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Archive for November 11th, 2009

Kenya police warn Muite over Mungiki remarks

Posted by Administrator on November 11, 2009

NAIROBI, Kenya, Nov 11 – Police Commissioner Mathew Iteere on Wednesday warned former Kabete MP Paul Muite against making “reckless” statements over the murder of Mungiki Spokesman Njuguna Gitau.

He told a news conference that Mr Muite will have to explain the information he has over the murder of Mr Gitau after the former legislator said the police were behind the killing.

“Mr Muite has gotten into the habit of making weird allegations against the police and other citizens none of which he has ever cared to substantiate, his allegation he had foreknowledge of Njuguna’s murder and did nothing about it is unfortunate,” he said.

He accused the MP of making alarming allegations and said he will be required to explain what he knows about the killing.

However he was unclear if the police will ask him to record a statement saying: “Mr Muite has been making numerous allegations about police and other citizens and he never gives any evidence, we will not consider any statements from him since recording one will not change anything.”

Mr Iteere took the opportunity to appeal to the members of public to stop making allegations likely to interfere with an investigation into Mr Gitau’s murder.

He said good progress had been made to unravel the murder case with many people recording statements.

“”We are making progress but of greater concern are the utterances attributed to some person on this incidence, we would like to caution those involved in this irresponsible behavior because its effect is to cover up the crime. Presently some members of public who came out freely to give evidence have started shying away following these weird speculations,” he said.

Mr Iteere also pledged the commitment by police to fight criminal gangs in the country.

He said some people were threatening the police with prosecution by the International Criminal Court for imaginary extra judicial executions.

In its efforts to clear illegal gangs especially in Nairobi and its outskirts, he announced that police had accosted a gang in Dandora on Wednesday leaving five members dead but managed to recover two pistols and a sub machinegun.

He said following the shoot out, one police officer was hospitalised after he was seriously injured.

Mr Iteere said: “The police will leave no stone unturned until all the criminal syndicates are done away with.”

Source: Capital FM

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Broke KPCU shuts down

Posted by Administrator on November 11, 2009

Kenya Planters’ Co-operative Union headquarters in Nairobi. Photo/FILE

Kenya Planters’ Co-operative Union headquarters in Nairobi. Photo/FILE

By WACHIRA KANG’ARUPosted Wednesday, November 11 2009 at 19:09

 

Troubled Kenya Planters’ Co-operative Union has halted operations after running out of funds to keep it on its feet.

 

The once giant miller, consequently, sent home all its staff and suspended selling of coffee at the Nairobi Coffee Exchange auction leaving millions of farmers uncertain of what will happen to their produce.

 

The union was last month placed under receivership by the KCB Group over a Sh644 million debt in a move that effectively cut management’s access to the bank accounts and by extension, an avenue to withdraw money for its operations.

 

Curtailed access

 

Deloitte Consulting Ltd was appointed receiver managers.

 

“This has curtailed our access to funds that would cater even for the most basic operational requirements for business continuity,” a statement sent to the press on Wednesday read.

 

KPCU human resource and administration manager James Munyi signed the release.

 

And in what could inflict more damage to KPCU survival, a rival union formed to take its place said it is gaining momentum.

 

Speaking to Daily Nation in Muranga, Mugama Farmers’ Co-operative Union deputy managing director Joseph Kariuki said he was optimistic that farmers would benefit from their new partnership with the newly created Kenya Coffee Co-operative Exporters Limited (KCCE).

 

“Before, there was no transparency in marketing; what made us contract KCCE is because we want transparency. We have seen our new partner can be trusted,” said Mr Kariuki.

 

However, speaking to the Daily Nation KPCU managing director Gerald Masila said the union and the government are finalising a rescue package.

 

“The details will be announced in the course of the week,” he said.

 

Vowed to fight

 

The union’s board of directors has, however, vowed to fight to rescue the union from the machinations of “those who have been heard to loudly boast and vow that KPCU must die.”

 

Workers are expected to return to work at the end of the month by which time the suspended board of directors hopes to have resolved its woes with bankers.

 

“The issues in dispute between us and the bank are not beyond resolution and as an organisation, we are pursuing all available options towards ensuring that the problem is fully and amicably addressed,” the statement further read.

