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Archive for December 12th, 2009

Habits that keep eligible men away

Posted by Administrator on December 12, 2009

•Single women often complain that there are no more good men left – but how accurate is this? Could they be the reason they are single?

•Single women often complain that there are no more good men left – but how accurate is this? Could they be the reason they are single?

“There are just no eligible men left – the good ones are either married or in committed relationships; the available ones are just players who are out to use and dump you,” declared Anna, an old friend.

Anna turns 31 next year and has all but given up hope of finding a good man to spend the rest of her life with. She is working on plan ‘B’ right now – finding a ‘suitable’ (read good-looking and intelligent) man to have a child or two with before she moves on with her life.

At least this way, she reasons, she will have something to occupy her time when she gets to her forties and fifties and hopefully by the time she turns 60, her yet-to-be-born children will have had a couple of grandchildren to keep her company during the holidays.

Now, Anna has everything going for her – at least at a glance. She is attractive and in her circle of friends, she turns the most heads when it comes to men. She is also effortlessly stylish, has a wicked sense of humour and is financially well-cushioned.

She works for a top-notch advertising agency, a job all her friends think is glamorous considering all the glitzy functions she attends almost daily and all the interesting people she gets to meet. With all these, you would expect that she would have bagged Mr Right ages ago.

Her remark about there being no marriage material men was bound to raise heated debate especially because this remark was made during a monthly girls’ night out at a popular pub in the city centre.

Out of the group of nine, three are married with at least a child each, two are planning to walk down the aisle sometime next year while the remaining four, Anna included, are yet to meet a man “interesting” or “suitable” enough to settle down with.

When girls get together, they pull no punches, and tend to say it as it is and once the stage was set, everyone decided that it was time to thrash out this matter and settle it once and for all.

The fact was that out of the group, five had found what they believed was genuine love, testimony that Anna’s assertion was not entirely true. There was bound to be at least one good man left out there for her. After some heated discussion on the topic, the girls decided to dissect Anna to try and find out exactly where the problem lay. Were there truly no good men left out there or was Anna, herself, part of the problem if not the problem?

“Anna, you drink like a man; maybe that’s what puts the men off?” suggested Liz, who can be painfully blunt at times.

After this preliminary brave diagnosis, there was no holding back and by the time the group parted ways some four hours later, Anna had what everyone believed was a fool-proof manual on how to get herself a lifetime partner before the end of the coming year.

The group had also gone further and tried to pinpoint exactly where women go wrong in their search for real love.

Are you marriage material?

Most of the time, women are too busy judging men and trying to pinpoint their shortcomings, they fail to recognise their own glaring shortcomings. Anna, for instance, wanted a man who did not drink himself to a stupor every weekend.

“I want a man who I can have an intelligent conversation with, a man who is comfortable enough to stay indoors on a Sunday afternoon watching a movie and doing little else,” she said.

Talk of the pot calling the kettle black – the problem was that Anna could drink any man under the table, and was in fact on her fourth glass of brandy, never mind that we had been at the venue for little over an hour.

Verdict: You should mirror the qualities you are looking for in a potential partner, as they say, like poles attract. If one of the qualities you’re looking for in a man is one who is financially stable and has a grounded money sense, you too should be responsible when it comes to money because the last woman such a man will want to be stuck with is one who will milk him dry because shopping gives her an irrational high.

In the same breath, if you want a God-fearing man, you will not find him at a booze-fuelled Mugithii night in a club in Ngara or Florida 2000 – in short, be a reflection of all or most of the standards you want in the kind of man you’re looking for.

When a man is searching for a woman to marry, rarely will he go for the one who will drink him out of the bar. Just as a woman will not want a drunkard for a husband, a serious man will also want a sober woman to look after his children and home.

Change your attitude

“If you believe that all the good men are taken, that will be your reality,” Susan, who has read just about every major relationships book ever written, told Anna. Susan is one of the two who plans to get married mid-next year to a “good man”, therefore all the other girls urge Anna to take her advice seriously.

Many women are guilty of perpetuating the notion that most men are just no good. They grew up hearing about it from their mothers, who heard it from their own mothers and when these women get children of their own, they are likely to drum into them the same misleading message.

If you believe that all men are dogs, a common phrase among women who have had ‘bad luck’ with a few men, your path will always be littered with these types. Think about the law of attraction, which argues that your thoughts, conscious or unconscious, can affect or determine what happens in real life.

