Habari Za Nyumbani–on jambonewspot.com

Visit www.jambonewspot.com…..your community website for more

Archive for July 14th, 2010

Kenyan woman killed in Hillsborough NJ crash

Posted by Administrator on July 14, 2010

 
Mrs Veronica Kuria who died in a car crash in New Jersey
Mrs Veronica Kuria who died in a car crash in New Jersey

A Manville woman died following a two-car crash on Route 206 and Mountain View Road in Hillsborough Sunday night, with the investigation closing the road for about four hours, Hillsborough Township Police said.

Veronica Kuria, 37, of South 20th Avenue in Manville, was pronounced dead at Somerset Medical Center following the 7:58 p.m. crash Sunday. Police are still investigating the crash, and could not say whether Ms. Kuria’s death resulted from it.
Alcohol is not believed to have been a factor, Hillsborough Township Police Chief Paul Kaminsky said. A second driver, James Ohe, 50, of Belle Mead, was transported to Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital for a broken leg and other moderate injuries from the crash, he added.
According to police, Ms. Kuria was driving north on Route 206 when her Toyota Camry crossed into oncoming traffic and collided with a Chevy Trailblazer that Mr. Ohe was driving south. When police and rescue personnel arrived at the scene, Ms. Kuria was
found to be unconscious and trapped in the vehicle.
The Hillsborough Rescue Squad and the Somerset Medical Center Paramedics reported using the Jaws of Life to extract Ms. Kuria from the vehicle, and began CPR during the extrication, Chief Kaminsky said. Though the New Jersey State Police’s Northstar
medical helicopter had reported to the scene, Ms. Kuria was transported to Somerset Medical Center by ambulance. She was pronounced dead at the hospital.
The Hillsborough Township Police and Somerset County Prosecutor’s Office Collision Analysis and Reconstruction Team conducted an investigation of the crash site, which closed Route 206 for about four hours. The Hillsborough Township Police, Fire Company No. 2, Rescue Squad, the New Jersey State Police Northstar medical helicopter, Somerset Medical Center Paramedics,
Somerset County Prosecutor’s Office Collision Analysis and Reconstruction Team, and the New Jersey Department of Transportation responded to the scene.

Source: CentralJersey.com

======================================================================================

A major fundraising toward the funeral arrangements for Veronica, will take place this Saturday July 17th at her family residence, 158 S 20th Avenue, Manville NJ 08835.
The function will start at 4pm.
Please come help with the finances to transport the late Veronica to Kenya for burial.
Family and friends continue to meet in Manville daily for prayer and worship.

Contributions can also be deposited in:
Bank of America
account #: 381015554671

For further information please contact one of the following people:

1. Paul Kuria Njoroge, 908-616-7272         
2. Phyllis Mathangani of Delaware: 732-331-9278

3. Mary Ndura (Mama Kiburi) of Delaware,
4. Mary Kahonu (Mama Gathuru) of New Jersey, 908-803-8234
5. Titus Gathii (Baba Gathii) of New Jersey, 732-447-4764
6. Nellie Nthisa of New Jersey, 908-331-1961
7. Ephraim Kihara Kairu (Baba Kairu) of New Jersey: 732-725-2149
8. Paul Wanjau (Baba Gichuhi) of New Jersey, 908-764-4738
9. Serah Mugambi (Baba Marcus) of New Jersey 908-812-7965
10. Mercy Gachai of Manville New Jersey 908-248-7328

Thank you for your prayers and support at this difficult time.

Posted in Announcements, Obituaries | 4 Comments »

No more ‘spying’ on passports

Posted by Administrator on July 14, 2010

Wananchi wait to see off relatives at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport. NSIS will no longer be involved in passport processing. Photo/FILE

Wananchi wait to see off relatives at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport. NSIS will no longer be involved in passport processing. Photo/FILE

By SAMUEL SIRINGI

The spy agency’s role in passport processing is to be abolished as the government seeks to streamline issuance of the crucial documents.

It will also be treasonable for anyone to corruptly issue or obtain Kenyan citizenship.