 

One of the options that the board is pursuing is the hope that the government will move in to its rescue.

 

“We are working closely with KCB to ensure that the receivership does not take any adverse direction that could end up hurting farmers,” PS Ministry of Co-operative and Marketing Seno Nyakenyanya said in telephone interview.

 

Farmers have been invited for an extraordinary general meeting on November 26 where they are expected to pass “crucial resolutions that will set the platform for earnest reforms of the company.”

 

Meanwhile, the High Court on Wednesday heard that no meaningful talks have been made between troubled KPCU and Kenya Commercial Bank.

 

And because the parties were not likely to reach an agreement on the way forward, the union wants the court to temporarily stop the receiver managers from taking over the control of the miller.

 

Additional reporting by James Ngunjiri and Sam Kiplagat

 

 

Source: Daily Nation 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Kenyans fear warming is an apocalyptic sign

Posted by Administrator on November 11, 2009

Los Angeles Times photo

Worshippers at a shrine in Muranga pray facing Mount Kenya during a ceremony to ask for rain. They also sacrificed a goat. The 17,057-foot mountain has lost 92 percent of its glacier cover during the past 100 years.

MURANGA, Kenya — From a tree-shaded plateau facing Mount Kenya, the worshippers gaze anxiously at its melting icecap and wonder: Is God dead?

For 7 million Kenyans who rely on the runoff of Africa’s second-highest peak to survive, evaporating springs and dry riverbeds are making life harder. In the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, reduced melts have contributed to rolling blackouts when rivers fed by the mountain are unable to run hydroelectric plants.

But for those Kenyans who still practice tribal religions and revere Mount Kenya as the home of God, the environmental alterations mean more than a threat to their livelihood. For them, the melting ice and other changes on their mountain have triggered a crisis of faith.

“This is where our God lives, and it is being destroyed,” said Mwangi Njorge, 95, one of those mostly older Kenyans who continue to make sacrifices to the deity they believe resides on Mount Kenya. He worries that the disappearing ice is a sign of God’s fury. “God is very angry, and if things don’t change, I fear he might abandon us forever.”

The scientific community is divided over the causes of melting ice caps in Africa. But many experts believe the retreating snow on Mount Kenya is one of the continent’s clearest examples of climate change and global warming.

The 17,057-foot mountain, located along the equator, has lost 92 percent of its glacial cover over the past 100 years, and experts predict the ice will disappear by 2050. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change warned in a 2007 report that countries such as Kenya will bear a huge burden of the fallout from rising temperatures and specifically pointed to the vulnerability of mountain environments such as Mount Kenya’s.

The stories of Mount Kenya’s worshippers put a human face on a brewing standoff between developed countries, which are blamed for contributing to most of the world’s climate change through carbon emissions and other pollution, and developing regions, such as Africa, which is seeking $67 billion a year in compensation for the economic and social costs.

Worshippers of the Mount Kenya deity already have incorporated the melting ice into their oral traditions, said Jeffrey Fadiman, a California State University, San Jose, professor who spent months on the majestic landmark collecting the oral histories of local tribes.

“Elders see the glacier melting as a punishment for younger people abandoning and violating their traditions,” Fadiman said.

It’s no surprise that Kenya’s earliest settlers revered the mountain. Shrouded in mist and covered year-round with a blinding carpet of snow, Mount Kenya inspired awe and legend from every tribe that laid eyes on it. Locals called it Kirinyaga, or “mountain of brightness.”

Scholars date the oral traditions surrounding Mount Kenya back as far as 500 years, when tribes such as the Kikuyu and Meru arrived in the region. Life and worship centered on the mountain. They prayed facing Mount Kenya and oriented their homes toward the peak. Sacrificial animals were positioned to face the mountain before slaughter.

Over the years, the extinct volcano has remained at the center of the country’s history. Mau Mau rebels hid in its forests during the fight for independence from British colonialists. Jomo Kenyatta, Kenya’s first president, titled his autobiography “Facing Mt. Kenya.”

“It was so white, so beautiful, you could see it from everywhere,” Njorge said.

Global warming is widely believed to be contributing to Mount Kenya’s melting ice. But part of the mountain’s environmental transformation is brought on by local activities, experts say.

