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Archive for July, 2010

Raped and left for dead by ‘security’ escort

Posted by Administrator on July 27, 2010

Curious: Members of the public peep into a police vehicle to view the body of a woman who was raped and killed at Kambi Nguruwe in Langas Estate, Eldoret Town. PHOTO/ FILE

Curious: Members of the public peep into a police vehicle to view the body of a woman who was raped and killed at Kambi Nguruwe in Langas Estate, Eldoret Town. PHOTO/ FILE

By Walter Menya

The three hour rape at the hands of the very people who were supposed to protect her can never get out of Mary’s (real name withheld) memory no matter how hard she tries.

Tears have become a common feature in her life since that night of Friday, April 2, when two night guards she had hired to escort her raped her and left her for dead in Ngara.

Regained consciousness

It was Saturday at 1am when she regained consciousness. A Good Samaritan took her to Guru Nanak Hospital. The staff referred her to Blue House Clinic which deals with Sexual and Gender Based Violence in Mathare slums.

She was treated at the clinic run by Medecins Sans Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders). She is still under treatment.

Mr Michael Njuguna, a social worker at the clinic, recounts Mary’s condition when he brought her in. “I got a phone call, called for a taxi to the place.

“I saw a traumatised lady crying and blaming herself. Her self-esteem was gone.”

Mary’s ordeal is hardly an isolated case in Nairobi’s slums. A 2010 Amnesty International study shows that more than half the women in slums have experienced physical, sexual or psychological violence.

The report, Insecurity and Indignity: Women’s Experiences in the Slums of Nairobi, found that perpetrators of these abuses include youth gangs, intimate partners, family members, employers and security personnel.

The study was conducted in Kibera, Mathare, Korogocho, Mukuru kwa Njenga and Korogocho slums between November 2009 and February 2010.

The situation is compounded by the lack of police presence in the slums. For instance, Kibera with a population of close to a million people does not have a single police station, Amnesty says in the report.

Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) opened Blue House in June 2001 to offer integrated HIV and TB care in Mathare slums.

Following the post-election violence in December 2007, sexual violence has become the daily challenge the medical staff have to contend with. They now operate 24-hours.

MSF treats between 20 and 40 survivors every month, many of them children.

Clinical officer Subayla Aboud said: “It is sometimes overwhelming. We have seen an 86-year-old woman and a six-month-old baby brought here after they were raped. But girls of school-going age tend to be more,” she added.

As she speaks, about 15 girls play outside awaiting their turn with Ms Subayla. They are victims of rape who have come for follow- up services. Some of them, Ms Subayla says, had contracted Aids and have been placed on the clinic’s HIV and TB care.

Source: Daily Nation

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Joy as Kenya youths beat track bigwigs USA

Posted by Administrator on July 27, 2010

David Mutinda Mutua of Kenya, celebrates finishing first in the 800 Metres Final on day seven of the 13th IAAF World Junior Championships at the Stade Moncton 2010 Stadium on July 25, 2010 in Moncton, Canada. PHOTO/AFP

David Mutinda Mutua of Kenya, celebrates finishing first in the 800 Metres Final on day seven of the 13th IAAF World Junior Championships at the Stade Moncton 2010 Stadium on July 25, 2010 in Moncton, Canada. PHOTO/AFP

On the final day of the World Junior Athletics Championships that ended in Moncton Canada, USA were all packing their bags, having won the overall title.

Both Kenya and USA were tied on gold — six apiece. But when David Mutinda Mutua returned first after one minute 46.41 seconds in the men’s 800m final, Kenya had just snatched the title, a third time in the championship’s history.

“We are very happy with the runners,” said an elated Isaiah Kiplagat, the Athletics Kenya chairman.

Retaining steeplechase

The event will be remembered for the retaining of the 3000m flat and 3000m steeplechase by Mercy Cherono and Jonathan Ndiku.

Mercy made history to become the first woman to retain a World Junior championship title over the 3000m distance when she earned Kenya its first medal on the first day.

Ndiku, 19, was a superb winner of the men’s 3000m steeplechase final, clocking 8:23.48. He became the first man to win back-to-back steeplechase titles in the World Junior race and his country’s 12th title.

“This race is our culture. It’s a Kenyan race,” he said.

