Habari Za Nyumbani–on jambonewspot.com

Visit www.jambonewspot.com…..your community website for more

Archive for October 12th, 2009

Looking for work, Kenyan man finds help from Anne-Marie House

Posted by Administrator on October 12, 2009

Staff photo by Don Himsel: Jairus Olocho, a Kenyan immigrant, is staying at the Anne-Marie House in Hudson with his wife and children. Olocho has received his license as an LPN nurse and is looking for work.

Staff photo by Don Himsel: Jairus Olocho, a Kenyan immigrant, is staying at the Anne-Marie House in Hudson with his wife and children. Olocho has received his license as an LPN nurse and is looking for work.

HUDSON – Jairus Olocho, his wife and their three children have a place to live and friendly faces to greet them.

For now, that’s enough for Olocho to feel blessed.

“It’s good. It’s a wonderful place to be. It has a lot of rules, but rules are good,” said Olocho, 38, an immigrant from Kenya who since July has been living with his family at the Anne-Marie House, a transitional program for homeless families.

Residents’ rooms resemble small dorm rooms. Olocho and his wife share one room, their 14- and 12-year-old sons share an adjacent room, and their 7-year-old daughter has her own room directly across the hall.

But there is a communal kitchen and dining room and a parlor to socialize – and a place where Olocho does much of his studying. A devout Christian, Olocho praises God for his chance to live here. But it isn’t where he wants to be in 10 years.

“Ten years from now, we will have our own home – God willing,” he said.

First, though, Olocho must find work, and so far that has proved to be a tough nut to crack.

Olocho arrived in the United States 10 months ago after going through the immigration process and obtaining a green card, which allows him to live and work in the United States. At first, he lived with relatives in Nashua, but the house was too small for both the hosts and Olocho’s family.

He can stay at the 
Anne-Marie House for two years, but he hopes it won’t take that long for him to find work so he can rent his own place and support his family.

Olocho and his wife earned GEDs and then recently, Licensed Nursing Assistant certificates through an American Red Cross program.

He and his wife both have been “vigorously looking” for work, applying mainly to nursing homes, he said.

“I have already sent out many applications, but not yet – just not yet,” he said of his struggle to find work.

Olocho was inspired to get into nursing by his great-grandmother, a woman who cared for people back in Kenya and died at 104 when she was gored by a cow.

Olocho studied in school for 12 years in Kenya, the equivalent of a high school education. He couldn’t afford to go to college there, he said.

For now, he’s taking a cross-cultural communication system class and hopes to land temporary or part-time work translating from Swahili to English. Swahili is a native language in Kenya, although English is taught in schools and is used as the main language for other courses, such as history, mathematics and geography, Olocho said.

His children are doing well and like school, he said. Some immigrants at a recent summit in Nashua talked of their children having difficulty with peers and teachers, but that hasn’t happened with Olocho’s kids, who attend school in Nashua because that’s where they started before the family had to move into the 
Anne-Marie House.

One of the friendly faces at the Anne-Marie House is that of Sovannareth Carlson, an immigrant from Cambodia who has lived at the transitional program for two years after she said her husband threw her out at a time when she was seven months pregnant.

With her 2-year-old son, Dominic, playing nearby, Carlson talked of encountering a glitch in her desire to start training to be a cook.

Carlson said she cooks very well and wants to work in a hospital or nursing care home because of the good benefits. She wanted to attend the culinary arts program at the N.H. Food Bank in Manchester, but learned she first needed a Social Security number. She received her number last week and now is waiting to hear back from the culinary arts program.

Like Olocho, Carlson said she’s thankful for now to be at the Anne-Marie House until she gets a job and is able to make her own way.

“Thank God I’m here. God brought me here,” she said.

Patrick Meighan can be reached at 
594-6518 or pmeighan@nashua
 telegraph.com.

Posted in Kenya | Tagged: | Comments Off

Sh200 thief to hang in Kenya

Posted by Administrator on October 12, 2009

NYAHURURU, Kenya, Oct 12 – A middle-aged man has been sentenced to hang by a Nyahururu court after he was found guilty of violently stealing Sh200 and a mobile phone.

Nyahururu Senior Resident Magistrate Timothy Kariuki said the mob that arrested Francis Njuguna, caught him red-handed as he beat Raphael Muturi with a sharp machete. The mob rescued the victim and recovered the weapon from the accused.

Mr Muturi’s son Clement Mwangi had heard him screaming for help when he mobilized people to rescue his father.

“These people did not know him (the accused) and there is no way they would have framed up such accusations against him,” said the magistrate.