Lush green forests have been chopped down. Development — of marijuana farms, of pastures for cattle, and for tourism — has taken a toll.

Environmental activist Fredrick Njau said logging, paper production, charcoal-making and other commercial exploitation ran amok during the presidency of Daniel Arap Moi, when government leaders gave their friends and allies a free hand in profiting from Kenya’s forests.

“The government really shot itself in the foot,” said Njau, project coordinator for the Nairobi-based Green Belt Movement.

Although how much of Mount Kenya’s forest cover was lost is unclear, a 1999 Kenya Wildlife Service survey observed nearly 20,000 acres of freshly logged terrain. Today around the base of Mount Kenya, stumps are nearly as common as trees.

“This is a sin against God,” said John Irungu, a local farmer who helps maintain a shrine where the first Kikuyus were believed to have settled.

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‘Witches, possessed’ flock to Kenya pastor

Posted by Administrator on November 11, 2009

Witches

Kisii, Kenya (CNN) — On one Sunday each month Pastor Lawrence Omambia, the lead preacher at the Community of Christ church in Kisii, Kenya, shows off his gift — healing and exorcism.

During the deliverance ceremony he paces through the simple brick and tin church listening to the mumbles and shouts of prayer.

He walks swiftly to a worshiper and thrusts his hands on the supplicant’s head. “I commend evil spirits to come out now in the name of Jesus,” he repeatedly shouts in Kiswahili.

His assistant hovers nearby with a tiny bottle of olive oil to smear on the site of offending aches and pains.

From early morning the faithful trickle into his church on the outskirts of town, coming from across the district hoping this Christian pastor can exorcise their pagan demons.

“They come for prayers to be released from the powers of witchcraft,” says Omambia, who was excommunicated from the Catholic church more than a decade ago for emphasizing the occult. “Some are possessed by these demonic spirits; so they come forward for prayers to get healed.”

The pastor says he can heal cancer, epilepsy and possession and says that the power from his hands is like electric currents from Jesus.

Of course it isn’t all that unusual for a pastor to claim healing powers. Witness the blow-dried televangelists of America and elsewhere, who often advertise their dramatic healing powers in infomercials.

But in Western Kenya the belief in the supernatural is far deeper and the line between Christianity and the occult is thin at best.

Many here believe that witches, night-runners brandishing flaming torches, and evil spirits populate the night.

And lynch mobs often attack accused witches. A particularly gruesome incident occurred near Kisii in late May. Fifteen people, mostly elderly women, were murdered in a witch-hunt.

Villagers say that more than 100 people gathered machetes and knives and stormed the village of Kegogi after midnight. They believed that the witches operated out of a school and compiled lists of those that they would curse. Five months ago another five women were killed in similar circumstances.

Omambia says witches should be sent to jail, not killed. That he, a Pentecostal preacher, believes in witches, rankles some more traditional Christians..

The bible seems pretty clear about people who practice the Occult: “For all who do these things are an abomination to the Lord”- Deuteronomy 18:9-12. But many Christians and pastors in Western Kenya believe in a complex mix of scripture and local traditions.

“Witches are there,” says the pastor, “but what we do here is more powerful than witchcraft.”

Omambia wears a somber suit when he battles the occult. He is small in stature, but he has piercing obsidian eyes. His sermons are of the fire and brimstone variety but the content contains core Christian values like ‘love thy neighbor’ and faith in Jesus.

It is his deliverance ceremony that shows a different side of faith.

Despite the theatrical nature of the ceremony, the Community of Christ Church doesn’t charge for the laying on of hands, unheard of at the myriad prosperity-style churches and pastors that populate Nairobi, Kenya’s capital.

“This is not a business,” says Omambia. “It is impossible to buy a gift from god.” Kisii is a largely poor and rural part of Kenya. His church does take collection, but the flock normally can only afford to give coins, although his followers did contribute enough to build the church structure from scratch.

Word of Pastor Lawrence’s perceived powers has spread. Seventh Day Adventists, Catholics and Muslims send him photographs of themselves or their family to seek help.

“I pray over the picture,” said Omambia. “Even if they are not with us physically, we believe they are with us in the picture.”

