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Archive for June 29th, 2010

Mother of Eight Returns to Class to Fulfil Her Childhood Dreams

Posted by Administrator on June 29, 2010

Nairobi — A mother of eight has gone back to school hoping to re-invent her childhood dreams. Denied education by poverty and early marriage at the age of 16, Catherine Kiyeng has opted to give the dream another try by going back to primary school.

But the journey back to class has been another struggle. Her attempt to join school in Muchongoi, Baringo Central constituency, was frustrated by two schools, forcing her to try her luck in the neighbouring Laikipia West constituency.

“One school gave me hope and I had even bought uniform only to be given a negative answer after seven months,” she said. Kiyeng blames her rejection by the two schools in Muchongoi on cultural beliefs that have little regard for women. She was finally allowed to join Kirima Primary School in Gituamba Location of Nyahururu District — but not without conditions.

A teacher at the school, Ms Susan Njeri Waweru, said: “After she told us about her past tribulations we agreed to admit her on condition that she places herself at the same level as the young pupils”. Kirima Primary School fraternity is not regretting since Kiyeng has exhibited leadership roles among the pupils and inspired many at the school to take studies seriously.

“She ensures her class is not idle when a teacher is late. She takes other pupils through revision as they wait for the teacher to arrive,” said Ms Waweru. Ms Waweru said they also use Kiyeng to counsel other pupils or as an example of the need for hard work.

Ms Kiyeng, whose first born son sat for KCSE last year at Ayebo Secondary School says her return to school has also inspired her other children in primary school to study hard. “They are working hard to achieve better results than their mother,” she said adding that her daughter who is in class five in Tenges was not happy at all after she managed only position nine while she (Kiyeng) came first.

She has been top of her class ever since joining Standard Four last year. She is also among the top flyers in Gituamba Division. The 36-year-old pupil and school games enthusiast says mathematics, science and social studies are her favourite subjects.

Kiyeng hopes to become a lawyer and fight for a just society. Perhaps it’s because she has experienced abuses in her marriage. Born in a polygamous family in Tenges, Sacho Division of the then larger Baringo District, she briefly joined school but dropped out in Standard Two due to poverty.

She married and was a mother at age 16. The marriage turned out to be abusive and she had to walk out of it with the permission of her in-laws. She then worked as househelp and uprooted tree stamps to raise money for her son who had been threatened with expulsion due to lack of school fees.

“I uprooted three stamps at a farm in Kerenoi in Muchongoi and made Sh27,000 which I used to pay the fees for my son,” she said. Kiyeng attended a peace sporting event sponsored by the Administration Police Commandant, Mr Kinuthia Mbugua, at Kabel AP post recently, where she was a fatigue official for female athletes.

She was in the Kirima school choir that entertained guests and later joined other women to serve meals and drinks to guests. She said the urge to go back to school started in 1994. “I started feeling great admiration whenever I saw pupils in uniform and the urge to go back to school increased once I divorced,” she said. She struggles to raising money for rent by doing menial jobs.

-Daily Nation

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Is this love or business deal gone sour?

Posted by Administrator on June 29, 2010

Ms Rose Wanjiru Kogu with her seven-week-old baby leaves a Makadara Court in Nairobi on Tuesday last week. She has denied falsely obtaining Sh165,000 from Mr Ibrahim Ndung’u, the man she claims is her jilted lover out to harass her. Photo/ TOM MARUKO

Ms Rose Wanjiru Kogu with her seven-week-old baby leaves a Makadara Court in Nairobi on Tuesday last week. She has denied falsely obtaining Sh165,000 from Mr Ibrahim Ndung’u, the man she claims is her jilted lover out to harass her. Photo/ TOM MARUKO

By RICHARD MUNGUTI
Posted Monday, June 28 2010 at 21:28

A man a teacher claims is her jilted lover has filed four court cases and recorded complaints in five police stations against her over claims of a Sh165,000 business deal gone awry.

The woman says she severed the relationship in 2002 after six months. But whether it was romance or business, it sparked a police trail on Ms Rose Wanjiku Kogu, who has ended up spending nights in the cells of police stations in Rift Valley, Central, and Nairobi provinces over the past eight years.

Police station

Mr Ibrahim Ndirangu Ndung’u has filed cases against Ms Kogu in the courts in Nyeri, Makadara, Kajiado, and the Milimani Commercial Court. He has also recorded reports against the teacher at Jogoo Road and Kasarani police stations in Nairobi, Kahuro police station in Murang’a, Namanga police station in Kajiado, and Kiamachimbi police station in Nyeri.