The court heard that the mob descended on Mr Kariuki with blows and kicks moments before police officers saved him from the wrath of the irate members of the public as they prepared to lynch him.

The offence was committed at Ngaindeithia village, Kireita location in Nyandarua North District on March 28.

The court had heard that the complainant was going home after work when he was accosted by the accused while in company of other robbers not before court. The accomplices escaped when they heard the mob approaching.

The prosecuting officer Chief Inspector John Ruto said Mr Kariuki was a known criminal and a bully who has been terrorising residents of Ngaindeithia village. He also said the rate of theft is high in the area and stern measures needed to be taken to change the situation.

The magistrate said that the evidence adduced by the prosecution was unshaken noting that the accused needed a tough judgment to deter other would be offenders.

SOURCE: CAPITAL FM

Posted in Kenya | Comments Off

Kenya shines at MAMA Awards fete

Posted by Administrator on October 12, 2009

Kenyans Shine at MAMA Awards

Kenyans Shine at MAMA Awards

NAIROBI, Kenya, Oct 11 – Kenyan musicians on Saturday night bagged three awards at the MTV Africa Music Awards (MAMA) held at the Moi International Sports Centre, Kasarani indoor arena.

The high profile event that premiered in Abuja, Nigeria, last November saw Amani, whose real name is Cecilia Wairimu, bag the best female award while David Mathenge aka Nameless won in the best male artiste category.

Nameless also won in the Listeners Choice category.

Amani was nominated for her song ‘Tonight’ while Nameless was nominated for his song “Sunshine.’

Artiste of the year went to D’Banj of Nigeria at the event hosted by international hip hop legend Wyclef Jean.

Jean’s ‘legendary showmanship, outrageous sense of humour and infinite enthusiasm’ managed to create a vibrate atmosphere at the event that was attended by thousands of music lovers.

The MAMA was created last year to celebrate the best African contemporary music.

 

MTV Africa Music Awards (2009) Winners;

ARTISTE OF THE YEAR – D’banj
BEST ALTERNATIVE AWARD – Zebra & Giraffe
BEST FEMALE AWARD – Amani
BEST GROUP AWARD – P Square
BEST HIP HOP AWARD – MI
BEST MALE AWARD – Nameless
BEST NEW ACT – MI
BEST PERFORMER AWARD – Samini
BEST R&B AWARD – 2 Face
BEST VIDEO AWARD – HHP
LISTENERS CHOICE AWARD – Nameless
MAMA LEGEND AWARD – Lucky Dube
MY VIDEO AWARD – Congo Winner

Posted in Kenya: Entertainment | Tagged: , , , | Comments Off

Wanjiru wins Chicago Marathon

Posted by Administrator on October 12, 2009

Sammy Wanjiru of Kenya celebrates as he crosses the finish line to win the mens 2009 Chicago Marathon in Chicago, Sunday, Oct. 11, 2009.(AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh) (Nam Y. Huh - AP)

Sammy Wanjiru of Kenya celebrates as he crosses the finish line to win the men's 2009 Chicago Marathon in Chicago, Sunday, Oct. 11, 2009.(AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh) (Nam Y. Huh - AP)

Smiling and waving, Sammy Wanjiru of Kenya was already celebrating his victory in the Chicago Marathon as he approached the finish line. He had no idea a $100,000 bonus was still hanging in the balance.

Wanjiru won the marathon with the fastest time on American soil, finishing in 2 hours, 5 minutes, 41 seconds, and collected a big bonus check on a bone-chilling Sunday morning.

With temperatures in the low- to mid-30s, Wanjiru turned in the best time in the U.S. and beat by one second the mark set by Khalid Khannouchi in Chicago in 1999. He got $75,000 for winning and $100,000 for the course record, although he nearly cost himself that bonus by waving to the crowd as he approached the finish.

Had he finished a second later and not broken the record, he would have received an extra $75,000 instead for posting one of the three fastest finishes in the race’s history.

“I was very happy to see I’m the winner,” Wanjiru said. “I was very happy. I was very happy to take $100,000 by one second.”

He had no idea how close he was to the course record as he headed north up Columbus Drive to the finish line, and he wouldn’t have been in such a great mood had that celebration cost him. It didn’t, so he could smile about it.

Abderrahim Goumri of Morocco made a late push to finish second in 2:06:04, with Kenya’s Vincent Kipruto in third (2:06:08).