He says he has helped people who send their photos to cure marital problems, asthma, and possession and even get visas to the United States.

And his followers say he is the real deal.

“I had problems. I was sick,” says Nora Buto, who believes a curse caused pregnancy complications, “I came here and he prayed on me like he was praying on other people. I got healed.”

After the deliverance ceremony she gave birth to a healthy baby boy. She christened him Lawrence Pastor.

Source: http://edition.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/africa/11/05/kenya.witches/

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Kenyan in Cycle 12 of America’s Next Top Model

Posted by Administrator on November 11, 2009

When Cycle 12 of Tyra Banks American Next Top Model (ANTP) premiered in the US on March 4 2009, there was something very unique about it. Nineteen-year-old Sandra Nyanchoka made history by becoming the first and only Kenyan to participate in the show. Born and raised in Nairobi, Sandra, her parents and six siblings moved to the US when she was 12.

Sandra’s ride on ANTM was bumpy. She got into an intense argument with another semi-finalist and faced elimination during the first episode. “That was just me standing up for myself and it was edited to look like I started the whole thing,” Sandra told reporters after her elimination.

Sandra, who was eliminated in episode six, shares her experience on Cycle 12 of ANTP, which is yet to be screened in Kenya.

Did the show portray you accurately?
No. I’m free, nice, and normal. I’m not a psycho, evil, competitive, monster model robot. There’s always a house bitch and I think they wanted it to be me this time. I wasn’t a bitch. I just did what I did to stay on the ball in the competition.

You did not get along with other models and most of them had negative things to say about you.

The environment we were in was really, really, tense. Plus, I wanted to focus on why I was there. I didn’t make friends because of it. For whatever reason, I clashed with a lot of girls at the beginning. Our approaches to the competition were just different. Once I realized that I wasn’t going to get along with the other girls, I felt it was best to ignore them. But, that was probably my downfall, as it meant less drama around me.

What did you feel when you were eliminated?
I felt the panel made a mistake when they eliminated me. I was not the weakest model left at that point in the competition. My profile photos were great in that last (final) shoot. I do think my elimination wasn’t performance based. I think it I was sent home because I wasn’t stirring up any drama anymore. I wasn’t as dramatic as they wanted me to be. Maybe I didn’t talk enough.
 
What did you learn from your experience on the show?

I am a wiser person because of the whole experience. I learned that you have to take risks. I did not take risks in my photo shoots. I really should have done that.

What surprised you about the show?
The cameras. It was so stressful being filmed all the time. I hated it. But, it was a great experience and I would do it over again, but being filmed all the time got to me more than I expected it to.

What are your plans for the future?
I want to continue to model. I do want to be a journalist too. I always loved writing and I was a news anchor for my school. Modeling is my passion and I will continue to pursue both avenues. Maybe in the future I’ll combine the two and do fashion journalism or something. They’re both my passions and I would love to incorporate modeling and fashion into everything I do. My modeling dream is to walk for Marc Jacobs, I love him. I have so many favorite designers; it would be an honor to work with any one of them.

Sandra is currently signed up with US fashion agency Major Models.

Source:http://www.capitalfm.co.ke/lifestyle/index.php?news=4378

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Obama Mourns Victims of Fort Hood Shootings

Posted by Administrator on November 11, 2009

FORT HOOD, Tex. — President Obama took on the role of national eulogist on Tuesday for the first time since assuming office as he led the country in mourning 13 active and retired soldiers gunned down not on a foreign battlefield but here on their home post by one of their own.

Standing in front of 13 sets of boots, rifles, helmets and photographs, Mr. Obama vowed that the memory of those slain in a rampage here last week would “endure through the life of our nation.” One by one, he listed the names of those killed and described their hopes and dreams and the families they left behind.

“It may be hard to comprehend the twisted logic that led to this tragedy,” the president told thousands of soldiers and relatives gathered here at the nation’s largest Army post. “But this much we do know: No faith justifies these murderous and craven acts. No just and loving God looks upon them with favor. For what he has done, we know that the killer will be met with justice, in this world and the next.”

