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Archive for October 28th, 2009

“Baba alinifanya tabia mbaya”:Slum where incest pervades

Posted by Administrator on October 28, 2009

The young boy contorts his face as his guardian lifts and places him on a plastic seat. He grimaces again as she tries to help him sit comfortably.

Little John plays with his fingers while mumbling to himself. He wanders into a world of his own, unaware of the worry written all over his guardian’s face.

“I have been asked to return to Nairobi Women’s Hospital for more tests,” says Wangechi, John’s guardian. “The doctor’s report indicates that the boy was sodomised,” she adds.

Living in the expansive Korogocho slums, Nairobi, four-year-old John adds to the growing number of many children in the area who are becoming victims of sexual assault.

However, unlike in many cases where strangers violate children, the perpetrators are people they know and trust.

“Baba alinifanya tabia mbaya. Kila siku alikuwa akiniumiza. Bado nasikia uchungu. (My father sodomised me. He would defile me every day. I am still in pain),” says John.

According to Wangechi, a social worker, neighbours rescued John from his father about a month ago. Every evening, they would hear him crying but they thought his father was disciplining him.

However, a curious neighbour enquired from John only to learn he was being violated. They took him to a clinic in Kariobangi and later to Nairobi Women’s Hospital where doctors diagnosed he was infected with HIV.

With the help of the local provincial administration, neighbours arrested John’s father and took him to Kariobangi Police Post. John now lives with a Good Samaritan. The police are still pursuing the case.

Evil Friends

In the same village, 46-year-old Karen sadly narrates how she learnt the plight of her granddaughter, Jane. She had gone to visit her son when her daughter-in-law told her that Jane had problems controlling her bowels.

She advised the parents to take her to hospital but they were reluctant saying she would heal.

However, when Karen examined Jane, she discovered that the child had been violated. The three-year-old Jane says: “Baba Susan aliniwekea dudu hapa chini nikasikia uchungu,” (Susan’s father defiled me. It was very painful).”

The child recalls that she had strolled into Baba Susan’s house while playing only for him to defile her.

Baba Susan is a neighbour and a family friend. “I could not believe it when the child informed me that the man had abused her,” her grandmother says. “I told her parents but they were hesitant to confront the man,” Karen adds.

Ironically, Karen learned that Jane’s parents were negotiating a settlement with their daughter’s tormentor. It is then that she sought police intervention.

Doctor’s report from Nairobi Women’s Hospital confirms that Jane was sexually assaulted though her case was presented very late. She was treated for a bacterial infection.

For Jane, however, her short life has been turbulent. Karen says that this is the third time her grandchild is being defiled.

Culprits Married

“That neighbour defiled her the first time but her parents did not take any action since he occasionally helps them. The second time, she was wandering in the slums when street boys defiled her,” she sadly recalls.

A few shanties from where Wangechi lives, tears flow from Monica’s eyes as she narrates about her daughter’s fate.

Twelve-year-old Margaret had gone to pick her younger sister at her grandparent’s house when the grandfather defiled her.

“That night, grandmother asked me to lock the dog’s kennel but while I was doing it, grandfather blocked my mouth and shoved me into an adjacent room. He defiled me,” says Margaret.

Thereafter he gave her Sh50 and told her never to reveal it to anyone. The next day, the man fled when he realised Monica had reported the incident to the police.

To date, he has not been arrested. Monica believes that he is hiding at his rural home in Nyeri. “Grandmother knows where he lives but she has declined to inform us,” she says.

Mr Meshack Orondo, a volunteer children’s officer in the slum says cases of incest and rape are rife.

“Most of the affected children are between ages two and 14. I get about four cases in a fortnight. Unfortunately, victims report late, sometimes after a week or two,” he says.

Sadly, in all the instances, Orondo notes that the perpetrators are married people or adults who also have children. “I am yet to receive a case in which a young person is accused of rape,” says Orondo. He attributes the rise of incest cases to the composition of families. “Most of them are extended families in very tiny rooms thus chances of children being violated by relatives is very high,” he notes.

Regrettably, family members conspire to cover-up. “Some destroy evidence fearing that the incident would bring shame to the family,” says Orondo.