Cherono not only clinched her fourth junior medal in youth and junior championship, but did it in style to set the world’s fastest time this season over the age group category — 8:55.07.

Source: Daily Nation

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Men saved from sex organ disease

Posted by Administrator on July 27, 2010

File | NATION Surgeons carry out an operation on a patient suffering from a heart disease. Surgery on Coast men infected with lymphatic filariasis has given them a new lease of life.

File | NATION Surgeons carry out an operation on a patient suffering from a heart disease. Surgery on Coast men infected with lymphatic filariasis has given them a new lease of life.

By MAZERA NDURYA mdurya@ke.nationmedia.com and BOZO JENJE bjenje@ke.nationmedia.com

Timely intervention has given a new lease of life to thousands of men in Coast Province who have been walking in the shadow of a debilitating disease targeting male sex organs.

Lymphatic filariasis, a parasitic disease that causes the scrotum to swell enormously, has been a nightmare for men in Kwale, Mombasa, Malindi, Kilifi, Kaloleni, Tana River and Lamu districts.

But even as the disease continues to stalk thousands, a joint initiative by the government, World Health Organisation and MAP International has offered surgical procedures that have eliminated the grotesque condition.

For 53-year-old Kadzitu Kambi, of Kinarani village in Kaloleni District, things changed for the worse when a small itchy spot on his scrotum slowly but painfully developed into a gross swelling.

Walking became a problem for the father of three, who was once energetic and active. It was also difficult for him to do the tasks he used to perform to earn a living for the family.

Although he had seen this condition in other men in the area, where it is estimated that more than 40,000 people suffer from lymphatic filariasis infection, it never occurred to him that he would be included in the statistics.

“The gross swelling on my private part gave me psychological trauma. I used to be teased and ridiculed. I am a football player but became a mere spectator due to the ugly swelling,” he said.

His wife put up with the situation before the operation that restored his normal being.

Told to leave him

“I was told to leave him and get married to another man but I chose to stick with him because when my husband married me he was normal. I chose to suffer in silence with him until help came from an organisation that conducted successful operations,” said Mr Kambi’s wife.

The wife of another patient, Mr Safari Mudzomba, said: “I was always ashamed and uncomfortable walking with him because he could not wear trousers due to the swelling. This frustrated me so much and could not stand the ridicule.”

The condition also affected the productivity of Mr Muhambi Nditwa, a 50-year-old labourer who used to harvest sand near River Nzovuni.

“I used to be very active but with the progression of the disease I could not move swiftly as I used to. Finally, my productivity decreased. I could not work as hard as before and, as a result, my income declined, contributing to my poverty,” he said.

Commenting on the disease, the MAP International country director, Dr Julius Kavuludi, said: “Because of its prevalence, often in rural areas, lymphatic filariasis is primarily a disease of the poor. It has steadily increased due to poverty. As many patients are physically incapacitated, it prevents them from having a normal working life.”

MAP International has organised surgical operations for those with the condition in a campaign called ‘Operation Restore Hope’.

Today Mr Kambi, Mr Mudzomba and Mr Nditwa, who are among the 130 beneficiaries of the surgeries in the last two years, are telling a different story of hope.

“We now have high hopes to pick up once again and move on to fend for our families,” they said.

Cannot afford treatment

According to Mr Safari Ngowa, the programme manager of MAP International, most of the patients operated on had been living with the condition for more than 15 years and could not afford the treatment. One operation costs about Sh20,000.

MAP International chief executive officer Michael Nyenhuis said: “It is gratifying to see a person who was helpless some few years ago now able to take his tools and get back to work and earn a living instead of being an object of pity and ridicule.”

“The 130 people who have been successfully operated on are a living example of what good health can transform lives of a people who can access basic needs such as food, clothing, education and shelter,” he added.

Source: Daily Nation

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Kenyan man passes away in North Carolina

Posted by Administrator on July 27, 2010

The Late Mr. Samuel Njenga Njuguna who passed away in Durham, NC

The Late Mr. Samuel Njenga Njuguna who passed away in Durham, NC

Mr. Samuel Njenga Njuguna passed away suddenly in North Carolina on Tuesday July 20th after a long illness. He is survived by his wife Esther, his children Diana, Ann-Brenda, and Brian.