Although Mr. Obama had spoken at the funeral of Senator Edward M. Kennedy and made a post-midnight visit to Dover Air Force Base to salute the returning dead, this was the first time he had served as the nation’s comforter at a time of major tragedy. These are moments that can define a president, as when Bill Clinton eulogized the Oklahoma City bombing victims or George W. Bush gave voice to the anguish of a nation after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

But where Mr. Clinton used the moment to seek greater powers to combat extremism in American society and Mr. Bush channeled national anger into national resolve against Al Qaeda, Mr. Obama chose not to address in detail the haunting questions raised by the Fort Hood killings, for which the authorities have blamed Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, an Army psychiatrist: Did the government miss warning signs when it did not follow up on his communications with a radical cleric in Yemen? How does an American soldier become so radicalized? Did this constitute domestic terrorism?

While senior Army officers have expressed concern about a backlash against Muslim soldiers, Mr. Obama never used the word Muslim but praised the diversity of the military. “They are,” he said, “man and woman; white, black and brown; of all faiths and all stations — all Americans, serving together to protect our people, while giving others half a world away the chance to lead a better life.”

The Army says 1,977 active-duty soldiers identify themselves as Muslim, out of a total of 553,000. But probably many more Muslims in uniform do not disclose their religion, experts say.

At least some in the community surrounding Fort Hood said they wanted Mr. Obama to address whether the attack was tied to terrorism. “If this was a Muslim terrorist thing, to not call it that is an insult to people who know different,” said Randy Wallace, pastor of the First Baptist Church in Killeen, Tex.

Anthony Power, a retired sergeant who served 27 years and fought in Vietnam, said he liked Mr. Obama’s speech but added: “There were some issues that I would have hoped he would have addressed. I think he got away from speaking about Muslims or terrorism because of the occasion and the ongoing investigation.”

Chief Warrant Officer Byron Dixon, who wore his traditional cavalry hat in honor of the dead, called it “a very wonderful, heartfelt speech which has inspired me to keep moving.” But he added that he hoped Mr. Obama would not stop paying attention to what happened here. “He should address security on military installations here and abroad on future occasions,” he said.

At American Legion Post 573 along Veterans Memorial Highway, a dozen veterans sat solemnly as Mr. Obama spoke. Kevin L. Bradford, 72, a Vietnam-era veteran who dislikes Mr. Obama so much that he said he would fly a flag at his house at half-staff until the president leaves office, praised his remarks. “I think it was a good speech, a very good speech,” Mr. Bradford said. “I know it was from the heart.”

But David Cronk, 25, a disabled Iraq veteran, was not so sure. “It was well-written,” Mr. Cronk said, “but I think he needs to do a little more from the heart. I can tell when someone is reading from a tablet and when someone is speaking from the heart.”

The service was on a bright, warm afternoon five days after the attacks at a processing center for deploying troops, where witnesses said Major Hasan opened fire after saying “Allahu akbar,” Arabic for “God is great.” Mr. Obama, accompanied by the first lady and military leaders, met with survivors of the attack and loved ones of those killed.

Security was tight amid the playing of taps, the singing of “Amazing Grace,” the roll call of the missing and the ceremonial volley of gunfire. More than 100 massive shipping containers were stacked to form a wall around part of the field, while sharpshooters were positioned on the roof of the III Corps building behind the lectern.

The victims ranged in age from 19 to 62. Ten were men and three were women; between them they had 19 children, with another on the way. “It was a kick in the gut,” said Gen. George W. Casey Jr., the Army chief of staff. But General Casey vowed that the Army would persevere. “Grieve with us,” he said. “Don’t grieve for us.”

Many soldiers and relatives expressed gratitude that the president had come to help them grieve, with many breaking into tears.

“It’s great that the president takes the time to come when there is so much on his plate,” said First Lt. Steven Aoyagi, 24, a helicopter pilot. “It’s good to know this won’t get swept under the carpet, because a lot of soldiers don’t feel safe right now. They need to have confidence in their leaders.”

Staff Sgt. Lorena Brand, 40, tears welling in her eyes, said the visit would focus national attention on the troops and the continuing terrorism threat. “Those of us who serve, it seems we’re always being overlooked,” Sergeant Brand said. “So his coming, it puts the military and soldiers first, instead of feeling we’re always at the bottom of the list after the firefighters and police.”