Ms Kogu, through her lawyer, told the court that Mr Ndung’u has been using unscrupulous means to harass her over her choice to terminate their romantic relationship. But Mr Ndung’u told the court he was only after the money he claims he gave her in 2002.

The 37-year-old teacher and mother of two children aged four years and seven weeks, has faced suits ranging from robbery with violence, fraud, assault, to defamation — all stemming from the “unfulfilled contract of a clothes deal for new and mitumba (used) clothes”.

Ms Kogu, through her lawyers, has at various times complained to the AG’s office, the commissioner of police, and the CID director about what she believes is outright use of police officers to harass her over the broken relationship. When the violent robbery charge was filed, Ms Kogu complained to the AG.

The AG’s office conducted an independent investigation and found that the charge was founded on malice and directed Mr Ndung’u be charged. To date he hasn’t been charged. This week, Makadara resident magistrate D. Kinaro was told that the clothes were to be imported from Uganda.

Ms Kogu, who was arrested last year and charged with obtaining the Sh165,000 by pretence, has denied the charge. When Mr Ndung’u took to the witness stand last week he said he had opened a plethora of cases against the secondary school teacher to get back his money.

Ms Kogu, since married to Mr Charles Karue who formerly worked in Botswana, sat pensively, cuddling her seven-week-old baby as she watched her accuser riffle through a brown envelope to fish out a “clothes deal” contract they purportedly signed on September 13, 2002.

Remaining witnesses

She is out on a cash bail of Sh50,000, but has denied she defrauded Mr Ndung’u. The case will proceed on August 3. The prosecutor, Inspector Lilian Gichuhi, was ordered to summon all remaining witnesses that day. Court was told the two met at a bar in Nyeri and drank beer.

Ms Kogu, through her lawyer Mwangi Mugo, charged that Mr Ndung’u did not have any real claim and his was just to ensure “she will never be loved by any man. My instructions are that you are malicious and there is bad blood between you and Rose. She ditched you and got married to another man. That is why you have commenced all manner of cases against her from a capital one to civil”.

But Mr Ndung’u stuck to his guns: “No your honour. These cases stem from a collapsed contract between me and Ms Kogu. She failed to deliver to me clothes eight years ago after I gave her a cool Sh165,000.” Mr Mugo further grilled Mr Ndung’u: “You have filed all manner of complaints against the teacher. Is it true you filed a violent robbery claim against her at Kahuro police station Murang’a?” “Yes your honour, I filed the report after I was assaulted by students of Ndutumi Secondary School in Maragwa District.

“My relation with Rose was purely business. I’m a married man with children.” Asked why he had to wait from 2003 to 2009 to report about the alleged fraud at Jogoo police station, Mr Ndung’u told the court last Tuesday that she had “a godfather. A former officer at Murang’a could not allow any policeman to arrest and detain her. She was well shielded”.

Source: DAILY NATION

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Branding Kenya – A Hard Sale!

Posted by Administrator on June 29, 2010

    Photo Credits: Topi Lyambila

    Photo Credits: Topi Lyambila

    By: Kenya London News

     

    With hardly an enviable backdrop, Kenyans have been told they need to wake up to the reality of the times and find their feet before it is too late.  44 years after independence the country reputably the most stable economy in the region, still struggles to come to terms with the revelations that almost brought the nation to its knees in 2008’s post-election violence. 
    It is with this understanding however that Kenyans are determined to rebuild a country that has witnessed rampant corruption amid a fare share of inept political leadership.
    The responsibility to foresee this arduous task has fallen in the hands of the Brand Kenya Board (BKB) created under the instructions of His Excellency President Mwai Kibaki, and equally supported by the Rt. Hon. Prime Minister Raila Odinga. 
    Speaking at an invitational Diaspora Forum hosted at the Kenya High Commission Offices at 45 Portland Place on Friday, the Brand Kenya Board CEO, Mary Kimonye noted that the country needed branding, and their objective was to come up with a deliberate and well thought programme that defines our national identity, fosters social harmony and positions Kenya distinctively and impact fully on the  global arena in terms of: Investment, Sports, Leisure, Holiday, Residence, Icons, Culture/ Heritage, plus Products & Services. 
    Ms Kimonye who was accompanied by the International Brand Manager for BKB, Jacquie Muhati-Lukiri told the gathering that the London forum was one of the several planned meetings to involve the Diaspora Kenyans in the project.  The BKB team will soon visit the US and other areas where there are notable numbers of Kenyans in a bid to sensitize them on the issue at hand. 
    As part of their mandate; BKB are charged with;
  • Ensuring an integrated national brand is created, harnessed and sustained in the long term both nationally and internationally.