He cites the case of Margaret where the grandmother has concealed her husband’s whereabouts to protect him.

Mrs Rebecca Balongo, Korogocho’s Chief concurs with Orondo.

Fuelling Crime

“Most of the reports I receive involve children between ages three and eight,” she says. “Majority come late but we try our best to take them to hospital and apprehend the culprits.”

Balongo cites poverty and parental negligence as the reasons behind the increase in rape.

“Some parents are careless. They leave children unattended the whole day exposing them to evil people,” she says.

Others choose to settle the cases at home. “The rate of dependency in the slum is very high that families solve some of the cases among themselves. They believe the court process is lengthy and expensive. This fuels crime since the perpetrators target other children.”

Kasarani OCPD, Mr Joseph Wambua says cases of incest and rape targeting children in the slum may be on the rise but majority of victims do not report to police.

“Those who report do it when they have erased the evidence,” he says. “It is hard to fight the crime when families conspire to conceal it because of shame,” he adds.

Wambua says Margaret’s case has not reached his office but he promises to pursue it to ensure she gets justice.

NB: Names have been changed to protect the identity of victims.

Source: East African Standard

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African Children’s Choir to perform in Manchester Sunday

Posted by Administrator on October 28, 2009

The African Children Choir

The African Children’s Choir, which raises funds for vulnerable youth in some of Africa’s most troubled regions, will perform in concert at 4 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 1, at the First Congregational Church, 508 Union St., Manchester. The international touring group, which formed in 1984, “shows the world that its members, like the millions of abandoned and traumatized children in Africa, have beauty, dignity and unlimited potential,” show organizers said.

Funds garnered through the choir’s performances support the ongoing care and education of the young singers as well as thousands of other children. To date the work of the choir has extended from its beginnings in Uganda to Rwanda, Kenya, Nigeria, Ghana, Southern Sudan and, most recently, Nkomazi, in the northern border region of South Africa.

“It targets children whose lives can be changed by the chance to receive the care and quality education that brings freedom from poverty and hopelessness,” show officials said.

In addition to Sunday’s concert, the choir will perform in a 20-minute segment during the 10 a.m. worship service at the church. Both appearances are offered free of charge, however donations will be accepted. The African Children’s Choir includes 23 children principally from Uganda and Kenya. Many of the children have been orphaned due to strife in those war-torn countries.

“The choir tours throughout the world to raise funds for their schooling with the hopes that the children will continue their education and then return to their countries to help rebuild,” show officials said.

“The motto of the parent organization, ‘Music for Life’, says it quite clearly: ‘Helping Africa’s most vulnerable children today, so they can help Africa tomorrow’.”

An individual chorister tours for only one year. The groups are accompanied on their tour bus by chaperones, a tour leader and a driver.

First Congregational Church first presented the choir to the greater Manchester area in the spring of 2007. The concert features African dancing, singing and costumes and includes a short video about the life-changing work done by “Music for Life.”

Among the international group’s high-profile performances in recent years was a collaboration with Josh Groban on the “American Idol: Idol Gives Back” television special in 2007.

For more information, log onto www.fccmanchesternh.org or call 625-5093.

www.newhampshire.com

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Tiger who? Kenyan golfer walks his own path

Posted by Administrator on October 28, 2009

Wednesday 28 October 2009
Simon Mburu, the Kenyan who will tee off in the 2009 Laurance Scrap Metal WA PGA Championship at Bunbury Golf Club
Incomprehensible as it may seem, but not every professional golfer in the world has heard of Tiger Woods.

Simon Mburu may be able to hit the ball 300m with his driver but still lives in a mud hut with his family in Njoro, a village 170km from Nairobi.

Until a chance encounter with NSW professional Michael Etherington, he had never heard of the American superstar.

Mburu was doing what he was best at – playing golf around the nine-hole course where his father works – when he was spotted by the Australian who was visiting Africa for a family reunion.

Etherington and Mburu, 24, are in the field for the Laurance Scrap Metals WA PGA Championship at Bunbury Golf Club this week.

Etherington said the Kenyan looked like one of the young caddies trying to earn a living carrying bags until he saw him strike the ball.

