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Archive for November, 2011

KU students barricade Thika highway over colleague’s death

Posted by Administrator on November 29, 2011

Kenyatta University students main campus yesterday demonstrated and barricaded the busy Thika highway following the brutal killing of fellow student on Saturday night. Transport along the super highway and business operations around the university was paralysed the entire Sunday as students engaged anti-riot police in running battles.

The students were protesting the killing of Felix Mageto, a third-year student found dead near the popular Kiwanja market early yesterday. He was the reigning Mr Ruiru Campus.

Details of his death remained scanty but police preliminary investigations indicated that the student may have been a victim of a violent robbery. “It appears he was attacked by people who wanted to steal from him,” said a junior police investigator at the murder scene. Angry students who learned about the killing began group meetings as early as 9am to discuss what they said is soaring insecurity in and around the university.

The students later poured onto the highway after church services and barricaded the road forcing motorists to seek alternative routes to and from Thika town and Nairobi. They also raided shops and broke into M-pesa shops at Kiwanja market where they destroyed property worth millions of shillings.

Motorists who attempted to drive through the barricade were stoned. Anti-riot police who arrived a few hours after the riots had started were forced to used teargas to force the rioting students back into the campus compound.  Police confirmed that they had launched investigations into the killing.

Source: http://www.the-star.co.ke/national/national/51289-ku-students-barricade-thika-highway-over-colleagues-death

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Sudan Expels Kenyan Ambassador Over Bashir Warrant

Posted by Administrator on November 29, 2011

Sudan has expelled Kenya’s ambassador after Kenya’s High Court issued an arrest warrant for Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir.

The Kenyan court ruled Monday that the country’s government must arrest Mr. Bashir “should he ever set foot in Kenya.” Mr. Bashir is wanted by the International Criminal Court for alleged war crimes and genocide in Sudan’s Darfur region.

Human rights groups had criticized Kenya for failing to arrest Mr. Bashir when he attended a ceremony in Nairobi for Kenya’s new constitution in August 2010.

A Sudanese foreign ministry spokesman said Monday the government in Khartoum has ordered the Kenyan ambassador to leave the country within 72 hours. He said Sudan has also summoned its own ambassador from Nairobi.

Sudan’s foreign ministry had earlier said the court ruling was linked to Kenya’s domestic politics and would not affect bilateral relations.

Sudan does not recognize the authority of the International Criminal Court, and Mr. Bashir has flouted the arrest warrants by repeatedly traveling abroad, though mostly to countries that are not ICC members.

The ICC has argued that Kenya is obligated as a member state to arrest the Sudanese president. Officials at the Hague-based court have said that if Kenya fails to comply with the ICC warrant, the court may report Kenya to the U.N. Security Council.

Sudan’s government has been fighting rebels in Darfur since 2003. The ICC says Mr. Bashir orchestrated a campaign of murder, rape, and other crimes against civilians in the region.

The U.N. says fighting and related violence in Darfur have killed an estimated 300,000 people and displaced some 2.7 million others.

Source: http://blogs.voanews.com/breaking-news/2011/11/28/sudan-expels-kenyan-ambassador-over-bashir-warrant/

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Woman’s Burial Blocked Over Dowry Delay

Posted by Administrator on November 29, 2011

Family members of a deceased woman were, at the weekend, engaged in a tussle with her husband’s family at her funeral in Embu. They barred her husband’s family from burying her until dowry was paid in full. The family of the late Jackline Wanja stopped her burial at Njukiri village in Embu West district. They arrived at the funeral at 1pm and found that burial was already in progress.

Immediately after their arrival they threatened their in-laws that dire consequences would ensue if the burial went on before her husband paid dowry in full.

According to Embu traditions a woman is not supposed to be buried in her husband’s or father- in-law’s land if dowry has not been fully paid. As the two families conflicted, mourners were forced to flee the home. The situation was only saved by an armed administration police officer who arbitrated between the two families.

It was not established whether dowry was later paid or not. Sources at the funeral said the family of the deceased, who allegedly collapsed and died a week ago, had avoided the burial arrangements. They had vowed not to allow her husband’s family to bury her remains unless he cleared payment of dowry. But the man’s family had not acceded to their demands by the time of her burial. This is when her family decided to act tough by preventing their in-laws from burying her.