In new measures meant to speed up the process of issuing passports, work permits and citizenship, the Immigrations ministry plans to kick out the National Security Intelligence Service (NSIS) from the process.

The move is also intended to eliminate corruption. Currently, the spy agency conducts general vetting of applicants for passports.

According to the plan, the agency will only be allowed to regularly provide a watch-list of people who are classified as a security risk.

“This will avert issuance of passports, visas and other travel documents to undesirable people,” according to the new measures contained in a document authored by Immigration permanent secretary Emmanuel Kisonga.

This is a big blow to the agency, which has also be criticised over claims that it was behind the illegal alteration of the proposed constitution.

According to the new plan by the Immigration ministry headed by Mr Otieno Kajwang’, an audit of all foreigners who have been issued with Kenyan citizenship would be conducted.

All documents found to have been fraudulently acquired will be cancelled. On a quarterly basis, Mr Kisonga said, names of people issued with Kenyan citizenship and work permits would be published in the Kenya Gazette.

Source: Daily Nation

Posted in Immigration, Kenya | Comments Off

FBI agents take suspects’ heads

Posted by Administrator on July 14, 2010

By Steven Candia, Suzan Kitooke, Herbert Ssempogo and Agencies

A suicide bomber carried out one of the twin bomb attacks that killed 74 people in the city as they watched the World Cup final on Sunday, security agencies said yesterday.

State minister for internal affairs Matia Kasaija said the security agencies had established that the Kabalagala blast was executed by a suicide bomber.

He, however, said it is not yet clear whether the Kyadondo rugby club blast, moments after the Kabalagala attack, was also carried out by a suicide bomber.

“The Kabalagala incident has been confirmed that it was carried out by a suicide bomber. However, the Kyadondo incident was similar but we are not 100 percent sure,” the minister said in a phone interview yesterday.

Two heads believed to be of Somalis suspected to be suicide bombers were recovered from Kabalagala and the rugby club in Lugogo moments after the grisly incidents.

The heads were taken away from the city mortuary by the American intelligence agency, FBI, on Monday evening for further investigations, sources said.

“There is nothing strange about that. There is a purpose and it is part of the investigations,” Kasaija explained.
About four FBI operatives arrived at the mortuary at about 5:00pm and left shortly after with the heads in bags to see if they match records of other terrorists, sources said. The heads were delivered to the city mortuary on Monday after the blasts.

It is not clear where they took the heads, but sources said the FBI and local investigators were concerned about the identity of the heads.

“If two of the three explosions were set off by suicide bombers, how do you explain the third explosion,” the source said. By the time the FBI took the heads, they were still recognisable.

However, speaking at the Media Centre yesterday, Dr. Byaruhanga said the heads were taken for DNA and other forensic tests.

Addressing journalists at the same centre yesterday, Police spokesperson Judith Nabakooba said the Force had arrested six suspects in connection with the blasts.

The Police on Wednesday arrested a man suspected to be a Somali, Shafique Abdulnoor, who was reportedly found loitering in Katwe, a Kampala suburb.

Abdulnoor, who was detained at Katwe Police Station, did not have identification documents, a source said, adding that he crossed into Uganda via Kenya. He had a bag that contained shoes.

INTERPOL team flies in

Meanwhile, International Police (Interpol) said on Monday it would send a team to Uganda to beef up the investigations.

Secretary general Ronald Noble described the attack as “despicable and cowardly”. He said Police chief Kale Kayihura requested for the assistance.
“This attack on innocent victims who had simply gone out to enjoy the World Cup must be condemned in the strongest possible terms and those behind it can only be regarded as cowardly,” Noble said in a statement on Interpol’s website.

He said Interpol would provide on-site support for the investigators.
Kenyan anti-terror experts
The announcement comes after Kenyan anti-terrorism experts arrived on Tuesday.

“We also have teams from the USA, the UK and other countries. They are here working,” Kasaija said.

