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Archive for January 14th, 2010

Wife’s memory spurs Camarillo man to open home for Kenyan orphans

Posted by jambonewspot on January 14, 2010

By Jeffrey Dransfeldt jdransfeldt@theacorn.com

BETTER LIFE—Larry Hines, right, visits in 2007 with Lucy, an orphan from Kenya, whom he and his wife, Nadine Griffey, began sponsoring eight years ago. Hines has helped Lucy and other Kenyan children better their lives by providing educational oppotunities through the nonprofit named in honor of his wife.

BETTER LIFE—Larry Hines, right, visits in 2007 with Lucy, an orphan from Kenya, whom he and his wife, Nadine Griffey, began sponsoring eight years ago. Hines has helped Lucy and other Kenyan children better their lives by providing educational oppotunities through the nonprofit named in honor of his wife.

Larry Hines continues to honor the memory of his late wife, Nadine Griffey, with his ongoing committment to further the pledge the Camarillo couple made eight years ago to help a young Kenyan girl.

Since his wife’s death in 2004, Hines has worked to transform the lives of a growing number of Kenyan orphans through the Nadine Griffey Academy of Kenya. The mission of the nonprofit is to help improve the education of childen in Nairobi.

How it started

It was 2002 when Hines and Griffey began supporting Lucy, a young girl living in the slums of Nairobi.

Two years later, Griffey, a longtime public school teacher, died after battling a chronic autoimmune disease.

Despite his personal loss, Hines knew his wife wouldn’t have wanted him to stop the humanitarian work they’d begun a few years earlier.

In 2005, Hines had the chance to visit Lucy for the first time. She was living in the Mathare slum in Nairobi with her aunt and eight other children in a small room with a dirt floor and lacking a door, a toilet, heat, light, furniture and water. He was moved to find a way to change her situation.

“You can’t solve all the problems of the world, but you can tackle a few of them,” he said.

Hines, an attorney, started the Nadine Griffey Academy of Kenya to help educate orphans in Nairobi.

Originally, he’d planned to build a boarding school to provide educational facilities as well as a home for orphans, but he ran into problems with the governmental approval process.

Instead he decided to create a home where children can stay between school terms. The academy’s board of directors will also sponsor orphans to attend already established private boarding schools in the Nairobi area.

The children will attend Musa Gitau Primary School, St. Elizabeth Academy or Madaraka Primary School. Students will be chosen with the help of Kenyan educators, who will look for determination and a willingness to learn. They will be educated from about fourth grade through high school, and possibly beyond.

Five children have already been selected, including Lucy, who attends St. Elizabeth, and her sister, Lydia.

Hines has made several visits to Nairobi on his quest to help educate young people.

“If you just gave them a ton of money, it would somehow get taken away from them or they would waste it, and it doesn’t change their view of things,” Hines said. “Only through education and putting them together with peers of people that will end up going to college . . . (will) you break the cycle.”

Griffey had always maintained a passion for education, said Hines. She worked for the Santa Paula School District from 1975 until her retirement in 2004.

“She loved teaching young kids,” Hines said. His wife’s passion inspired him to create the academy.

Video hits home

The nonprofit’s website has been updated with a 15-minute video that Hines made during his most recent trip to Nairobi.

“You can describe it all you want, and you can see still pictures, but movies help a little bit,” he said.

The academy’s board of directors is made up primarily of local educators with ties to Trinity Presbyterian Church of Camarillo. Board member Shirley Smithtro said the goal is to help transform the lives of the orphans so they don’t have to return to the slums.

“You don’t have any hope at all if you don’t have an education,” she said. “You have no skill set. You can’t read. You can’t write.”

The board members didn’t gain a complete understanding of the situation until five of them— Smithtro and her husband, Stan; Bob and Ruth Fraser; and Hines— went to Kenya in October.

Witnessing poverty

The group first visited the Mathare slum, which has an estimated population of 500,000.

“Some of the alleys between the houses are only wide enough for one person to walk through . . . (straddling) this sewage drain that’s going down under your feet,” Smithtro said. “I scrubbed (our) shoes with Clorox . . . when we got home.”

The smell had them breathing through their mouths during the visit, she said.

The rural impoverished areas they later saw weren’t much better. Smithtro said the classrooms were larger and more airy but lacked supplies. Her husband took a photo of her holding a soccer ball made out of plastic bags.

For lunch children ate beans cooked in huge pots and made porridge out of ground lentils, beans and soy. For many of the children, that was their only food for the day, with nothing to eat at home, Smithtro said.

“You can’t go to school and learn if you’re terribly hungry,” Hines said. “It just doesn’t work.”

Bathrooms consist of two little sheds, one for boys and one for girls, with holes in the floor.

Outside sits a bucket of water, but no soap.

The teachers are untrained and make $60 a month, Smithtro said.

“They really would love to get more education,” she said. “They have such passion for the children over there.”

The Smithtros sponsor a child, Karen, through Compassion International, a Christian childsponsorship organization. The couple spent a full day with Karen in Nairobi. “It changes your life when you actually can go there and you look at the face of poverty,” Smithtro said. “These sweet children—it just breaks your heart to know what they live in, and yet they’re happy.”

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Princess Caroline testifies in court over husband’s assault onKenyan hotelier

Posted by jambonewspot on January 14, 2010

HILDESHEIM, Germany: Princess Caroline of Monaco arrived at court yesterday to testify at the trial of her husband, Prince Ernst August of Hannover, who is charged with assaulting a hotel owner in Kenya.