Verdict: You have the power to attract or repel love. If you want to find love, change your thought process – believe that it is out there and it will find you.

Expand your horizon

If you have been looking in the same place year after year yet keep turning up empty-handed, maybe this is a sign to start looking further afield.
Look beyond your church choir and start accepting invitations to weddings, birthday parties, and graduation ceremonies.

Join a social network since this offers you a chance to meet new people. Also start doing things you enjoy, such as swimming, hiking, singing, dancing – who knows, you and the man you’re looking for might just share a pastime.

Ask friends, relatives and colleagues to hook you up with their single friends, at least this way, you’re assured that you will not end up with a married man masquerading as an eligible bachelor.

Ensure that your friends really know this person, after all, you don’t want to end up like Triza, thankfully married with one child and another on the way, who, a few years ago, found out that the man she had hoped to get married to already had a wife and child.

Triza had been dating this man for eight months before the shocking revelation. How is this possible, you may ask? Well, according to Triza, he had not given her the slightest reason to suspect otherwise – she had full, unrestricted access to his flat in South B, (He handed her an extra key after they had been dating for just two months), would leave her his car when he went out of town “on business” which was frequently and introduced her to his bosom buddies.

With such a convincing set-up, even you would have been hood-winked. Triza only stumbled on the truth when she decided to give ‘their’ bedroom, (she had practically moved in by then) a thorough clean-up one weekend – tucked in the furthest corner of a drawer heaped with papers, envelopes and files, was a framed coloured photograph of a familiar happy-looking groom clasping hands with an unfamiliar ecstatic bride.

She did not need anyone to tell her that she was looking at her boyfriend. When she confronted him that evening with the incriminating evidence, he admitted that he was indeed married, had been for three years and had a baby boy and another on the way. His family lived up-country, hence the frequent ‘business’ trips out of town.

Triza’s experience aside, do not be afraid to let several people know that you are single and looking. The problem with Anna, the girls figured, was that she did not act as if she wanted someone special in her life. She gave the impression of a carefree party girl, and since she was constantly surrounded by people and always had plans for the weekend, none of the girls, until that evening, knew that behind that façade, she was lonely and wanted to settle down and raise a family.

Verdict: Speak your mind; make it clear to those close to you that you’re available, without behaving desperate about it, and start looking beyond your usual haunts for that elusive man.

Wall-flowers end up alone

Our Anna is certainly no wall-flower so maybe this does not apply to her, but on another note, she does pass off as being too forceful and opinionated. But let’s first say a thing or two about wall-flowers.

The girls concluded that love passes by many women because they are too timid and reserved, which relationship experts say could be an indicator of low-self esteem. They keep to themselves during social gatherings and talk to no one else but the people they know.

These are the people who only get up from their seat to visit the washroom yet when they get home, they cannot understand why no one approached them.

Such behaviour is not only off-putting, it will certainly not help you meet new people. This does not mean that you should throw yourself at every Tom, Dick and Harry in the room and recite your life history while at it. Mingle, smile and make eye-contact. The opposite of the wall-flower is the know-it-all individual.

This one is the loud-mouth who blubbers everything about themselves and has an opinion about everything under the sun and rarely allows others to put in a word. The girls thought that Anna had committed this social sin on too many occasions and concluded that it was one of the characteristics that put men off.

Verdict: No man wants to claim a wall flower and neither does one want to spend the rest of his life with a woman who has a machine gun for a mouth.

Are you a female predator?

There is a huge difference between knowing what you want and going for it and literally hunting it. There is a danger of putting a man off if you’re too forward about your interest, the girls, some of whom had made this mistake in the past, concluded.

By all means flirt, but avoid being too sexually provocative because it sends the wrong message about you. The man might conclude that you’re too easy and though he might show some interest, you can be sure that the interest will only be temporary and directed in one direction. By the time the girls stumbled on this point, Anna was on her sixth glass and was brave enough to admit that she had a one-night stand with a man she had met at a friend’s party a couple of months ago.

“When he didn’t call the next day like he had promised, I wondered why because I thought we had really clicked, and it was obvious that he was really attracted to me,” Anna lamented.

“You sleep with a man you have just met and you wonder why he doesn’t call the next day? – pleeese,” snorted Liz, who helpfully added that a serious man goes for a decent woman, not one with questionable morals.

Verdict: Baring your claws, showing acres of flesh or shedding your clothes in an instant will only get you used and unceremoniously dumped, not a lifetime partner.