“He was longer off the tee than many professionals and was Kenya’s leading amateur at the time, playing off a handicap of plus two,” he said.

“He had a set of clubs which were 45 years old. I’d never seen anyone play with clubs that old. He was completely self-taught.”

Mburu had only one ball so if he lost it in a hazard, he had to look for it until he found it.

Just about every piece of golf equipment Mburu now owns was given to him by Etherington. Life has not been easy for Mburu who has been caught up in tribal conflicts. He will also travel to Melbourne for qualifying for next month’s Australian Masters where Woods is the big drawcard.

Source: WWW.PGA.ORG

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Kenyans told to accept gay reality

Posted by Administrator on October 28, 2009

NAIROBI, Kenya, Oct 28 – A Non-Governmental Organisation working with groups that are at higher risk of contracting HIV/AIDS has said Kenyans should accept the reality that same sex relationships are rampant in the country.

Public Health Innovations Executive Director Nguru Kiragu told Capital News on Wednesday that his organisation had interacted widely with many homosexual couples, and cautioned Kenyans to confront the truth instead of sweeping it under the carpet.

“There is evidence that same sex relationships are present. It affects the society because some of them are in relationships and are at risk of HIV or spreading it,” said Mr Kiragu whose NGO works with male and female commercial sex workers, gays and lesbians.

He said the majority of such people had heterosexual partners which further increased the risk of the spread of HIV and Sexually Transmitted Diseases.

The social worker further said it was important for same sex partners to be provided with information on safe sex, HIV/AIDs management.

He stressed that ignoring any percentage of a population was a major setback to any health achievements made.

Mr Kiragu said that due to stigmatisation in Kenya, t was difficult to know the number of bisexuals and homosexuals in the country as most of them were unwilling to reveal their status.

Tied to the culture of tradition and religious beliefs in Kenya, gay partners have never been accepted in the society and as a result most of them have continued to thrive in secrecy and even gone to the extent of staying in marriages for the sake of satisfying societal requirements.

But those who have joined associations and groups somehow can access medical care through different organisations.

One group, the Gay and Lesbian Coalition of Kenya has effortlessly been trying to find its footing in the society, a move that has spurred a lot of criticism.

Other organisations include those aimed at responding to HIV/AIDs.

Working examples are three groups consisting of male sex workers in Mombasa who through the International Centre for Reproductive Health-Kenya (ICRH) came together to fight HIV/AIDs.

One of the male sex workers told Capital News: “Most of us thought we could not get or transmit HIV because women were not involved, but after this project I know I am also at risk and I am always careful, together with my fellow peer educators we talk to our partners urging them to use condoms,” he said.

“We can now also access medical care unlike before where we were afraid of saying we had infections in such places (anus).  Doctors used to wonder how we got those infections, and due to discrimination in this country men who have sex with other men could not go to hospital.”

ICRHI revealed that it had recorded 737 male commercial sex workers.

“We are intending to have proper statistics since homosexuality is not just a problem here.  It is widespread because most of those we spoke to have networks as far as to North Eastern, and everywhere else in the country, but the idea is to sensitise them on HIV/AIDS,”  said an official from ICRH.

Due to the controversial nature of homosexuality and lesbianism, very few health experts dealing with same sex partners want to be quoted.

CAPITAL FM

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The African Brain Drain

Posted by Administrator on October 28, 2009

Africans living in the United States are twice as likely to graduate from college as the average American.

These African students often come from families who value education as a way to get on in life and place a high value on working and studying hard.

Sara Tsegaye, a straight-A student at UCLA, is one example of that success. Her parents fled Ethiopia in the late 1980s, first to Sudan and then, when Sara was one year old, they moved to San Jose, California.

Sara’s father works on a mobile ice cream truck in San Jose and her mother used to be a factory worker before she got laid off.

“We manage to pay for school because I’ve been working since I was 11,” Sara told Reuters Africa Journal. “I’ve been working with my dad on his ice cream truck, he’s been paying me and I’ve been saving the money. Also I had two jobs in high school and I saved up a lot of money. I understand the value of money.”