Samuel was diagnosed with metastatic lung cancer in August of 2009. He received treatments from Regional Cancer center, with multiple hospitalizations between Durham regional and Duke Hospitals in the past year. He has borne the diagnosis with great endurance and his faith in God as well as tremendous support from his Durham Dayspring fellowship church and the Kenyan community.

On July 20th, he went to meet his maker and was healed of all of the earthly suffering and pain. He was brother to Joseph Gitu, Priscilla Njeri, Geoffrey Waihenya, Margaret Wanjiru Wakaba, Beth Wairimu, Paul Kamau, Ibrahim Macharia, and Jane Njoki all in Kenya. He has many aunties, uncles, cousins, nephews and nieces and grand-children in Kenya and other countries.

He was born in Nyanduma location in Kiambu district to the late Paul Njuguna Gitu and Late Hannah Nyambura Njuguna. He was educated and brought up by his uncle and aunt Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Githu Waihenya. He attended Nyeri high school and Kenyatta University.

He has worked as a teacher at Gathaithi secondary, Kinale high school, and Githiga high school at different capacities. He relocated to the US in 2003 where he has lived and worked until his passing. Family and friends are meeting in Durham NC in preparation for funeral arrangements.

Donations towards this may be sent to Acc# given below. Burial will take place in Durham NC on July 30th starting at noon to 4pm. He will be greatly missed by his family and all who came into contact with him.

Sam loved to make jokes and help others. He was easily liked by those who interacted with him. He is also credited for being a hard worker and committed to the welfare of his immediate and extended family and community. Again for this, he will be greatly missed. God gives and God takes away. MAY HIS NAME BE PRAISED.

Contact information:

Esther Njenga: 919-4795168

Acc# 1000114299349 (SunTrust Bank)

Routing No. 053100465

Account name: Esther Njenga

Posted in Meetings-Invitations | 5 Comments »

Anglo Leasing probe gains fresh impetus

Posted by Administrator on July 27, 2010

Kenya Anti-Corruption Commission director PLO Lumumba (right) gestures during a media briefing at Integrity Centre on July 26, 2010. Investigations into the Anglo-Leasing fraud, estimated to have cost the taxpayer nearly Sh200 billion, began in 2007. Photo/LIZ MUTHONI

Kenya Anti-Corruption Commission director PLO Lumumba (right) gestures during a media briefing at Integrity Centre on July 26, 2010. Investigations into the Anglo-Leasing fraud, estimated to have cost the taxpayer nearly Sh200 billion, began in 2007. Photo/LIZ MUTHONI

By Mwaura Kimani

Efforts to recover the billions of shillings lost in security contracts commonly known as Anglo-Leasing got a new lease of life on Friday after the Court of Appeal gave the corruption watchdog the green light to involve foreign governments in investigations.

Judges RSC Omollo, Samuel Bosire and Phillip Waki cleared the way for the Kenya Anti-Corruption Commission (KACC) to seek help from the Swiss government in its pursuit of the suspects, nearly three years after the investigations began.

KACC had appealed against a High Court order barring it from getting the Swiss government’s help in the scandal estimated to have cost the tax payer more than Sh600 million.

But the Court of Appeal found that the lower court had erred in finding that the corruption watchdog cannot investigate First Mercantile Limited, a Swiss firm that got a government tender to help the Postal Corporation of Kenya (PCK) buy telecoms equipment at a cost of Sh1 billion.

Treasury had paid First Mercantile Sh600 million for the deal signed in 2002 but stopped in 2005, forcing the Swiss firm to seek redress in a Geneva court.

Three years ago, First Mercantile obtained a court order blocking KACC from seeking mutual legal assistance from Switzerland’s Federal Office of Justice and Police to investigate the case.

The Swiss firm had argued that such assistance would amount to opening parallel investigations into a matter that was already before the court in Geneva, a position that the Kenyan High Court affirmed in a 2007 judgement.

KACC responded to the judgement with an appeal that ended last week with the verdict that it can, in fact, seek the assistance of the Swiss authorities to pursue the suspects.

On Monday, KACC termed the latest decision a big step in the fight against corruption that clears the way for it to involve foreign authorities in its investigation of bank accounts, inquiries and interviews.

It also allows the corruption watchdog to seek similar help in the execution of warrants authorising seizure of documents and equipment and freezing of assets.