Russia’s Liliya Shobukhova, who finished third at the London Marathon earlier this year, was a winner in her second marathon and finished all alone in 2:25:56. London winner Irina Mikitenko of Germany (2:26:31) finished second to clinch the 2008-09 World Marathon Majors championship, and defending champion Lidiya Grigoryeva of Russia was third (2:26:47).

American Deena Kastor, the Chicago winner in 2005, placed sixth (2:28:50) in her first marathon since breaking her right foot in the Beijing Olympics.

“It’s very exciting,” the 21-year-old Shobukhova said. “It’s a great surprise for me.”

Nearly 35,000 runners braved the cold and started the race, and Wanjiru and the leaders took a shot at the world record of 2:03:59 set by Haile Gebrselassie of Ethiopia at Berlin last year. They fell off during the latter stages, but the course record, remained for the taking.

After fellow Kenyan Patrick Ivuti dropped from the lead in the 16th mile, Wanjiru moved to the front and ran with countrymen Vincent Kipruto and Charles Munyeki before pulling away.

He didn’t seem to be bothered too much by the cold, which was a sharp contrast from the previous two races in Chicago.

In 2007, with high humidity and temperatures soaring into the high 80s, the race was stopped after about four hours — but not before a man with a heart disorder died. Hundreds of runners collapsed or vomited and 184 went to hospitals.

Last year, there were no major incidents, although the conditions were far from ideal. Temperatures went from 65 at the start to the high 70s while the elite runners were still on the course, before reaching 84 in late morning. Seventy-six runners had to go to hospitals.

The heat havoc came after a scary scene unfolded at the end of the 2006 race, when champion Robert Cheruiyot of Kenya slipped and banged his head as he crossed the finish line.

There were no obvious mishaps this time, Wanjiru’s waving near the finish notwithstanding. It was another big win and another big day for a runner who was raised by a single mother who farmed for a living, and was discovered by a Japanese writer scouting Kenyans seven years ago.

He moved to Japan at age 15 to study and train, setting a course that has led to him becoming one of the top marathon runners, one who’s eyeing the world record. Pacing himself would be a good idea.

“He can do very good things at the marathon but he should learn,” Goumri said. “It’s a new experience for them, the marathon. You should have two, three years (running) marathons. Then, you can do the world record.”

On the women’s side, it was an emotional day for Mikitenko.

The two-time London Marathon champion pulled out of the world championship in Germany in August after her father died. With her mother celebrating a birthday Sunday, she turned in a solid performance that came up just short of Shobukhova.

So did Kastor, who is trying to re-establish herself at 36 and set a course toward the 2012 London Olympics — something she might not be doing had things gone better in Beijing.

“I feel really good about where I am right now,” said Kastor, the bronze medalist at the 2004 Athens Games. “My day fell a little short, but I’m still pretty ecstatic by how my body has held up and how strong I’ve gotten over the past few months.”

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2009/10/11/sports/s125351D87.DTL

Posted in Kenya: Sports | Tagged: , , | Comments Off

Fresh probe into Julie Ward death

Posted by Administrator on October 12, 2009

Julie Ward: An unlawful killing verdict was passed in 2004 at an inquest

Julie Ward: An unlawful killing verdict was passed in 2004 at an inquest

British police have been advising Kenyan officers on a new inquiry into the murder of photographer Julie Ward in September 1988.

 

Scotland Yard said three detectives visited the country in July following the discovery of DNA evidence.

The burned remains of Ms Ward, 28, from near Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, were found in the Masai Mara game reserve.

The Met Police said its officers had briefed their Kenyan counterparts on “investigative opportunities”.

It is understood officers hope mouth swabs can be taken from a number of suspects to compare to DNA evidence taken from the scene.

Inquest verdict

The Kenyan authorities initially claimed Miss Ward had been eaten by wild animals but her hotelier father John funded an investigation and a court then ruled she was murdered.

Three park rangers were later accused of involvement in the case but acquitted at two separate trials.

It has delivered a DNA profile and a very strong one too
John Ward

An unlawful killing verdict was recorded at a 2004 inquest in Ipswich.

Mr Ward has continued to lobby Kenyan justice officials to reopen the case.

In a statement, Scotland Yard said: “In April 2008 authority was granted via the Foreign & Commonwealth Office for the Met investigation team to travel to Kenya to progress enquiries.

“Since then further lines of enquiry have been progressed in the UK in preparation for the visit…

“The MPS are continuing to liaise with the Kenyan police.”

It said Assistant Commissioner John Yates and other two officers visited Kenya at the end of July.

Mr Yates, now head of counter-terrorism at the Met, took on responsibility for case while head of its Specialist Crime Directorate.