Sara wants to work with an NGO or a non-profit organisation after she graduates. She wants to travel and she wants to make a difference in the world. Other African students say they want to go home once they get a bit of experience in their careers.

But Africa is suffering from a massive brain drain just now and it’s questionable whether enough of those highly motivated students from America will return home in large enough numbers to really make a difference.

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Kenya criticises US travel ban on officials

Posted by Administrator on October 28, 2009

By Wangui Kanina

NAIROBI (Reuters) – Kenya’s foreign minister criticised the United States on Wednesday after it revoked the visa of a senior government official who Washington says is standing in the way of reforms.

The senior government official was not named, but U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Johnnie Carson said on Monday during a visit to Kenya that the U.S. government planned to impose similar bans on three more individuals.

The move brought a stern response from Kenyan officials.

“It is with regret that an assistant minister of a friendly country walks into our country uninvited, makes fairly unacceptable and reckless statements and then leaves,” Foreign Minister Moses Wetangula told reporters. “It is not right.”

Wetangula said Nairobi respected Washington’s right to decide which Kenyans received U.S. visas, but he said Kenyan officials needed access to the United Nations in New York.

“When we want to go to the U.N., we shall go to transact international business,” he said. “That is an obligation and a … right that nobody can take away under international law.”

Carson sent warning letters to 15 prominent Kenyans in September whom Washington accuses of blocking reforms that are desperately needed after post-election violence killed at least 1,300 people last year in east Africa’s biggest economy.

The letters said the future of their relations with the United States would depend on their support for wide-ranging reforms, as well as their rejection of violence.

That move also triggered a diplomatic row, with President Mwai Kibaki protesting to his U.S. counterpart, Barack Obama. The spat also weighed on the Kenyan shilling due to fears it would hit the monetary support the country gets from donors.

Wetangula said Kenya’s leadership recognised the need to complete reforms before the next presidential election in 2012.

Local media have speculated that the senior official banned by the United States is Attorney General Amos Wako, who has been criticised for failing to prosecute top corruption suspects.

Watchdog Transparency International ranks Kenya as the most corrupt nation in east Africa.

Source: Reuters

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CAPITAL FM BLOG:My sexual orientation is none of your business

Posted by Administrator on October 28, 2009

This is one of those blogs that I know will provoke derision but I will throw prudence out of the window and write it nonetheless.

I’ve quietly been following debate on the gay partnership between two consenting Kenyan adults in the UK over the past few days and feel compelled to say the following;

The Kenyan media has unfairly demonised occupants of a homestead in Murang’a over the sexual orientation of one of their own who has chosen a particular (or is it odd?) lifestyle.

What moral authority does the media hold to dictate what is correct or incorrect in society?  Haven’t they told us that one man’s meat may be another man’s poison?

For a start, the civil union was conducted in the UK where the act is legal.As such, the couple has not committed any crime.  They did not cement the union here in Kenya where such an act is still unlawful.

Let me pose this… If you were to count the number of thieves sitting in the so-called Grand Coalition government you’d fall asleep before you’re done.Why haven’t we made it a big deal as we have this particular gay saga?

Why haven’t I seen the media troop to the homes of those politicians to demand to know from their mothers if they know their sons and daughters are crooks? I think I have the answer…  It’s because it is not the business of my folks to determine what I decide to do once I turn 18.It is also none of your business! 

If our TV crews expended so much energy on the moral high ground as we did on this story, then we would have changed Kenya for the better decades ago.

We should leave Charles Ngengi and his ‘bride’ Daniel Chege Gichia to enjoy their honeymoon on the sunny beaches of Brighton in the south of the UK. They are roughly 7,000 kilometers away from us and their partnership is unlikely to influence our way of life.

For what it’s worth, theirs would have been a quiet union had it not been for the prying media who intruded our quiet ‘moral’ lifestyles, which they have now ‘polluted’ with ‘normal’ goings on in a part of North London.

We should accept divergent orientations and views, especially if they do not affect you and pose no risk. This world is not about what you imagine to be right or wrong – right according to whom?  What you imagine is right may be wrong according to someone in Islington – or Kawangware for that matter.

There! I’ve said it.  Bring on the affection or hate.

For the record; I’m not anywhere near gay.