Source: NAIROBI STAR

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Furious Embu Wife Strips Student Naked

Posted by Administrator on November 29, 2011

A college student in Embu district was stripped naked and beaten up by a wife of a lecturer at the institution for allegedly having a sexual relationship with her husband. Reliable eye witnesses said the irate lecturer’s wife found the female student at Manyatta market where she had gone for some personal business.

The lecturer’s wife allegedly pounced on her with kicks and punches demanding to know why she was trying to break her marriage. The witnesses said the lecturer’s wife blamed the student of having sexual affairs with her husband vowing that she will never permit it to continue.

The woman had allegedly been looking for the student for a long time. She said that she was gratified that she had got hold of her finally. “This is my time to teach you a lesson for snatching other women’s husbands. Why cant’ you look for your own instead of breaking people’s marriages,” the woman was reported to have scolded the student.

The witnesses said the woman beat up the student and at the same time tore her garments leaving her naked.The beating was so severe that the student fled for her dear life while nude. The woman in hot pursuit tried to catch her but the student was faster than her and managed to flee. The witnesses said the student did not report the matter to the police and just remained quiet nursing her injuries.

Source: NAIROBI STAR

Posted in Kenya | 8 Comments »

Death and Funeral Announcement-Joseph Walter Makokha

Posted by Administrator on November 29, 2011

The Late Joseph Makokha-1983-2011

The Late Joseph Makokha-1983-2011

We regret to announce the death of Joseph Walter Makokha (1983-2011) after a short illness at Baylor medical center in Irving on Friday the 25th at 6pm.

He was husband to Janne Makokha, father to Luke Makokha. Friends and family are meeting at 6pm at his home at 4507 W Pioneer dr apt 913, Irving TX. The gate code 1313#.

A fundraiser will be held on Dec 10th at 3144 Spyglass Dr Grand Prairie TX 75052 to help in transporting the remains of Joseph back to Kenya where we will be laid to rest.

For information please contact:

Patrick Kaburu Aka Mwas:     972-697-7049

Naomi Kaburu:                       469-733-5478

Gladys                                     214-524-8355

Che Guevara                           325-480-6387

 

The Lord giveth, the Lord taketh away, and blessed be the Name of the Lord.

May the Lord God rest hir soul in eternal peace and may He continue to bless those left behind.

AMEN

Bank of America
Account name: Patrick Kaburu
Account #: 488034325302
Routing #: 111000025

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Kenyans in the US to set up YouTube Show

Posted by Administrator on November 28, 2011

A group of Kenyans living in the US have taken to a popular video sharing website to do a show targeting their countrymen in the Diaspora. The 10 Minute Fix does a weekly dose of shows, which are garnering thousands of views on YouTube. Though the show has no commercial sponsor, its backers in the Californian city of San Francisco believe it is worth their time and will eventually pay off. NTV’s Larry Madowo spoke to them last month.

Posted in Diaspora News, Kenya | Comments Off

Kenyans in Diaspora may miss out 2012 poll

Posted by Administrator on November 28, 2011

By Chris Wamalwa in USA

Thousands of Kenyans living abroad may be locked out of the 2012 general elections due to the slow implementation of provisions dealing with dual citizenship, a leading Kenyan US based lawyer has said.

Immigration lawyer, Regina Njogu of Washington, DC who has been working closely with the Task Force on Citizenship and Related Provisions now fears if the Task Force does not fast track dual citizenship acquisition, at least 1.5 million Kenyans will not vote.

Those to be affected are Kenyans who lost their citizenship after they acquired the citizenship of other countries.

“]Immigration lawyer Regina Njogu of Washington, DC [PHOTO: CHRIS WAMALWA/STANDARD]

Immigration lawyer Regina Njogu of Washington, DC [PHOTO: CHRIS WAMALWA/STANDARD

Under the new Constitution, such Kenyans can only regain their Kenyan citizenship by applying.

Section 14(5) of the constitution and Part III article 10 in the Kenya Citizenship and Immigration Act of 2011 require that Kenyans who lost their citizenship must apply to regain it and become dual citizens.

The Task Force on Citizenship and Related provisions, which falls under the Ministry of Immigration is mandated with setting the procedures and fees for the application process.