 

  • Nationally, build national identity and pride in every Kenyan.

 

  • Internationally, restore confidence in Kenya among investors, visitors, tourists and development partners.

 

The occasion host His Excellency Ephraim Ngare, Kenya’s High Commissioner to the UK applauded the efforts of BKB, saying the Government was behind them and that Kenyans in general both at home and abroad were looking keenly to see that the board achieved its aims in mobilizing and creating awareness as a way of enhancing nationalism among the people. 

In response the UK Kenyans challenged the team on several issues that they felt had been neglected by the country’s political leadership.  Perez Ochieng CEO of SACOMA International, a community based charity operating in the UK said Diaspora Kenyans had been continually discouraged by the lack of support by parent Ministries in Kenya when they tried to support those disadvantaged in society.  Pastor Odima, a preacher based in London posed the big question to the BKB team; “Is Kenya Saleable?”  The Pastor congratulated the team on their Endeavour noting that they ought to address the root course of the problems that have beleaguered Kenyans at home if they wanted to expand social cohesion. He said that in the past, we have had commissions charged with similar responsibilities of improving rapport among Kenyans without any success. 

Kamau Wainaina a Youth Programme Coordinator here in the UK, wanted to know the youth involvement and consideration in the BKB charter saying that on many occasions leaders claimed to be speaking and working on behalf of the youths when they did not understand the basic needs of the youth.  He sought clarification on the issue of Youth categorization.   

Macharia Gakuru, author of the Deya Biography, lamented the lack of recognition by the Government on professional input by those in the Diaspora and wanted to know if BKB had the necessary funding to support the international efforts expected to be carried out by Kenyans abroad. 

Photo Credits: Topi Lyambila

Photo Credits: Topi Lyambila

It also emerged that a cross section of Kenyans in the UK were not comfortable with the existing interpersonal relations between them and the High Commission, a factor that was seen as undermining any efforts to build a working relationship.

 

It was felt that disconnect comes largely because of the lack of continuous communication.  In the past all Kenyan Diplomatic Missions had a Press Attaché  who was responsible in not only ascertaining a positive image/relationship with the Kenyans in the respective countries, but also the International Community, Members of the mass media and other stake holders who from time to time engage with the Mission.   

The Diaspora Kenyans also noted the tendency within Government, to award Public Relation contracts to foreigners who knew very little or cared less about Kenya.   

Ms Kimonye told the meeting that all their concerns were carefully noted by the BKB team and would be dealt with accordingly, as the main purpose of the forum was to seek views on how to build Brand Kenya.  She further noted that in principle;  

  • Kenyans need to regain their hope, confidence and pride in themselves and in the future prospects of their country.
  • Kenyans need to jointly work on initiatives to recognize and appreciate the strength of our diversity.
  • We need to work on a national image and identity that serves as a focal point for harnessing the  energy, warmth and entrepreneurial spirit of our people
  • The country needs to develop a set of national values, and initiatives to enhance social harmony, cohesion and peaceful co-existence.

 

Reiterating the BKB Promise

  • To build a strong country brand that fosters national pride and patriotism and earns global recognition and preference.
  • To instill in every Kenyan national pride and foster international confidence in the country by providing a competitively prosperous and stable environment  to all our stakeholders;
  • To Kenyans; a country that is safe and free to live work, exploit their diverse talents and realize their full potential.
  • To investors; a supportive and enabling business environment
  • Foreigners; an exciting safe, friendly destination to visit, live and holiday.

 

    This is certainly a major undertaking that BKB is handling, and will need more than sheer patriotism.  The team is aware of the existing differences among the Kenyan people based on tribal differences, political sectioning, some of which are openly practiced in public offices in the country.  It was also pointed out that these differences exist even among those in the Diaspora. 
    It is with this background that one speaker echoed the need to examine ourselves with brutal honesty if we are to achieve the very ambitious goals set out in the BKB Charter.

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