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Archive for December 18th, 2009

Cow jumps six feet onto roof

Posted by jambonewspot on December 18, 2009

A cow standing on the roof of a house in Blagdon, Somerset Photo: ARCHANT

 

Neighbour William de Cothi, 17, photographed the animal after he spotted it on the roof about six feet off the ground.

The Sixth Form student said: “I was looking out of my window when I saw the cow.

“At first I thought that it was an illusion and that it was in the background and not really on the roof.

“But after a closer look I could see it was actually on the roof.”

The teenager added: “I have heard cows can jump quite high, so I think that is how it got up there.

“I got my family to come and look later and they laughed. It was absolutely amazing.”

The house owner in Blagdon, Somerset, called police after getting home to find her roof seriously damaged and smashed tiles as she feared a burglar had tried to break in.

Local PC Ray Bradley said: “This was initially recorded on my figures as a burglary so I am glad I can take it off.

“If it wasn’t for the door-to-door enquires and this photo we wouldn’t have found out it was a cow responsible.”

Source: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/

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Protesters petrol-bomb matatu

Posted by jambonewspot on December 18, 2009

Clashes between hawkers and police turned costly when a bus that plies the Mathare-town centre route was petrol-bombed on Thursday. The hawkers at Globe Cinema roundabout were protesting their eviction by the riot police. Photo/CHRIS OJOW

Clashes between hawkers and police turned costly when a bus that plies the Mathare-town centre route was petrol-bombed on Thursday. The hawkers at Globe Cinema roundabout were protesting their eviction by the riot police. Photo/CHRIS OJOW

At least two people were injured, one of them seriously, when protesting hawkers hurled a petrol bomb into a bus in Nairobi on Thursday.
An uneasy truce between the hawkers and police exploded into chaos again as protesters engaged riot police in running battles.

But the police and some hawkers were quick to point an accusing finger at the outlawed Mungiki sect for triggering the mayhem.

The incident, at the Globe Cinema roundabout, left bus driver Mr John Ndung’u suffering from serious burns and his conductor Mr Maxwell Otieno slightly injured.

There were no passengers in the bus at the time.

Police spokesman Eric Kiraithe said the Mungiki had infiltrated the demonstrators and were responsible for the violence.

He also said that initial findings indicated the protesters used a petrol bomb.

“The hawkers would ordinarily have no problem with vehicles and this points only to Mungiki, but we shall investigate to see if the protesters are linked to the sect,” said Mr Kiraithe.

“We shall soon get a clearer picture of what really took place,” said the police spokesman.

According to the bus driver, the protesters hurled the petrol bomb into the vehicle as he waited for his turn to pick passengers at the Globe Cinema roundabout.

“I saw the protesters running away from the police towards where I was parked. They started attacking the six vehicles in the queue,” said the conductor, Mr Otieno.

Hurl something

He said he then saw one of the demonstrators hurl something wrapped in a piece of cloth into the bus. The object exploded, setting the vehicle on fire.

Mr Ndung’u, who was in the back seat at the time, suffered serious burns to his hands and legs and was taken to hospital.

The bus was extensively damaged despite the timely arrival of the Nairobi City Council Fire Brigade.

The hawkers were battling the police for the third day running in a bid to gain access to the central business district, culminating in yesterday’s 

confrontation.

Former local government minister Karisa Maitha banned hawking in the city centre in 2004 and the traders were relocated to designated markets.

However, they have slowly been making a return to the central business district, especially in the evenings, inconveniencing pedestrians as they block the pavements with their wares.

On Thursday, General Service Unit personnel and riot police were deployed to the city centre and managed to chase out the hawkers, who vented their frustration on the bus.

Five protesters were arrested in the mayhem.

Source: Daily Nation

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Exposed: How officials looted schools’ millions

Posted by jambonewspot on December 18, 2009

•Confidential audit report by Finance ministry reveals rot at the highest levels

•Confidential audit report by Finance ministry reveals rot at the highest levels

The full details of the millions of shillings lost through dubious activities at the Education Ministry can be revealed.

A confidential report prepared by Finance ministry reveals that the Kenyan taxpayer and donors supporting education programmes sunk Sh178 million into a hole run by a well-oiled network of senior ministry officials and school teachers.

However, independent investigations indicate that the sums lost run into billions of shillings.

Losses detected

The Finance ministry report entitled: “In-depth Risk Based Fiduciary Review, Kenya Education Sector Support Project”, covers only losses detected in May and June this year, and October last year.

It covered 187 institutions as follows: primary 96, secondary 68, technical colleges 11, special schools 12.