“The Task Force is moving at a slow pace and it is not known whether the application process will be set early enough to allow all those Kenyans that want to regain their Kenyan citizenship apply in time to register to vote,” she said.

Njogu said that continued delay would cause logistical problems since the adjudicating body -The Cabinet Secretary- charged with the responsibility of processing applications will be swamped with applications that they will have to go through within a short period.

“Given that those applying to regain citizenship are based abroad and the applications will be adjudicated in Kenya, that will obviously contribute to delays in receiving and sending back approvals,” she said.

Most of those Kenyans that will be affected are based in the US, Canada and Western Europe, regions where large populations of Kenyans have emigrated to and settled, even acquiring citizenships of their host countries.

This revelation comes at a time when the electoral commission (IELB) team led by its chairman Ahmed Hassan is set visit the US.

The team will be in the US between December 4 and 14 this year to educate Kenyans on elections law and process.

The next step will be voter registration of those eligible to vote across the Diaspora.

At the time of voter registration, those that will not have applied to regain their lost Kenyan citizenship or those whose applications will not have been approved will not be able to register as voters.

Voter registration is expected to begin in the Diaspora in the next few months. †

Kenyans living in the US interviewed by The Standard said they feared missing out on the elections.

“If anybody including the government of Kenya tries to disenfranchise me, I’ll sue them in the High Court, the UN and even the ICC. We have fought for these rights so hard for long for anybody to joke around with them,” said Khalid Rajab of Darby, Pennsylvania.

With an estimated population of 3.1 millions most of who are eligible voters, the Diaspora has become a new ground for vote hunting by presidential candidates.

SOURCE: http://www.standardmedia.co.ke/InsidePage.php?id=2000047435&cid=4

Posted in Diaspora News, Kenya | 1 Comment »

In Kenya, new life at an old hospital

Posted by Administrator on November 27, 2011

Lillian Wanjiru, 30, with daughter Rosemary. She begged not to have an expensive C-section.

Lillian Wanjiru, 30, with daughter Rosemary. She begged not to have an expensive C-section.

NAIROBI, KENYA—Lillian Wanjiru is in labour, about to give birth to her third child, and she is worrying about contracting HIV or some other infection in the maternity ward.

She is lying on a rusted metal cot covered with a cream vinyl mat. It’s been given a quick wipe with disinfectant and water after the previous birth.

Quarter-sized drops of other women’s blood dot the floor of the labour ward, where nearly 30 women, many teenagers, are giving birth. Pieces of placenta lie on a bloodied mat a few beds over.

Meticulously, Wanjiru — round and petite with kind, saucer-shaped brown eyes — pulls a multicoloured wrap under her waist, down past her knees, trying to protect her naked body from the worn vinyl. She closes her eyes and scrunches her face, wincing through a contraction.

There are no painkillers. No family members are allowed, to wipe sweat from foreheads or rub sore lower backs. Some women whimper, soft moans. Others holler, rambling as if they are speaking in tongues, eyes rolling back in their head.

RELATED: Full coverage of our child birth series

“You’re coming where your money is affording you,” Wanjiru says quietly. Rich people in Kenya go to private hospitals, with clean sheets, not here to Pumwani, one of the largest public maternity hospitals in Africa.

Poking out from her overnight bag, a new blanket and onesie for her baby. Wanjiru is praying for a girl. Her two-bedroom Nairobi apartment is already filled with school-age son Clinton, toddler Michael and husband Paul.

To build her strength, the 30-year-old housekeeper, who taught herself English by watching African soap operas, has been trying to eat porridge, greens and some fish. But there were many days when she went with little, eating just ugali (a mixture of maize flour and water) to save for the costs of delivering in Pumwani.

It’s a perverse trade off: to receive skilled medical assistance, she sacrifices her health.

Two nights in hospital costs about $12.50, a sizeable chunk of the $70 she and Paul, a contract construction worker, earn in a good month. A caesarean section costs double.

Despite the expense, Wanjiru says the hospital — where trained staff can deal with complications such as a breech baby — is safer than giving birth at home. In Kenya, there were 530 maternal deaths for every 100,000 live births in 2008. It’s a rate that has risen steadily since 1990, although it is down marginally from its peak of 580 in 2005.