By Michael Mumo-Capital FM

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The body organ thieves: Frightening new dimension in wave of kidnappings

Posted by Administrator on October 28, 2009

Police have stepped up the war on kidnappers and recently killed eight suspects.

The killings, by Flying Squad and Special Crime Prevention Unit detectives, come amid reports of kidnappers who may be seizing people to harvest body organs.

According to a victim who reported his ordeal at Kasarani Police Station on September 24, he was held for four days before being released by his abductors after his organs were found to be “useless”.

The case is recorded at the police station as OB 10/24/9/2009 and is being investigated by the Criminal Investigation Department. Confessions by victims indicate that three gangsters, one of them a woman, have been prowling the city, abducting people who are then drugged before being driven to undisclosed locations, where they are subjected to medical examination with the aim of removing body organs.

Three people have so far confessed that they were kidnapped by the gang on Moi and Kenyatta avenues.

After some tests, the victims are either held further or bundled into a vehicle and driven to isolated locations, where they are dumped. The victims say nothing is taken from them.

However, police spokesman Eric Kiraithe has said no cases of kidnapping for harvesting of organs had been established.

“We have had cases of bizarre murders or people being shot by criminals who attempt to kidnap them but we have not been able to investigate cases of harvesting of organs,” Mr Kiraithe said.

Some diplomatic missions and multinational corporations have issued alerts to their nationals and staff to be cautious of kidnappers.

Detectives investigating the kidnappings have established that most victims are being held in dens on Thika Road or Dandora.

Security consultants working for the foreign missions and multinationals have issued a list of precautions to foreigners which include not driving alone at night and avoiding deserted areas.

Detectives who have begun hunting a gang behind the abductions for ransom on Monday night shot dead three suspects and recovered an AK-47 rifle loaded with five bullets in Dandora Estate.

Two weeks ago, police in Lang’ata shot dead four people suspected to be kidnappers in Otiende Estate and recovered an AK-47 rifle, two pistols and a piece of cloth doused in a sleep inducing chemical as they lay in wait for a victim. Another suspect escaped in a get-away car.

All the suspects, including an ex-convict recently released from prison, were from Ngecha in Kiambu. They are believed to have been involved in the latest kidnapping of a city-based part-time university lecturer identified as Paul Kariuki, two foreigners and a Sudan-based United Nations agency employee.

Mr Kariuki was reportedly held at an unknown location by gangsters who kidnapped him as he drove to his Ngong home on Saturday evening in the company of a friend.

Flying Squad boss Julius Sunkuli last week said they were tracking down the kidnappers, who have demanded Sh5 million ransom for his release.

The victim’s car was intercepted by armed men on Ngong Road and he was forced into another vehicle. He was later freed after his family paid ransom.

The kidnappers hurriedly abandoned the son of a prominent businessman and owner of a bank on Monday after realising that police were pursuing them. The gang had abducted the young man in Westlands and were driving him to their Dandora den when police were alerted.

Paid ransom

Another family recently paid Sh1.5 million ransom to kidnappers. The victim was found tied in a garbage collection area after the money was paid.

A Thika-based businessman was recently abducted near his business premises. He was freed after the family paid the ransom.

A foreigner and his son who had been abducted by kidnappers were recently rescued by police in Kiambu during a car chase. The vehicle in which they were being ferried was involved in an accident in which two of the kidnappers died. The other two were shot dead by police as they tried to escape.

Police spokesman Kiraithe said: “Kidnapping has become the latest crime that we must deal with urgently. We are concerned about the kidnappings and will do everything in our power to ensure the crime is stopped.”

DAILY NATION

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State to spend Sh40 m to count gay Kenyans

Posted by Administrator on October 28, 2009

The Government will spend Sh40 million on a research to establish the number of gay Kenyans.

The survey, set to begin in December till June next year, is the first of its kind.

On Tuesday, National Aids and STD Control Programme (Nascop) director Nicholas Muraguri said the survey would be done in conjunction with the National Population Council.

“We cannot continue excluding this group identified as a key driver to new HIV/Aids infections,” said Dr Muraguri.

