The hateful gossip; the parents telling their kids to pinch us and make our lives miserable so we can stop coming to church in “rags;” the constant staring to see if the poor kids were going to offer God a penny or a quarter; I was tired of it all.

Meeting Fr. Kaiser was also instrumental in my journey to leave the church. At the mission where he worked, the Catholic Church ran a clinic that served all people, regardless of their religious affiliation. I remember being taken to the clinics during one of the many stomachaches I had invented to avoid my father’s whip. Fr. Kaiser had been very gentle, unlike the government clinics where they yelled at the sick. While my Adventists were waiting for heaven to ease our pain, this good priest was doing it here on earth. (Fr. Kaiser defended Kenya’s poor to his death in 2000, when someone murdered him).

I became a teenager and went to a boarding high school in Tabaka, in the same Gusii highlands. There I got to see Tabaka Mission Hospital, which I had heard was the best in the region. It was then that I realized that while my Adventists were busy hating and condemning sinners, Catholics were building schools and hospitals.

Four years at my high school also taught me that all Adventists did was hijack public schools and label them SDA. Mine was TABAKA S.D.A. HIGH SCHOOL, but all the Adventists contributed was the pressure they put on the teachers to force students to hold prayers for two hours on Friday night and church services for six hours on Saturdays. They had Pathfinders, Adventist student officials, who caned you and made your life hell if you did not obey.

Unable to comprehend why my church was so dysfunctional, I concluded that it must have been because we it lacked white men like Fr. Kaiser. During my high school years I attempted to defect by attending a few Catholic services, but my father caught word and threatened to kill me. That would have to wait until I went to America. Ironically, it was learning more about the good Christian white men I admired as a child that strengthened my faith in the decision to leave the church altogether.

But that came later. In Kenya, I was still thinking of America as the gateway to the Promised Land. That belief was strengthened when one of my uncles gained admission in 1980 to a U.S. university, and began to send money home shortly thereafter.

When my uncle visited from America briefly in 1986 my kinsmen sat under omotembe, a sacred tree in front of my grandmother’s house, to listen as he told us about this magical place he lived in. They were not interested in how people in America earned money. They knew it was easy because my uncle returned with a lot of it and fed them for nearly a week. They wanted to hear about how amazing America was: the technology, the automobiles, the paved highways, the malls. My uncle described a box where you insert coins; the machine gives you food and beverages.

Later I came to know that as a vending machine. But in our oral communication tradition my uncle’s story developed into one about a machine that delivers food to people as they work in their offices. Everyone in America was rich and no one wanted to wait tables, my kinsmen said. Even my father, a teacher, often told that version of the story. And my grandfather explained that Americans were wealthy because all of them believed in God.

I finally made it to America and learned very quickly that my people hadn’t prepared me well for this heaven on earth. America wasn’t a place where you “wash cars for a day and make enough money to take the rest of the week off.” Nor was it a country where you buy clothes, wear them once and discard them. And, more surprisingly, it wasn’t that gateway to heaven where people praised God, night and day.

The more I lived with Americans, the more I found out that they weren’t as religious as I had thought. They were not out there using their God-given powers to heal. In fact, many of them were propagating hate. I learned of white supremacists and Christian extremists, who – like the Adventists of my childhood – invoke God’s name as they spread hatred. But unlike my Adventists, these Americans are armed with enough machine guns to start Armageddon.

In 2005, I was shocked to hear Pat Robertson – that grandpa whose show “The 700 Club” I loved to watch on television in Nairobi – call for the assassination of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.

Most recently in June, the Rev. Wiley Drake of First Southern Baptist Church in Buena Park, Calif., said he was praying for President Barack Obama’s death. And in August, another man of God, Pastor Steven Anderson of Faithful Word Baptist Church in Tempe, Ariz., told his congregation that he, too, was praying for the president’s death.

“I’m not going to pray for his good. I’m going to pray he dies and goes to hell,” Anderson told his congregation in a sermon titled, “Why I Hate Barack Obama.”

These are not the men I imagined I would find in heaven.

Source: http://news.newamericamedia.org/

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Entire PM Raila Odinga Speech at Harvard University

Posted by jambonewspot on October 1, 2009

Here are videos of Prime Minister Raila Odinga’s entire speech delivered at the Harvard University in MA.

Raila Odinga’s Harvard Speech Part I

Raila Odinga’s Harvard Speech Part II

Raila Odinga’s Harvard Speech Part III

Raila Odinga’s Harvard Speech Part IV

Raila Odinga’s Harvard Speech Part V

Raila Odinga’s Harvard Speech Part VI

Raila Odinga’s Harvard Speech Part VI

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Baby Missing after Mother is attacked by Fake Immigration Agent

Posted by jambonewspot on October 1, 2009

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — A newborn snatched from a Nashville home was missing and his mother recovering from stab wounds she said she suffered in a struggle with the woman kidnapper posing as an immigration agent, authorities said Wednesday.

Maria Gurrolla told reporters she had never seen the woman before she showed up at her door Tuesday evening. She said the woman got a knife from the home and stabbed her several times.

“I need my baby back,” the 30-year-old mother said through an interpreter outside Vanderbilt University Medical Center.

Gurrolla said the woman, whom she described as a robust white American, did not say anything about wanting to take the baby, who was on the sofa.

“She said she was an immigration officer and she was there to arrest her,” said Gurrolla’s cousin, serving as interpreter. It was not clear if Gurrolla was an immigrant, but police said she has lived in Nashville for at least 10 years. The cousin said the family did not want to discuss her legal status.

Gurrolla said she did not see the woman take the baby because she ran to a neighbor’s home to get help. That neighbor, Eric Peterson, told The Associated Press that Gurrolla banged on his door and was “covered from her head to her toe with blood” with gashes on her neck and upper chest.