Mr Ward said the evidence that provided a DNA profile prompted Scotland Yard to take a “renewed interest” in the case.

He told BBC Radio Suffolk: “When it first came into our possession it would not yield a DNA profile. But as DNA has got more and more sensitive over the years, now it has delivered a DNA profile and a very strong one too.”

He added there were also other lines of inquiry being pursued including a suggestion that undiscovered remains of his daughter could be found buried at another location.

Story from BBC NEWS:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/uk_news/8302212.stm

Posted in Kenya | Tagged: , , | Comments Off

Easy Money Fuels Rise in Kidnappings in Kenya

Posted by Administrator on October 12, 2009

BY Jeffrey Gettleman

NAIROBI, Kenya — Little Emmanuel Aguer was one of the most recent victims.

A month ago, he was snatched on the way to his grandmother’s house. Four days later, after his middle-class family received calls asking for $70 or else — calls the family was not sure were even genuine — his uncle found his corpse stuffed in a sugar sack. His head had been bludgeoned and his eyes were gouged out.

Emmanuel was 6 years old.

“These people knew what they were doing,” said his uncle, Mariak Aguek. “What they did was so traumatizing, I can’t even express it.”

Nairobi, Kenya’s capital, is a teeming city of have-nots and have-lots, so notorious for violent crime that it is often called “Nai-robbery.” But there is a new problem, or at least one that is causing new fear — kidnapping, and several recent attacks have been on children and Western women.

Parents in the packed, iron-shanty slums that ring downtown Nairobi like a collar of rust are now walking hand in hand with their children, even short distances. In the frangipani-scented enclaves where the diplomats live, security is being stepped up at schools and e-mail kidnapping alerts are spreading faster than a computer virus.

More than 100 Nairobi residents have been abducted for ransom this year, security consultants say, a huge increase over years past. Big chunks of money are changing hands. And as the security experts say, the minute you start paying ransom, kidnapping goes from a crime to a business. Just ask those in Mexico City, in Baghdad or in Bogotá, Colombia.

Blindfolds, safe houses, military-grade assault rifles and complex, well-practiced maneuvers with cars to block in unsuspecting prey — they are all part of Kenya’s emerging kidnapping industry.

The kidnappings are highly organized and often ruthless. One Belgian woman who was recently held for more than a week was stripped naked, according to security consultants who worked on her case. A second foreigner, a German woman, was seized in a subsequent attack and then locked in a closet with the Belgian woman in the same squalid house, indicating that a criminal gang may now have its sights on Western women.

In July, two smartly dressed young men walked into the workshop of an Indian trader in Nairobi and asked him to give them an estimate for a new well. When the trader went out to the site, he was jumped by a gang of six, bundled into a car and cruelly beaten with hammers and belts until his family cobbled together $3,000 for his release.

“It was a set-up,” the trader said. “They must have been monitoring me for some time.”

Many people here are beginning to wonder if the Kenyan thugs may have been inspired by their Somali brethren next door, who have made millions snatching foreigners on land and sea.

“Their appetite is growing,” said Charles Owino, a Kenyan police spokesman. “And if we don’t manage it, it can grow to be big.”

Kenyan security companies see the spike in kidnappings as proof that their other security measures may be working — possibly too well. Yesterday’s big fear in Nairobi was an armed home invasion, in which rough men with machetes and guns would scale the walls of a house in the wee hours of the night, burst in and terrorize the family in a quest for jewelry and electronics.

Executives for KK Security, a private security force that protects 4,000 homes in Nairobi, said they used to respond to a home invasion every week. Now, it is more like a couple of times a year.

But as it gets harder to break into homes because of all the security devices people deploy these days (like silent alarm systems and electrified fences) and with the Kenyan police force more mobile (because companies like KK are now driving them around), criminals are looking to the streets, where people have less control over their environment.

“It’s shifting from brutal crime to smart crime,” said Patrick Grant, a KK executive.

And kidnapping, he says, “is easy money.”

Who’s safe? Just about no one. Nairobi seems to be in the swell of another crime wave and though the police say they are cracking down (which often means simply shooting suspects on sight), a general feeling of foreboding seems to be spreading. In May, gun-toting robbers hijacked a bus along Kenya’s busiest road, the Nairobi-Mombasa highway, robbing all the passengers and raping the women.

In June, a Kenyan member of Parliament was carjacked and kidnapped, and when he finally got home, he heard a strange thumping noise in the trunk — it was the desperate sounds of another man who had been kidnapped and locked in there.

In July, carjackers robbed and kidnapped a senior police commander. An assistant minister was also terrorized in his own home by an armed gang. But he got little sympathy, at least online.