This is a far cry from the actual number of the country’s public educational institutions comprising 20,000 primary, 4,000 secondary, 37 technical training institutions, and 116 special learning centres.

During those three months, the government and donors lost Sh103 million in the form of imprest given to senior education officials for activities that never took place.

In total, 17 senior officials and seven district education officers have been suspended over the sleaze, according to Education minister Sam Ongeri.

Some of the top officials mentioned adversely in the report with regard to the questionable dealings are acting director of secondary education, Mrs C. Ondiek, deputy directors Patrick Aghan, Martin Orwa and E.M. Magwa, senior education officers Kenneth Kabetu, Salome Yatich, Mutuaru Mukindia, Benson Kahara, Petty Kimweli, Omusonga Okwach, and Fredrick Odhiambo.

Others are assistant director of education Francis Kimosop, senior quality assurance officer Thomas Omuga, district education officer Ann Shiundu, senior clerical officer Nyaga Muthuri and ICT officer Paul Odhiambo.

Also mentioned are assistant accountant John Mbogo, and a secretary, Ms Dorothy Ndia, among others.

Another Sh75 million was lost through roll-out of programmes undertaken through an initiative called Kenya Education Sector Support Programme.

Introduced in 2005, the programme gets funds pooled by donors to support Kenya Government backed education programmes. It seeks to eliminate duplication and misuse of funds.

But as investigations reveal, the programme provided a vehicle for siphoning funds.

According to our investigations, the scandal has been running for about four years and the Treasury’s report is just but the tip of the iceberg.
Kenya Anti-Corruption Commission officials, we learnt, have expanded the net to cover those years.

Notably, the Treasury’s report, which was first highlighted by Finance minister Uhuru Kenyatta in October, formed the basis for which the British Government, a major supporter of Kenya’s education, announced its intention to cut its funding.

The report isolates the levels through which the wheeler-dealers operated, namely at the ministry headquarters, district and school.

In the first place, public money was stolen through fictitious training workshops, hiring of training halls, laptops and other accessories, as well as trainers’ fees.

Other tricks used to milk State coffers were: inflating payments for goods and services, double allocation and disbursement of funds to some schools and alleged implementation of new programmes like school nutrition and mobile schools in the arid and semi-arid lands.

Whatever the case, all those involved in the dubious dealings handed in fake receipts, which were easily accepted by the accounting officers at the ministry headquarters.

Asked to comment on Friday, the minister, Prof Ongeri, and permanent secretary Karega Mutahi, remained tight-lipped, saying they did not want to jeopardise ongoing KACC investigations.

Create confusion

The report also highlights cases where money was wired to schools’ accounts without following procedures. But this was deliberate to create confusion and allow for some fat cats to skim off State largesse.

In those cases, we independently learnt, the schools would receive excess amounts of money, but shortly, thereafter, they would get fresh instructions from the ministry headquarters to remit the excess sums to private bank accounts, minus a small cut for the headteacher.

Contrary to earlier impressions that the scandal affected only free primary education, the fact is that it cuts across the entire length and breadth of the education sector.

But the thrust of the report is abuse of imprest. It emerges that top education mandarins took imprest allegedly to conduct workshops in various parts of the country. But the workshops were never held. To account for their activities, they provided fake receipts and other documents. Through that, a tidy Sh103 million was lost.

The scandal involved the bizarre and the naïve. Some of the schemes were as laughable as they were despicable.

The ministry paid Sh4.2 million for hiring laptops, LCD and public address system for workshops held in seven provinces to train headteachers and their deputies on managing instructional materials.

“All the seven coordinators of the seven regions were allocated Sh600,000 each for hire of laptops and LCDs. It was observed from the various surrenders that the officers attached receipts bearing the standard amount of Sh600,000,” says the report.

“During this period, the ministry had 52 laptops at the store. Verification from some of the venues has indicated that the attached receipts has been forged and the LCD and laptops has been provided by the institutions hosting the events.”

At an Eldoret school, a ‘Mama Uji’ walked away with Sh70,000 for selling porridge to ‘fundis’ putting up a nursery classroom.

An officer who had been given a government vehicle to travel to Mombasa from Nairobi had the audacity to include among the surrender documents a return-air ticket.

Another one alleged to have fuelled a bus belonging to Ramogi Institute of Technology (Riat), Sh24,000 yet the training was residential and nobody had used the bus.

Money also disappeared through new programmes launched by the ministry such as career guidance and counselling, sanitation and deworming, feeding, double-shift learning model, non-formal education, and mobile schools in arid lands and special needs education.

Source: Daily Nation

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