She pleaded with him to rescue her children from the “lady in the kitchen” who had a butcher knife. He went to the home a few doors down and saw a woman speeding away from the home. He brought Gurrolla’s 3-year-old daughter back safely to his house, but found no baby, he said.

Police issued an Amber Alert with a picture and description of a 30-year-old woman. They found and questioned a woman matching the description near Buffalo, N.Y., then said they did not believe she was involved in the case.

Gurrolla was in a wheelchair and covered by a blanket at the hospital. Her eyes were bloody and swollen and she had a long scratch on her face.

Dr. William Dutton said she had a penetrating chest wound and her lung had collapsed. He said she also deep stab wounds to her neck, but was in stable condition. He said she still has physical signs that she gave birth recently. He described the birth as complicated but declined to elaborate.

A blue yard sign outside Gurrolla’s home in the community of mostly single-family brick houses in south Nashville announces, “IT’S A BOY!” Police spokeswoman Kristin Mumford said she doesn’t know whether Gurrolla was targeted because of the sign.

Peterson said as he was making his way to Gurrolla’s house, a woman with a ponytail was behind the wheel of a gray 2-door Honda that sped away from the home.

As he approached Gurrolla’s yard, a young girl in a diaper walked from around the back of the house. He left her with Gurrolla and the woman he lives with and headed back to look for the baby.

He sent his pet pit bull in first to check things out, then went in through the back door,

“As I preceded into the kitchen, I saw a puddle of blood, a big puddle of blood,” he said.

He searched everywhere but found no baby. When he told Gurrolla, that’s when she first started to cry. Police said the baby’s father was at the home later Tuesday night, and Sharon Kimble, who lives with Peterson, said the toddler’s father came later to pick her up.

Police spokesman Don Aaron said investigators were interviewing Gurrolla and her family again about the abduction. No one, including the family, has been ruled out as a suspect, he said.

A sketch artist is working to come up with a drawing of the kidnapper’s face. Police said Gurrolla described the woman as a white woman in her 30s, approximately 5 feet, 4 inches tall, with her blonde hair in a ponytail.

“We don’t have any indication at this point that this is anything but a stranger child abduction,” Mumford said. “We’re not ruling out anything, but we have no reason to believe that the family is not being completely truthful.”

Mumford said police are retracing the mother’s activities before the attack, such as a visit to a local Walmart. Hoping to find a witness, police released a photo of a car that was parked near Gurrolla’s at the Walmart and later followed her down the road.

Aaron asked the public for tips on the case and said it was a top priority for police in the area.

“There is an infant child that cannot care for himself who is missing and time is of the essence,” said Kristin Helm, a spokeswoman for the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation.

SOURCE: HUFFINGTON POST

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Capital FM Blog: Kenyans are terminally Stupid

Posted by jambonewspot on October 1, 2009

Now that the American Ambassador has taught us, let me cast aside all level of diplomacy and speak my mind. We, Kenyans, suffer from terminal stupidity. In fact, it is so severe that we shall surely perish from our own daftness.

Consider these points with me. Firstly, ask almost any Kenyan today and they will tell you that the run up to the 2007 general elections had clear pointers to some sort of violence whatever the outcome of the polls. Even the NSIS had warned of sure chaos whether President Kibaki secured an undisputed landslide victory or lost fairly. I say we are dim-witted because some of us were cheated by some airhead politicians that a regime change would lead to Zimbabwe-style land redistribution. Our brethren then armed to the teeth in preparation for evictions of ‘outsiders’.

More than a year and a half later, I can bet you that these folks still believe they have a chance to own bigger chunks of land by wiping out their ‘outsider’ neighbours. Stupidity well-defined!

When Kofi Annan came to Kenya and pressure was piled by the likes of Condoleeza Rice, Mwai Kibaki and his hangers-on agreed to meet up with Raila Odinga and his troops. They agreed, begrudgingly, to share the spoils of power by divvying up Cabinet, parastatal, ambassadorial and other plum jobs.

We foolishly cheered them on, and believed that they would willingly confess and let their hooligan supporters be arrested and arraigned in court for the post-poll chaos. We even expected these leaders to append their signatures to international arrest warrants by inviting Luis Moreno-Ocampo to investigate the killings.

Do you now agree with me that we are genetically brainless, or not yet? If not, I’m not done; read on.

Kenyans ululated to the news that Kofi Annan had “lost his patience” and decided to hand over the so-called dreaded envelope to the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court. In our inbred thickness, we believed that Mr Annan had finally unleashed the joker card on our leaders. Now, tell me, when did you last hear the grey-haired Ghanaian speak? Or did he do a ‘Pontius Pilate’ on us by washing his hands off the Kenyan case?

I have argued before that Kofi Annan is the greatest betrayer of the Kenyan people. Look, this Annan guy did not even broker the power sharing deal (no, that deal was forced on Kibaki and Raila by Jakaya Kikwete after Annan spent a fruitless weekend at Kilaguni Lodge).

The most that Kofi Annan has done since the Peace Accord was signed is to invite some Ministers, civil society activists and journalists to Geneva for a talk shop. I stand to be corrected but Mr Annan, unlike the Americans with their now-laughable threats, has not made any direct effort to push for the acceleration of reforms as stipulated in the National Accord.

The African Union is paying hefty fees to maintain a consulting firm that is checking the progress of the reforms. All their reports, this far, keep grumbling about the slow pace of reforms. I am yet to see any direct push for faster progress from Chairman Annan.

And we believe that this man or any western “friend” will help us get to Canaan? Aren’t we all terminally stupid!

SOURCE: ERIC LATIFF’S BLOG ON CAPITAL FM

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El Nino: Is Kenya Prepared?

Posted by jambonewspot on October 1, 2009

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