Death toll revised down

Speaking at the Media Centre briefing, the Ugandan Police doctor, Moses Byaruhanga, said the death toll had been reduced from 76 to 74.

He said the bodies of other people who died of other causes had been included by error.

He said the city mortuary had handled 71 bodies from the blasts––50 of them men and 19 women. He also gave their nationalties.

Two heads were unidentified, he said.
Al-Qaeda inspired Somalia-based militants, al-Shabaab, claimed responsibility for the attacks.

An unexploded suicide vest was recovered at Ice-Link Discotheque in Makindye, which should have been the third strike.

While al-Shabaab claimed responsibility, Kayihura pointed a finger at the ADF rebels.

But they denied involvement.

Source: New Vision

Posted in Africa | Comments Off

100-year-old man finally tells his wife: ‘I do’

Posted by Administrator on July 14, 2010

Fr Christopher Wafula of the Tongaren parish of the Catholic Church bonds newly weds Abraham Wabwoba and Sarah, during their wedding ceremony on July 2 at their Tabani home in Kitale. Abraham, who is 100 years old, beat his age restrictions to show love for his wife of 42 years. Photo/AGGREY MUTAMBO

Fr Christopher Wafula of the Tongaren parish of the Catholic Church bonds newly weds Abraham Wabwoba and Sarah, during their wedding ceremony on July 2 at their Tabani home in Kitale. Abraham, who is 100 years old, beat his age restrictions to show love for his wife of 42 years. Photo/AGGREY MUTAMBO

By AGGREY MUTAMBO

One hundred years since his birth in 1910, Abraham Wabwoba is still with us and in love with his wife of 42 years. He has seen two World Wars, lived through 18 World Cup finals and two global economic depressions.

A fortnight ago, Mzee Wabwoba surprised his sleepy village of Tabani near Kitale by walking his wife Sarah down the aisle. For a man well beyond the expected limits of romantic feelings, many consider it unusual to have a wedding anniversary, let alone a marriage ceremony.

So when the Tongaren Parish of the Catholic Church announced that Abraham would wed, it was not a normal happening. Villagers thought it was a waste of time, since Abraham was already customarily married. Moreover, at 100, they really didn’t understand why he was keen on a church wedding.

The man, though frail, would hear none of it. So the church put up a tent in his home to conduct the ceremony. Abraham still has a strong eyesight, and he easily picked out his wife from the congregation. And even as he supported himself on a wooden pole and struggled to take the vows after the priest, he was emphatic: “Sarah is still in my heart. I see no one else.”

Fr Christopher Wafula who conducted the ceremony, likened the two love birds to a car “whose ownership is known, through the plate numbers”. While reports indicate that 28,000 couples exchange vows every year in Kenya, a survey published in the Saturday Nation last month warned that many unions were crumbling.

For Abraham, it is the desire to live by the teachings of the Bible that culminated in his wedding. In Genesis 2:21-24, God commands man to leave his home and form a union with his wife forever. Initially, the church declined to formalise the union. Polygamous unions are not allowed by the Catholic Church. But when his elder wife died in 2002, the doors were open for him to wed in church.

Exchanging vows before more than 100 great grandchildren, it was evident that the couple had beaten many odds to protect the institution of marriage. Abraham was already married to his first wife when Sarah was born, and had a son. His second wife died during child birth.

And now, after years of banking on a culture that binds by bride price, the two have rings and a certificate as proof of marriage. “She understands me. She has been like my sister and friend,” Mzee Wabwoba said. According to his eldest grandson Patrick Wekesa, the man has had six children with his wedded wife and has been healthy.

Kenya has only a handful of people aged 100 years and above. Most of them would be living in their relatives’ homes or old age care centres. But Abraham has always lived in his house, and raised a united family. Abraham, who worked as a porter during the Second World War, spent much of his time away from home.

According to Fr Wafula, today’s marriages are “contract”. Abraham’s and Sarah’s union will be a constant reminder to Kitale residents that marriage is indeed a commitment.

Source: Daily Nation

Posted in Features | Comments Off

 
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 153 other followers