In an interview with The Standard, Muraguri said establishing the population of men who have sex with men would facilitate development of interventions.

Apart from knowing their population, Muraguri said the study was aimed at understanding their behavioural practices, condom use and risk factors.

Murgauri said it is believed majority is married for purposes of trying to hide their preferences.

“We want to know how many partners do they usually have, are they married, do they use drugs and what’s their care seeking behaviour,” said Muraguri.

Hot spot

Currently, the gay hotspot is believed to be Coast Province, Nairobi and tourist sites, including game reserves.

Muraguri said gay men had been known to have an almost five times higher the national HIV prevalence than the normal average

He said social exclusion has globally been identified as a major contributor to ill health among gays.

He said the Government finds it challenging to tackle the spread of new infections estimated at 100,000 cases annually because of ignoring key drivers to the scourge.

Studies have shown 15 per cent of the new HIV infections are attributed to gays.

According to the Mode of Transmission Study conducted at Coast Province in 2007 and results released last year, they were responsible for up to 20 per cent of the new HIV infections in the region.

The most at risk have been identified to be commercial sex workers, truckers, injecting drug users and gays.

Muraguri said the Ethical Review Board would appraise tools for the study.

He said most programmes on gays were mostly driven by NGOs, a situation the Government ought to take charge off.

He said by gathering such information, they would reach out to the group in the fight against spread of HIV and Aids.

SOURCE: East African Standard

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Kenyan woman creates art to fight HIV

Posted by Administrator on October 28, 2009

The sun rises above a land rich in beauty where flamingos flock along the water; the thorns of the acacia trees softly nestle along the mountainside; and the buffalo roam, quietly calling out the peaceful sounds of Africa that are found in a Kenyan workshop called Imani!

That’s where they sing songs of praises for positively living with HIV/AIDS. It’s the attitude of peace that gives them the will to change their lives through art.

We first met Evelyn Njoki last year in Eldoret, Kenya. She gave us a tour of Imani as we watched employees make some of the most beautiful pieces of jewelry. Everything is handmade with care and with courage, all thanks to the Indiana University Ampath program. It provides them with clinical care to treat HIV/AIDS.

It gives them Imani, where they not only make art but sale it to achieve self-sufficiency. Njoki is one of Imani’s founders. She traveled 8,000 miles to Indianapolis to share her story and her passion with students at IU’s Herron School of Art.

“I was pregnant and I did not know that I was HIV positive. I started making necklaces. I don’t know where the designs came from. I could go with my baby, knocking at people’s offices and asking them, ‘Can you buy this, can you buy this, can you buy this?’,” Njoki shared.

She asked and they bought enough for Njoki to employ and train others in the art of making jewelry. Now, IU students can learn her trade secrets.

“Oprah Magazine is our material. This is the product we finally make out of the magazine,” she said.

There are many products, but the one called the Imani necklace, which means peace, is also a top seller.

“We are peaceful by getting medication and everything at Ampath,” Njoki says.

It’s a lesson of life beyond the skill.

“In life you cannot just give up because you have something wrong or something wrong going on in your life. You can always keep trying. It doesn’t matter what happens. You can always find hope,” said IU student Fatoumata Bah.

And the students are learning the Kenyan way about how to turn used into new.

“We have to think ahead about how it’s going to eventually turn out. I learned to think about the different color schemes you want to use and just the artistry that goes into it,” said Herron School of Art student Emma Fisher.

Another student Courtney Ware said, “It’s really beautiful. It’s like better than anything we could’ve ever done.”

And Njoki continues to outdo herself.

“This one is called ‘Njoki Funky Meats’ and, like, now it’s the top-selling product, selling like hotcakes,” she said.

Njoki, Imani, and IU create a partnership where ideas are shared.

“I had the chance of seeing different countries’ products in gift shops. And that’s how we can develop our products,” said Njoki.

The universal fair trade system sustains a world and saves lives across the continents with peace, all thanks to Imani.
 
“People buy our products, it creates jobs for us and it can change many people’s lives,” Njoki said.

video: http://www.wthr.com/global/video/=Women You Should Know: Evelyn Njoki&flvUri=&thirdpartymrssurl=

Source: http://www.wthr.com

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