“A thugs who robs a minister, president or an incompetent m.p. is the ROBINHOOD of today and what a good job,” read a recent post on a Kenyan blog. “If the government cannot afford security, sometimes nature has its own way of dealing with it.”

Even the prime minister’s private office was recently looted.

“I don’t know if it’s the global recession or what,” said the wife of one Western diplomat, who preferred to remain anonymous. “But there’s been a lot of crime lately and everybody’s talking about it in the diplomatic circles.”

The German woman kidnapped in September described three days of terror. Her abductors threatened to rape her, slice her into pieces and kidnap her child. They knocked her in the head with a pistol butt and then incongruously offered her marijuana.

“You’re thinking they will never let you go,” said the woman, whose family handed over an undisclosed ransom for her release. “Time just doesn’t pass.”

But it is not just the haves who are getting hit. Take Emmanuel’s family. They have enough money for a stereo and a refrigerator and cold sodas for the occasional guest. But they are hardly rich. They are refugees from southern Sudan who have been through hell and back — civil war, squalid camps, persecution, even fears of being enslaved. Now they have to worry about their children getting chopped up when they step outside to take a stroll past the dirt soccer fields or corrugated iron gates of their middle-class neighborhood.

“My son was really intelligent, he was really honest, when I sent him to the store to fetch something, he always came back with the right change,” said Emmanuel’s father, Ater Aguek. “Sometimes, I still have dreams I’m playing with him.”

source: NEW YORK TIMES

Posted in Kenya | Tagged: , , | Comments Off

Kenyan police arrest American heading for Somalia

Posted by Administrator on October 12, 2009

* Man was trying to enter area controlled by insurgents

* Arrested U.S. national told police he is a Muslim

NAIROBI, Oct 12 (Reuters) – An American man has been arrested in northern Kenya while trying to enter an area of Somalia controlled by Islamist insurgents, police and residents said on Monday.

Lawless Somalia is viewed by the international community as a breeding ground for al Qaeda-linked groups which have been carrying out an insurgency against the U.N.-backed administration of President Sheikh Shariff Ahmed.

A witness told Reuters that the man was arrested on Sunday by police manning the immigration office at the border town of Liboi in Kenya’s North Eastern province. He was on his way to Qoqani in southern Somalia without any security escort.

“We have arrested the suspect at the border town,” said one police officer, who did not want to be named. “The suspect is being transported to the provincial police headquarters for questioning.”

Police thought the man’s willingness to enter the conflict-torn nation where foreigners are routinely kidnapped for huge ransoms was puzzling, the witness added. The area he wanted to go to is controlled by the al Shabaab rebel group which the United States says is al Qaeda’s proxy in Somalia.

The U.S. national had said he was a Muslim and denied any connection to Islamic radicals who make up the bulk of the insurgency in Somalia, said the witness.

Western nations are increasingly concerned about the radicalisation of Somali youth living within their countries. Some have returned to Somalia to boost the insurgents’ ranks. (Reporting by Humphrey Malalo and Sahra Abdi; Editing by David Stamp)

Source: REUTERS

Posted in Kenya | Tagged: , , | Comments Off

Kenya cracks down on illegal guns

Posted by Administrator on October 12, 2009

Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki has told security forces to crack down on illicit firearms as part of a national disarmament exercise.

Mr Kibaki said those in illegal possession of firearms had to surrender them or face prosecution.

He said laws would be tightened to tackle the problem.

Last week, a BBC investigation revealed that some Kenyans were buying guns in case of violence at the next elections due in 2012.

Some 1,300 people were killed following claims of electoral fraud in the 2007 elections.

President Kibaki did not refer to that report.

He said that illegal firearms had been used in armed robberies and car-jackings across the country and posed a major challenge to security.

Speaking at a national thanksgiving service in Nairobi on Sunday, Mr Kibaki said lawmakers would tackle the problem.

“To strengthen the legal framework and help mopping up illicit arms, parliament will be asked to amend [the] Firearms Act with a view to providing for stiffer penalties for those found in possession of firearms illegally,” he said.

The government was committed to addressing security concerns and ready to undertake meaningful reforms to respond to new types of crime such as terrorism, fraud and human trafficking, he added.

“Training in these areas is already ongoing and will be sustained to enable us to respond effectively to all security challenges,” he said.

Kenya shares long borders with war-torn Somalia and Sudan, where guns are easily available.

Story from BBC NEWS:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/africa/8303130.stm

Posted in Kenya | Comments Off

 
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 153 other followers