As Mr. Obama spoke, soldiers wiped away tears. “It really doesn’t matter what he says,” said Specialist Beau Taylor, who was injured by roadside bombs in Iraq and watched the ceremony on crutches. “It’s his presence here that really matters.”

James C. McKinley Jr. and Ray Rivera contributed reporting.

Source: New York Times

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Hard work leads to bright future for Kenyan children

Posted by Administrator on November 11, 2009

By Martin Shardow

    NAIROBI, Nov. 11 (Xinhua) — “Securing a chance in one of Kenya’s most famous schools demands hard work, determination and focus,” said Mike Kinoni, a grade-three student at Mang’u High School.

    Joining Mang’u High School was Mike’s childhood dream. But securing the golden chance to pursue his secondary education there did not come on a silver platter.

    Mang’u High School, one of the most famous schools situated on the outskirts of Nairobi, was founded in 1925 by the Holy Ghost Fathers at Kabaa in Machakos district, but later moved to its current site along the Thika-Nairobi Highway in 1972, in a bid to create room for the country’s aviation program.

    Joining Mang’u High, one of the top 10 schools in Kenya, is quite competitive and only students who perform best in the national primary examination, the Kenya Certificate of Primary Education (KCPE) are admitted.

    When the results were released showing that he had attained marks to secure him a place at Mang’u High, the only high school offering classes in aviation, Mike could not hide his joy since he finally secured the chance to fulfill his dream of becoming a pilot.

    Apart from studies, Mike enjoys playing rugby, a game that has made the school famous since it delivered some of the best player sto the national team.

    The boy said he was quite thankful to the dedicated teachers who are always at hand to help students and to the high standards of discipline, without which he would be a “spoilt child.”

    Peter Kinoni, Mike’s father, echoed his son’s sentiments, saying “I am glad that since my son joined Mang’u I have never been called to school to address issues of indiscipline.”

    While many parents relegate parental duties to teachers, Kinoni makes sure that he has time to be with his son to ensure his progress, which, according to the father, has greatly helped build confidence in Mike.

    Among the Mang’u High alumni are Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki, his long-time ally Environment Minister John Michuki, Internal Security minister George Saitoti, former Vice President Moody Awori and retired Catholic Church archbishop Nding’i Mwana Nzeki.

    As for famous people coming from famous schools, Patrick Mutuku, father of Jimmy Mutuku, a student in another well-known Nairobi School, said “it is not always the case, …, it is hard work that pays.”

    The school was started by the colonial government and has maintained high academic standards.

    The father’s opinion was agreed by Jimmy’s English teacher. “I have seen many failures due to the assumption that attending a great school guarantees one success. They failed to understand that being in a good school will not earn one an automatic ticket to university, they have to work hard, too,” he said.

http://news.xinhuanet.com

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Move the capital city to a more central location

Posted by Administrator on November 11, 2009

By JOSEPH MAGUTTPosted Tuesday, November 10 2009 at 17:44

NAIROBI CITY HAS BEEN IN decline for some considerable period, mainly due to poor attention and lack of consistency in planning. Its infrastructure is choked and gridlocked. Fifty years from now the city may suffer critical implosion, if drastic measures are not taken. The current infrastructure cannot absorb the high population growth, nor is there sufficient room for modern planning that will serve the next generation. Until 1926, Nairobi operated on ad hoc city plans. The 1948 Nairobi masterplan, although with its own limitations, was a seminal approach to proper organisation of the fledgling urban centre.

However, a more focused blueprint was the 1973 Nairobi Metropolitan Growth Strategy, which was ignored until it expired in 2000. IT IS SAD THAT A CITY SUCH AS KUALA Lumpur in Malaysia, which borrowed from this masterplan is now the pride of South East Asia, yet Nairobi is apparently stuck in a rut with rundown infrastructure, and an albatross in the name of the biggest slum in Africa.

The new Nairobi Metropolitan Region under the stewardship of the Nairobi Metropolitan ministry is the latest attempt to redesign, modernise and expand the city. The masterplan, which is designed to subsume several local authorities bordering the city, envisages creating 13 independent zones, spanning 3,000 square kilometres. The vision is commendable and ambitious but it is one that will not provide a well-planned or futuristic city.