What defines your ideal man?

Women have often been accused of judging a man by ,where he lives, the car he drives or what job he holds. Most so-called modern women would not give a man a second glance if he does not drive.

“The irony is that some of these women do not even own a car, yet they expect the man dating them to drive one – women can be so fickle,” stated Job, an exasperated man who is convinced that most women are gold-diggers.

Anna drives a metallic grey Toyota Rav4 and when the girls pinned her down and asked her to honestly say whether she would consider dating a man who drove a Nissan Sunny, she eventually said “No” after hedging for a while.

The fact is that a man who drives an impressive car and earns tons of money is not necessarily the best match – if anything, he might turn out to be the stingy type that gets physically ill whenever he has to part with a penny.

Verdict: Don’t overlook a potential partner just because he doesn’t own a car or because he drives an outdated model or doesn’t hold a big job. As long as he doesn’t plan to live off you and shows potential for excelling, give him a chance – he might surprise you and turn out to be the most responsible man you ever meet.

cnjunge@nation.co.ke

Source: Daily Nation

Posted in Features | 1 Comment »

How heroic trio of fighter pilots scuttled mission to bomb State House and GSU

Posted by Administrator on December 12, 2009

•As the three top notch pilots relaxed at home with their families, rebel servicemen at KAF Nanyuki Station serviced and armed three jet fighters, rounded them up at gunpoint and ordered them to bomb two city targets. However, the three knew one thing - they were abductees on the ground but in charge in the air

•As the three top notch pilots relaxed at home with their families, rebel servicemen at KAF Nanyuki Station serviced and armed three jet fighters, rounded them up at gunpoint and ordered them to bomb two city targets. However, the three knew one thing - they were abductees on the ground but in charge in the air

By Roy Gichuhi

On November 24, 1982, Corporal Bramwel Injeni Njereman, an armaments technician with the Kenya Air Force, became the first Kenyan to be convicted of treason for trying to overthrow the Government of Kenya.

According to judgement passed by a court martial sitting at the Kenya Army’s Langata Barracks, Njereman was found guilty of five overt acts during the attempted coup of August 1, 1982.

Among these acts was “forcing Major David Mutua to fly an F/5 aircraft on a bombing mission to Nairobi and accompanying him at gunpoint.” He was sentenced to death by hanging.

About a month later — on December 16, 1982 — Cpl Walter Odira Ojode became the second Kenyan to be found guilty of the same offence by the same court.

According to the presiding judge, he “locked up servicemen and officers and ordered Major David Mutua and Capt John Mugwanja to fly F/5 jets to bomb some targets in Nairobi.” He, too, earned the death penalty.

Both servicemen appealed and lost their cases. Along with coup leader Hezekiah Ochuka and principal conspirator Pancras Oteyo Okumu, they were executed on the night of July 10, 1985 at Kamiti Maximum Security Prison.

Career hangman

The executions were carried out by Michael Wanjuki Kirugumi, a career hangman with dozens of hangings to his name in the colonial-era facility.

To date, they remain the last people to be lawfully killed by the Government of Kenya.

Who was Major David Mutua? Who was Capt John Mugwanja? And who was Capt John Baraza, the third pilot not mentioned in the aforementioned judgements.

They were fighter pilots skilled in flying — in the case of Mutua and Mugwanja — the most potent warplane in the Kenya Air Force inventory, the F/5 Tiger.

On the bright Sunday morning of August 1, 1982, they flew a mission of hitherto scant detail to Nairobi that could have changed the course of Kenya’s history forever.

As the three pilots relaxed at home with their families, rebel servicemen at Laikipia Air Base, known then as KAF Nanyuki Station, serviced and armed three jet fighters. Mutua’s two-seat F/5F Tiger was loaded with 500lb bombs and Baraza’s Strikemaster with high explosive antitank rockets. Though not carrying bombs, the guns of Mugwanja’s single seat F/5E Tiger were loaded.

The pilots were rounded up from their residences and at gunpoint, Cpl Njereman ordered them to suit up and get into their cockpits. The mission — to bomb State House Nairobi and the General Service Unit headquarters, also in Nairobi. He took the back seat of Mutua’s plane to enforce the order.
This was to be the three pilots’ last mission and military and political scholars can argue indeterminably about what Kenya would have become had they done what their captors ordered them to do.