“It clears the way for KACC to pursue the Anglo-Leasing type cases and conclusively bring the perpetrators to book,” said KACC advisory board chairman Okong’o O’Mogeni. “KACC is holding a lot of information on the deals but the court order had meant that it cannot use them for investigations and possible prosecutions,” said Mr O’Mogeni.

Investigations into the Anglo-Leasing fraud, estimated to have cost the taxpayer nearly Sh200 billion, began in 2007 but no stolen funds have been recovered.

The involvement of foreign governments in the pursuit of suspects in similar cases has yielded more striking results in other African countries.

Information-sharing between the British and Nigerian agencies, for instance, saw more than £35 million worth of assets frozen in the UK, and more than £5 million repatriated to Nigeria.

Legal challenges at home and abroad have however prevented Kenyan authorities from seeking similar assistance making the Court of Appeal’s decision critical.

Lawyers said the judgement opens a fresh window for quick investigation and determination of pending corruption cases.

“Some of these cases commenced more than six years ago — a statement of how slow our criminal justice system is,” said Philip Murgor, a senior partner at Murgor & Murgor Advocates.

Business leaders and anti-corruption crusaders said Kenya’s fight against graft has suffered near paralysis due to a faltering political commitment and misuse of court process to frustrate justice.

“We still have a long way to go to eliminate corruption,” said Mr Patrick Obath, the chairman of the Kenya Private Sector Alliance (Kepsa). “Until we systematically fight corruption by successfully prosecuting offenders, we won’t achieve much,” he said.

The Anglo Leasing series of contracts were mostly signed in 2002 when the Kenyan government decided to replace its passport printing system.

The tender was originally quoted at Sh588 million but was awarded to a non-existent British firm, Anglo Leasing Finance, at a price of Sh2.9 billion.

Investigations into the scandal, which resulted in the resignation of the then Finance minister David Mwiraria and dismissal of three top civil servants, uncovered 17 other security contracts in which the government had either paid out billions of shillings to bogus overseas contractors, had been grossly overcharged or had signed contracts that left the taxpayer at a disadvantage.

Public outcry forced the government to cancel the contracts but some of the contractors sued the government or the Kenyan authorities for breach of contract.

Kenya remains one of the most corrupt countries in Africa, according Transparency International, which ranked the country the third most corrupt nation in the five- member East Africa Community, citing high level of corruption in the public sector.

Many Kenyans believe success of Kenya’s anti-corruption machinery is bound to be judged on the basis of the return on investment to the taxpayers in terms of recovery of stolen public assets, the number of high profile convictions and the deterrence force of the institution in fighting corruption.

“The ruling by the Appeal Judges is testimony to the fact that something is happening on Anglo Leasing cases,” said Patrick Lumumba, the new director at KACC.

The ruling also gives KACC powers to seek MLA without reference to the AG.

Previously, KACC had to seek the AG’s support in seeking assistance with any foreign government or bodies, under the Anti-Corruption and Economic Crimes Act, 2003.

“The AG must push for the passing of the Mutual Legal Assistance Bill so that he too can be on the same or better position than that of KACC,” said the ruling by the three Judges issued on July 16, 2010.

The Mutual Legal Assistance Bill which was introduced in Parliament in May last year is still awaiting debate in the House.

Mutual Legal Assistance (MLA) is the formal way in which countries request and provides assistance in obtaining evidence located in one country.

Source: Business Daily

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They’ll drink on, come death or blindness

Posted by Administrator on July 27, 2010

 

38 -year old Samwel Khamati lost his sight after taking illicit brew at Nairobi's Kibera slums on Sunday. PHOTO/ PETERSON GITHAIGA

38 -year old Samwel Khamati lost his sight after taking illicit brew at Nairobi's Kibera slums on Sunday. PHOTO/ PETERSON GITHAIGA

By John Ngirachu

The poison comes in various names— koroga, naps, mugacha, steam engine. It kills some and blinds others. It creates widows, widowers and orphans.

Yet, they are hooked to it. Every morning, the survivors are back for some more. This is the sad story of Kenya’s wretched of the earth in slums like Kibera.

Ms Janet Wanjiku usually has her first drink of the day at 6.30am.

She calls it kutoa lock or kuvunja mhead and says it gives her the energy to go about her job as a casual worker at Highrise Estate, where she gets small jobs washing clothes.