In a 2010 interagency report, the World Health Organization and others said Kenya had made “no progress” in improving maternal health.

A recent Kenya Demographic Health survey found only two out of five births were attended by a skilled health-care worker. For the poorest fifth of the population, a trained attendant was present just 21 per cent of the time.

Rose Oranje, a policy and communications specialist with the African Institute for Development Policy, thinks a “persistent lack of political commitment,” helps explain why Kenya has made little progress — something that’s reflected in the limited amount of government resources allocated to maternal health. There are only 14 physicians and 118 midwives per 100,000, according to the World Bank.

Unsafe abortions account for a third of all maternal deaths in Kenya, she says, adding that other countries in sub-Saharan Africa, such as Ghana, Ethiopia and Rwanda, have prioritized maternal health care and reformed abortion laws, among other things. “But Kenya isn’t doing any of these,” she says.

And then there’s HIV. While its prevalence has declined, women are still almost two times more likely than men to contract the disease, which contributes to about 14 per cent of maternal deaths.

There is also a high rate of teenage pregnancy. Physiological and social factors can mean a greater risk of complications, such as obstructed labour, for young mothers and babies. In 2010, the country’s infant mortality rate was 52 per 1,000 births, an improvement from 77 in the 2003 health survey.

At least 100 babies                             are born each day in Pumwani’s tired cement building, which has seen few upgrades since it opened in 1926.

Run by Nairobi’s city council, costs are largely subsidized. Pills to help prevent the transmission of HIV from a positive mother to her baby are free. There are seminars on hygiene and breastfeeding. Abandoned children are sent to different orphanages, depending on their HIV status.

But the hospital has been criticized by human rights groups and the media.

A scandal during the early 2000s centred on the disappearance of newborns from Pumwani. A U.K.-based Kenyan evangelist had allegedly promised infertile women “miracle babies.” He is to be extradited to Kenya to stand trial for child abduction.

In September, a government task force found corruption, lack of critical supplies, mistreatment of mothers and absenteeism among doctors at Pumwani. More than 1,000 children died at the hospital in the past year. And while 13,000 women gave birth normally, 253 developed complications and 13 died.

Only a fraction of the necessary incubators are working. At-risk mothers waited 24 hours for an emergency caesarean section, the task force found.

Paint peels off walls, which look as if they haven’t had a good scrubbing in years. Curtains separating the beds are ripped and yellowed. Cockroaches jet out from corners. Staff is entirely hands-off and overworked. There are tales of women delivering on their own, babies almost falling off the cots.

Wanjiru came to the hospital the night before, having experienced stomach pains.

Her water broke at breakfast, although she doesn’t tell the nurses — she fears angering them if she bothers them. She calls her husband and tells him she’ll phone again after the baby is born.

By noon, a doctor makes his rounds. He does not speak to Wanjiru, but ruptures her membrane with scissors as she writhes from pain. It shouldn’t be much longer, a nurse says, especially since this is her third child.

But for nine hours, she struggles, dilated at five centimetres. Wanjiru keeps saying she can feel something is wrong, that she needs medicine to make the labour progess.

Women are supposed to be checked every 30 minutes, say nurses and doctors. A plastic cone is placed on their stomach to listen to the baby’s heart rate, starkly simplistic compared to electronic fetal monitors in Canada. Blood pressure, temperature, hydration status and contraction rates are all supposed to be monitored.

In reality, hours pass before anyone stops for more than a passing glance. No one, including Wanjiru, is counting the time between contractions. There are long periods where she may as well be at home. She’s on her own here.

At hour seven, head nurse Rosemary Mideva, a motherly woman who shepherds the ward but is stretched in too many directions, decides Wanjiru is progressing too slowly and her contractions are not strong enough to push out the baby.

A doctor needs to examine her and she may need a caesarean section. But another three hours will pass before that happens.

“I don’t want theatre,” says Wanjiru, referring to the operating room and pleading with a reporter to tell the nurses she can’t have surgery.

She worries that if she has an operation, the stitches will burst when she is at work, washing laundry in basins. But she doesn’t dare speak to the staff.

So Wanjiru waits, in pain, and worries.

Rice and beans are served from a metal bucket, but she eats a banana from home because it’s cleaner. She would never eat food here.