Ernst August, 55, a distant relative of Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II and great-grandson of the last German emperor Wilhelm II, is being retried after being convicted in 2004 of causing serious bodily harm and fined R4 672 057.

Though he does not deny the assault, in the retrial Ernst August is seeking to have the charge and sentence reduced.

Caroline, 52, testified behind closed doors in a 2008 hearing that led to the retrial.

She was initially scheduled to testify in November but cancelled at the last minute, citing security concerns.

She agreed to yesterday’s appearance after the court guaranteed that media and others would be kept at least 3m away from her.

In the first trial, the court ruled that Ernst August had repeatedly hit Josef Brunlehner, owner of a hotel on Lamu Island, with a metal object in January, 2000, after becoming irritated at noise from a disco.

Ernst August claimed he only slapped Brunlehner.

Kenyan authorities did not arrest Ernst August after the incident, but it was pursued in Germany where the law allows prosecutors to charge citizens who commit crimes abroad.

The incident was not the first time Ernst August had a brush with the law.

Among other things, he was fined for attacking a German photographer in 1999 and had his driver’s license suspended for a month in 2003 for speeding on a French highway. – Sapa-AP

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US court to hear Kenya terror victims

Posted by jambonewspot on January 14, 2010

By KEVIN J KELLEY, The Citizen Correspondent, NEW YORK

It’s taken more than 11 years, but Kenyans harmed by the Nairobi embassy bombing will soon be able to present their case for compensation in a United States courtroom.

US federal Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly recently ruled that a trial should be held to determine whether some 700 Kenyan victims of the 1998 attack are entitled to damage payments.

Under the judge’s January 7 order, a small representative group of Kenyans would present arguments on why at least $11.3 million (Sh848m) in seized Al Qaeda assets should be used to compensate all those who joined in a lawsuit filed by Washington attorney Philip Musolino.

Judge Kollar-Kotelly’s ruling should be seen as a “procedural breakthrough” in the battle to compensate Kenyans maimed, bereaved or financially damaged by the destruction of the US embassy, Mr Musolino said. All previous efforts in the US legal system to gain monetary relief for the bomb victims had ended in failure.

Mr Musolino termed last weekend’s decision as “very encouraging,” and suggested that the trial could get under way in Washington by next September.

Judge Kollar-Kotelly ordered Mr Musolino to file a report by March 12 proposing procedures for the trial and indicate how many Kenyans may travel to the United States to take part.

Some complex legal issues remain to be addressed in the case, particularly the question of whether American, Kenyan or international law should apply. In accordance with Judge Kollar-Kotelly’s ruling, it will be up to a magistrate judge to determine how damages should be awarded.

Mr Musolino said he does not expect the Obama administration to oppose the effort to gain access to $11.3 million in Al Qaeda funds that had been blocked by the United States as of 2007. The attorney added that he may soon travel to Nairobi to arrange for a few of his clients to testify in the trial.

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Red Rock Resources testing latest samples from prospects at Migori gold project, Kenya

Posted by jambonewspot on January 14, 2010

Red Rock Resources (AIM: RRR) said that five diamond drill holes at the Macalder and Nyanza prospects at the Migori gold project in Kenya, drilled but never sampled by the previous operators, have been logged and samples over 498 metres have been prepared and sent for testing.

The holes, one at Macalder and four at Nyanza, total 801m. Percussion drilling for 358m in 32 holes has been completed on the mineralized Macalder tailings and are being prepared for multi-element and metallurgical testing, while 109m in four reverse circulation (RC) holes was also drilled before the end of 2009 at and near the gossan at Macalder, and samples prepared for testing.

The drilling programme has now resumed with deeper RC holes planned to intersect gold targets at the Gori Maria prospect and at Nawabisawa in the eastern license, which will also begin in January.

The company plans to revise the 43-101 resource estimate following receipt of the sampling results from the 2009 programme and will also incorporate results from the 2006-2007 drill programme.

Red Rock has recently upped its stake in Kansai Mining Corp, which owns the rights to the Migori gold project, to 35.2% to become the largest shareholder shortly after announcing its intention to enhance exposure to the Migori gold belt.

Migori comprises two contiguous special prospecting licenses, SP202 and SP122, covering an area of 310.5 square kilometres and situated in south western Kenya approximately 290 kilometres west of Nairobi.

The major zones comprise: the Kakula-Kalange-Munyu mineralization of 679,000 ounces of gold with over 22 million tonnes at approximately 1 gram per tonne of gold, where exploration fence drilling of more than 300 reverse circulation and diamond drilling holes has delineated this indicated resource; the  Gori Maria striking zones drilled by over 100 RC and DD holes for 8.6 Mt of 0.9 g/t gold and an indicated resource of 240,000 oz, and the MK and Nyanza zones, both having significant promise of hosting higher grade mineralization than the former two zones.

Red Rock is also expecting the listing of its 24.44% owned associate Resource Star Limited (ASX: RSL) in February, planning to convert A$490,000 of loans to RSL into new ordinary shares in the group which has assets in Australia’s Northern Territory as well as Malawi, at the offer price of A$0.20 per share.

Following the listing, Red Rock will be interested in 24.33% of RSL.

Shares in Red Rock rallied 7.5% in London morning deals.

Source: www.proactiveinvestors.co.uk

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