It is worth noting that, besides providing a congenial environment for quality life, properly planned cities attract the best companies globally, and are thus a catalyst for investment.  To this end, I feel there is a need to design and build a city that will serve Kenyans for the next 1,000 years.

This is a hard choice that we must make as a country.

My proposal is that the capital city should be located between Losai National Reserve and Shaba National reserve – specifically at Golja, North of Isiolo. This is because Nairobi, besides having declined irrevocably is not geographically located at the real centre of the country. It does not enjoy or project the persona of “neutrality” and hence there is need for a geographically neutral location that will allay regional jealousies that may jeopardise national unity. A city located in the most central location of Kenya will contribute to ethnic harmony and bring about regional equi-distance in terms of accessibility.

Besides, Nairobi carries a lingering colonial tag having been used by the British colonial administration as a seat to perpetuate its brutal tyranny in Kenya and the region at large. This poignant reality galls a new generation that yearns to identify with anything that invokes national pride.

The need to build a new city in the Golja region is also inspired by the devolution agenda, as this will be amenable to the policy of equitable distribution of national resources. This will contribute to the development of northern Kenya and help to ease the current disproportionate urban population in Kenya.

IT IS INSTRUCTIVE THAT MANY CITIES have been built to serve the emerging interests of individual countries. Examples include Brasilia in Brazil), Abuja in Nigeria, Dodoma in Tanzania, Islamabad in Pakistan, Gaborone in Botswana, and Lilongwe in Malawi. Taiwan is now considering building the next generation city in its central hinterland.

To begin with, the new city can, in the initial stages, serve as the seat of government through the relocation of administrative functions; eventually it can become the country’s commercial capital. The National Assembly and all key government administrative arms should constitute the initial phase of relocation.

In the face of the many challenges facing the country, this proposal may sound woolly but this mental orientation is necessary. Big ideas sometimes sound foggy and ludicrous.

Mr Magutt is a political scientist and founder of Big Ideas International, a think-tank in Nairobi. (jmagoott@yahoo.com)

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Court cuts Sh200,000 woman demand on minister

Posted by Administrator on November 11, 2009

A woman quest to have the court grant orders for the maintenance of her two children went awry after the amount sought was reduced on Tuesday.

Ms Agnes Nduku, a former Cabinet minister girlfriend, with whom they have two children feels shortchanged by a court ruling that saw the maintenance fee she had sought from Housing Minister Soita Shitanda reduced drastically.

Ms Nduku was asking for almost Sh200,000 monthly to cater for the twins’ needs. The amount includes a Sh35,000 monthly rent, Sh20,000 in food expenses, Sh4,000 for a house help and a Sh10,000 entertainment allowance.

But the court ordered the Malava MP to pay Sh40, 000 as maintenance fee, which the mother of the children insists she is not going to take.

The minister is, however, expected to cater for school related expenses which vary from books, uniform transport and school fees. The MP will also pay for the medical expenses of the twins.

According to the court orders the maintenance money must be paid by the 5th of every month beginning this month. Mr Shitanda has, however, been given until November 14 to give the money for this month.

The plaintiff is dissatisfied with the outcome of the case saying the new rates had even gone beyond what the father of the two children had already offered to pay.

In his affidavit, the minister had indicated that he was willing to pay Sh50, 000 per child and said he could afford accommodation of not more than Sh20, 000. 

The mother of the eight-year-old twins had gone to court to compel the minister to pay for the maintenance of the two minors. According to her, the MP should take full responsibility for the minors and cater for all their expenses.

The minister does not deny paternal responsibilities and confirmed to the court in his defence that he is the father to the kids. He, however, says that the mother of the children was out to exploit him.

“Her demands do not consider shared parental responsibility and merely seeks to exploit my status in the society,” said the minister.

With the Sh40, 000, Ms Nduku is expected to cater for expenses like food clothing and entertainment that she had earlier listed in the maintenance expenses.

According to her, the amount is too small and has made it clear that she will be appealing the decision.

“Their father had already offered to pay Sh50,000 how then did the amount reduce. The money is not enough,” she said.

Source: Daily Nation

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