There are moments of serenity.

The women hold hands and hum. “We share the problem that now we are all going through,” says Wanjiru. They enter strangers and leave sisters. And there is something beautiful about that.

Around 10 p.m., a different doctor makes her rounds. She gives Wanjiru drugs to help with the labour.

For the first time in more than 10 hours, Wanjiru screams.

Finally, at 11:27 p.m. the baby’s head crowns. Two nurses rush over. The umbilical cord is wrapped around the baby’s neck. One nurse clamps both sides of the cord and cuts it. A faint whimpering, then a cry.

Wanjiru is lucky she’s come here — this sorry hospital saved her baby’s life, and probably her own.

Placed on a metal scale, the baby, a girl, weighs 5.5 pounds.

Her name, Rosemary. The name of Paul’s mother, who died from AIDS.

“I’m so very happy it’s a girl,” says Wanjiru, shivering and shaking after the birth. With the baby beside her on the vinyl mat, she closes her eyes, no blankets to warm her, exhausted.

Source: http://www.thestar.com/news/article/1092041

Posted in Kenya | 1 Comment »

Islamist group warns of terrorist attacks in Kenya

Posted by Administrator on November 27, 2011

Gedo (Sunatimes) Ahlu-Sunna Wal-Jama’a Islamist group in Gedo region of Somalia have today warned Kenyan government to be on high alert of a possible terror attacks in Kenya.

Spokesman of the moderate ASWJ in Gedo region, Sheikh Mohamed Hussein Issack al-Qaaddi who spoke to Bar-kulan said that al-Shabaab are planning to attack Kenya, in retaliation for the military offensive Kenya has launched against them in Somalia.

Recently Shabaab militias have terrorized Kenyan border towns where bomb explosions left six people dead, inculding two children and injured scores.

By Siham Mohamud

Source: http://sunatimes.com/view.php?id=1523

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Kenyan graduate in New Hampshire

Posted by Administrator on November 27, 2011

Courtesy photo. Gladys Kimaru arrived in Nashua from her home in Kenya to make a better life for her and her family. Shown with Kimaru is her grand-daughter Isis.
Courtesy photo. Gladys Kimaru arrived in Nashua from her home in Kenya to make a better life for her and her family. Shown with Kimaru is her grand-daughter Isis.

In 2000, Gladys Kimaru arrived in Nashua from her home in Kenya, where she was an administrative assistant to a high-level manager at the Del Monte Fruit Co. She chose Nashua because she wanted comfort and safety but also the amenities of a small city. Armed with her inherent love for life, her big laugh and inborn resilience, Kimaru was determined to make a new life for herself.

Kimaru learned about the Adult Learning Center when she tried to enter the field of nursing and found that before she could become a licensed practical nurse, she needed her GED. In one year, she earned her GED and licensed practical nurse certificate, and after working at St. Joseph Hospital and the Greenbriar nursing home, Kimaru found her dream job at Home Health and Hospice Care.

“The best part of my job in home care is the opportunity to learn that is offered by the management, my colleagues, and my patients. My mantra is: have an open mind and you will learn,” Kimaru said.

She seems to have found her niche. But always curious and looking for ways to improve, Kimaru is taking a biology course to prepare for applying to college to become a registered nurse.

While she was enrolled in GED class, Kimaru discovered Early Childhood Adventures, the Adult Learning Center’s child care program that has earned the highest accreditation available to child care centers by the National Association for the Education of Young Children. Her granddaughter, Isis, is enrolled while her parents work. Kimaru often picks up Isis at the end of the day and the delight they both feel is palpable in the halls of the Adult Learning Center. Next for Kimaru is the U.S. citizenship class, and then taking the official test, a milestone that will ensure her place in the community. Isis and Gladys’ other two grandchildren will be there to cheer.

The Adult Learning Center is a nonprofit organization that provides programs that address community needs for an educated citizenry. For more information, contact Mary Jordan 882-9080, ext. 204 or visit www.adultlearningcenter.org.

Source: http://www.telegraphneighbors.com/localnews/941462-147/alc-graduate-finds-dream-job.html?CSAuthResp=1234%3A%3A5000%3A257%3A24%3Aapproved%3A748801ABF57441070238AEAD407A5FAA

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