Koroga poison

A glass of her favourite koroga poison goes for Sh30, she says, and one is often shared between two, under an arrangement referred to as “half-time”.

“My hands shake, I get dizzy and I feel abnormal. I cannot do anything in the morning if I haven’t had anything to drink,” she told the Nation at Line Saba in Kibera on Monday morning.

On Sunday morning, she headed to a house she referred to as Kwa Wa Kapere and had her usual dose of koroga, which she said is also used to make another drink popularly known as naps.

She left the place at about 8am in the company of her boyfriend, Mr Gachie Njeri, and they went back to her small house in Soweto, another part of Kibera.

Shortly after they got home, Mr Gachie started sweating and pacing about the room, displaying more than the usual signs of drunkenness and complaining that he was not well.

In a panic, Janet tried calling out to her neighbours and landlord to come to the rescue of Mr Gachie. She said nobody came to help and she went about her business the whole day in a drunken stupor and went to bed when night came.

In the morning after sobering up a little, she realised that Mr Gachie had died in the night, one of the 12 latest victims of the illicit liquor.

One would imagine that the deaths would inspire her and others to stop the habit, or only consume beverage tested by the authorities and proved to be safe. It does not happen in Kibera.

On Monday morning, Wanjiku had taken something to steady herself. Leo nimekunywa mugacha (Today I have taken mugacha), she declared.

Mugacha is a cream-coloured liquid whose ingredients we could not establish.

Mr Daniel Kinyua, a casual worker at Kenyatta Market in Ngumo Estate, said: “We drink daily, and it does not matter whether it is chang’aa or mugacha as long as it gets us drunk.”

He blew his breath as though to prove to the Nation that he had already had his morning fix.

Methanol poisoning

Dr Adung’o Ikol of Kenyatta National Hospital said six patients had been treated for methanol poisoning and four had died.

Mr James Mwangi and Mr Joseph Kariuki went to the hospital when they were told of the deaths of their drinking companions.

They appeared to have either taken less than their dead colleagues or sought treatment in good time, before the methanol could be broken down into formic acid, which leads to blindness and death.

In the slum, 38-year-old Samuel Khamati stood in a doorway, blind but with teary eyes wide open but unseeing, even as the camera flashed in his face.

“I want to go to the hospital but I don’t know how I will,” he said. He had taken the drink at a place called Gorofani kwa Wangechi and lost sight later in the day after feeling dizzy, experiencing headache and sweating unusually.

Although she was fine, Wangari Wanjiku told the Nation she had also taken the lethal drink. This was in the course of Sunday, she said, and there had been nothing unusual about it.

She was reluctantly contemplating going to Mbagathi District Hospital for a check-up.

Source: Daily Nation

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WikiLeaks Founder: Kenya report leak influenced 2007 Kenya poll

Posted by Administrator on July 26, 2010

 

Julian Assange, founder of Wikileaks claims his leak of the Kroll report shifted the 2007 Kenya poll

Julian Assange, founder of Wikileaks claims his leak of the Kroll report shifted the 2007 Kenya poll

By ANTONY KARANJA

The leaked Kroll report may have shifted the 2008 general elections in Kenya, an online whistleblowing activist claimed on Monday.

Julian Assange the most talked about man in the US media today is credited with leaking the report which highlighted massive looting of state coffers during the regime of former president Daniel Arap Moi.
Australian born Assange is the Editor-in-Chief of WikiLeaks a website that collects and posts highly classified documents and videos online. His website has sparked a heated debate on how much the public should know after classified Afghan war documents were posted on the site with the White House saying that this has a potential to harm America’s military.
In 2003, according to Mr Assange who was speaking in a Technology, Entertainment and Design (TED) conference, the then newly elected government of Mwai Kibaki commissioned the Kroll investigation shortly after his election on an anti-corruption platform. The report was handed over to the Kenyan government in 2004 a fact that was confirmed in 2007 by the government spokesman Alfred Mutua. However Mr. Mutua dubbed the report as “incomplete and inaccurate and based on a lot of hearsay.”

Mr Assange said he went to Kenya in 2007 and was able to get hold of the report just prior to the December elections. He said that he released the report three days after Moi had announced his support of President Kibaki’s re-election bid.