A former air force pilot familiar with the events of that day told Saturday Nation: “The pilots went through all the motions of obeying their captors’ instructions without any intention of carrying out the decisive order. They bid their time knowing a simple thing — they were abductees on the ground but in charge in the air. Njereman had never flown in a jet before, much less a high performance one like the F/5. Mutua decided to teach him a lesson.”

Njereman and other rebel servicemen were working at the behest of their leader, Senior Private Hezekiah Ochuka, who wanted State House and General Service Unit headquarters bombed. Loyal to his boss he doubtlessly was, but according to this pilot, he was none too clever.

“That ride could have killed him. With exposure to as much as 7gs, the likelihood of throwing up is high. Suppose he threw up into his oxygen mask? He would have choked in his own vomit.”

He was also cut out from all communication by the pilots whether or not he could hear what they were saying because for the most part, they spoke in coded language or simply used hand signals. The aircraft itself can also be manoeuvred in such a way as to signal something to the other pilot.

Team briefing

Adds the pilot: “Before every mission, the formation leader gives his team a briefing. There are standard codes for emergency situations but for every mission you can come up with certain signals to mean certain things. And it is possible still to maintain complete radio silence for a full mission.”

By whatever method he deemed fit, Mutua indicated to his fellow abductees that 

they would perform aerobatics over Nairobi and then damp the bombs in Mt Kenya forest on their way back. All three pilots synchronized their flight plans. Then the F/5s took off together and were followed shortly by Baraza’s Strikemaster.

It typically takes 10 minutes for an F/5 jet to get to Nairobi from Nanyuki. On the fateful day, the two F/5s were seen over Nairobi at around 10am They came in high and then made a steep high speed dive over the Kasarani area before making a perpendicular assent at the same speed.

Even experienced pilots do sometimes get blackouts when they perform these manoeuvres. The purpose of the g-suit is to squeeze blood into the head and stabilize the flow when the body is exposed to these forces. Mutua knew that Njereman wasn’t going to survive these pressures. After the first run, the gun dropped out of his hand.

To ensure that Njereman was enduring maximum discomfort, Mutua kept asking him questions such as: “What can you see? Where is that?” The exposure to so much g-forces was taking a heavy toll on Njereman, but Mutua kept talking to him to tire him further. After three runs, the gunman could barely speak. It was safe to make the trip home.

For a bomb dropped from an aircraft to explode, the pilot must first arm it before releasing it from the plane’s under-wing hold. If he releases it unarmed, it will simply drop to the ground like a stone. That procedure is called dumping. Njereman had no way of knowing that that is what his captives did over Mt Kenya forest.

Back at the Base, he looked dizzy and confused as he staggered out of the jet. He announced to other servicemen that they had bombed Nairobi. But by that time, the Army was closing in on the base.

As if participating in a macabre play, the three pilots found themselves in the back of a prison truck headed for Kamiti Maximum Security Prison shortly after this mission.

All three have passed on and here the story is taken up by a fellow officer who was with them from the time they were arrested to when they were released seven 

and half months later.

Maj Fred Wachira was an air traffic controller at Laikipia Air Base in 1982. At the time of the attempted coup, he was Acting Officer Commanding Flying Wing and worked directly with the pilots.

Coup crashed

He remembers: “For a few days after the coup attempt was crushed, there seemed a genuine effort to separate good people from bad. But that was short lived. Soon, the Base Commander, Col Njuguna, the Air Force Commander, Maj Gen Kariuki and all of us in the service found ourselves as suspects.

“Maj Mutua, Capt Mugwanja, Capt Baraza and I boarded the same prison truck, a Black Mariam, which took us to Kamiti Prison. After a few days at Kamiti, we were herded into another prison truck and taken to Naivasha prison. En-route and during our stay at the two prisons, we were treated like common criminals and subjected to the most degrading treatment you can think of.

“The worst part about all this is that our families were kept in the dark about our whereabouts. They had no way of knowing whether we were dead or alive. There was also no pay for us and on top of the psychological torture of not know the fate of their loved ones, our families were denied the support which we gave them in normal times. This went on for seven and a half months.”

The purpose of the incarceration was supposedly to screen and separate the innocent from those with a case to answer. The innocent were to be freed and, logically, resume their duties. Those with cases to answer were referred to a court martial sitting at Langata Army Barracks. But the process defied logic and fairness right from the start.

On November 24, after a trial lasting only nine days, Cpl Njereman was convicted of his offence and sentenced to death for treason. On December 16, 1982, Cpl Walter Odira Ojode followed Njereman as the next Kenyan to be sent to face the hangman.