This association between the two made it difficult for the Kibaki to release the damaging report and according to Assange it became “a dead albatross around president Kibaki’s neck.” Moi drummed up support for Kibaki in the Rift Valley area.
In October 2007, the then ODM presidential candidate Raila Odinga claimed that the Kroll report was being withheld by the government to bait Moi into backing President Kibaki for a second term.
The activist points out that details of the report however became front page news in the Guardian Newspaper in UK and became major news in other African countries.
Assange further claims that when the Kenyan TV discussed the report for almost twenty consecutive days, the vote shifted 10 points according to a Kenyan intelligence report and “that changed the results.”

Related story: http://habarizanyumbani.jambonewspot.com/2010/11/29/us-envoys-see-kenya-as-a-%e2%80%98swamp%e2%80%99-of-corruption/

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11 die after consuming illegal brew

Posted by Administrator on July 26, 2010

Mr Mutua Kilonzo (right) narrates how he cheated death after taking illicit brew at Nairobi's Kibera slums, 25 July, 2010. At least 10 people died after taking the brew while scores of others became blind. PETERSON GITHAIGA|NATION

Mr Mutua Kilonzo (right) narrates how he cheated death after taking illicit brew at Nairobi's Kibera slums, 25 July, 2010. At least 10 people died after taking the brew while scores of others became blind. PETERSON GITHAIGA|NATION

At least 11 people were confirmed dead and an unknown number left blind after consuming an illegal drink in Nairobi’s Kibera slum over the weekend.

Most of the victims were discovered dead in their houses on Sunday and during the day on Monday while four were confirmed to have died while undergoing treatment at Kenyatta National and Mbagathi District hospitals.

Dr Adung’o Ikol of KNH told reporters six people had been treated at the hospital and four of these had died while undergoing treatment there.

Four more victims were found in the slum Monday morning, one in the spot he called home under polythene sheets on a path in the slum.

An additional three who resided in bushes on a piece of land opposite the Department of Defence headquarters at Milimani also died; two on Sunday while the third was found dead Monday morning.

They were suspected to have bought the liquor at Kibera slums.

Dr Ikol said the victims died of methanol poisoning.

The doctor said methanol poisoning occurs when methanol is broken down into formic acid in the stomach, which then leads to blindness and eventually to death.

Victims are treated by being given ethanol, which prevents the conversion of methanol into the acid by the enzyme alcohol dehydrogenase produced by the liver and the brain.

“As little as 10 millilitres of methanol is harmful. The dead must have taken 100 millilitres or more,” said Dr Ikol.

The survivors said they had taken a drink referred to as ‘koroga’, which they said contains ingredients used to make a popular drink known as ‘Naps’ and marketed as a brandy.

Methanol is used as fuel or as a solvent in industries.

Source: Daily Nation

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Unexpected passenger aboard Kenya Airways flight

Posted by Administrator on July 26, 2010

Caption: Baby Zahra, her mother and KQ officers soon after her birth aboard a Kenya Airways flight

Caption: Baby Zahra, her mother and KQ officers soon after her birth aboard a Kenya Airways flight

Kenya Airways in flight crew found itself being called to extraneous duties as they assisted a woman passenger deliver a baby girl.

The woman developed labour pains during the KQ 317 flight from Dubai via Muscat to Nairobi on Thursday and the officers led by KQ Nurse Juliana Maithya had to create a makeshift delivery room in the aisle in the economy class to enable the woman deliver the baby once the plane landed.

The officers who also included Flight Purser Josephine Towett, flight attendants Oscar Heho, Mitchell Ongeso, Anthony Kuria and Muriithi, Captain Hamdan and First Officer Muiruri said both the baby and the mother were ‘doing fine’.

The Captain and First Officer waited for the baby to be born before disembarking.

Speaking at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport, Kenya Airways Chief Operating Officer Bram Stellar said this was the first time that such an event has occurred not only for the crew, but for Kenya Airways.

“It was already a packed flight from Muscat to Nairobi but passengers and crew were more than happy to make room for one extra person when the lady gave birth to a baby girl, whom we promptly named Zahra,” he said.

“Within 15 minutes the baby had been born. We are happy that the birth was normal and the mother and baby are fine,” he added.

Posted in Kenya | 3 Comments »

“I am Inspired for Greatness”- AfricaAlumni.com Youth Conference 2010

Posted by Administrator on July 26, 2010

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