As this was going on, Cpl Amos Kunikina Marani was charged with servicing F/5 jets, doing all the pre-flight checks and signing Form 700 certifying that the jets were ready to fly. He admitted to the offence of mutiny and was sentenced to 13 years in jail.

It didn’t seem to occur to anybody — or to bother them — that people were being convicted of treason and other serious offences while their victims were doing time in jail.

Recalls Maj Wachira: “The interrogators did their job. The only question is how it could possibly take almost eight months to do that and what compensation would be offered to those found innocent. All the same, we hoped that once cleared, we would resume our duties and life would return to normal.”

It turned out to be wishful thinking. At the end of the apparently endless screening process, the three pilots were found without a case to answer.
Says Wachira: “The four of us were together on the day we were set free. We were loaded in a military truck — not a prison Black Mariam this time — and driven to Kahawa Barracks. We were taken to a tent pitched in a nursery school within the complex.

All this time, we were looking forward for the onward trip to Nanyuki. But we were in for a rude shock. Maj Mburu from Moi Air Base told us that our services had been terminated. Apparently, this decision had been arrived at much earlier.

Terminal dues

“He gave us 30 shillings each for bus fare to town and ordered us to leave. The three pilots and I took a matatu to town where we went to a restaurant for tea to “enjoy” our terminal dues. In the next few months, we struggled through the DoD process of obtaining our termination certificates.”

Maj Wachira showed Saturday Nation his certificate which read among other things: “His commission was terminated on being retired from the service. His discipline and conduct was good.”

Save for the bus fare he got at Kahawa, he didn’t receive a penny for his 12-and-a-half years service with the Air Force. But the certificate served him in good stead and he was able to get a job with the Directorate of Civil Aviation as an air traffic controller where he worked for three years.

Top notch pilots

This is how Maj Wachira remembers his colleagues: “Those gentlemen were top notch pilots and it is unbelievable that they could be treated the way they were. Though I was an air traffic controller and not a pilot, I was their officer commanding and I knew them very well. There are many things that can be proved – like facts backed by records. But there are also many things that cannot be proved. Like just why we were treated like common criminals after so many years of devoted service.”

He adds thoughtfully: “Agreed it is an employer’s right to terminate service when he no longer needs it. But it should be done legally and humanely. Enormous suffering to us and our families followed our unjust and lengthy imprisonment in Naivasha and things were never the same again.

“Those three pilots were my colleagues of many years. They exhibited the highest level of courage and patriotism under very difficult circumstances. Though gone, there must be justice for them and their families.”

Roy Gachuhi is Director, East Africa School of Journalism. (roygachuhi@yahoo.com)

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Kenyan Passes Away In Nebraska

Posted by Administrator on December 12, 2009

The Late Allan Mukuba

The Late Allan Mukuba

We are sad to announce the death of  Mr.  Allan Mukuba of Bellevue, Nebraska. Mr Mukuba passed away on Wednesday  9th December 2009 at the University of Nebraska Medical Center (UNMC) after battling an illness. He was the beloved son of Mary Mukuba & Ernest Mwangi.  Brother to Grace Githae (Bellevue, Nebraska).  Cousin to Dennis Warui (Bellevue, Nebraska), Peter Kahiu & Naomi Kigondu (Bellevue Nebraska), Muthoni Muli (Oakland, California) , Ben Kahiu (New Jersey), Catherine Mutugi (Oakland, California).  

 Family and friends are meeting for prayers and arrangements at Grace Githae’s residence, 2528 Hancock St, Bellevue, NE 68005 everyday as from 6.00 p.m.

A Memorial Service will be held from 5-9pm (With service beginning at 6pm) at:
Glad Tidings Church
7415 Hickory St,
Omaha, NE 68124
(402)-391-6515
Date: Thursday 17th December 2009

The family needs prayers and financial assistance to offset funeral expenses.

 Contributions may be brought to the meeting or deposited to:

 Name: Grace Githae,

 Bank:  American National Bank, Account #       2740354, Routing # 104000854.

Details for the funeral will be communicated later, for further information please contact:

Grace Githae 402-813-1780 githaegrace@yahoo.com,

 Davis Mwangi 402-740-6986,

Apollo Gichema 402-490-0857,

Cathy Gichema 443-848-7244,

Dennis Warui – 402-990-8125 

 Naomi Kigondu 402-612-6877.

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