Wednesday, 17 July 2013

Two Flying Squad officers arrested for robbing Sudanese businessman

Updated Wednesday, July 17th 2013 at 15:48 GMT +3
By Antony Gitonga
Naivasha,Kenya: Police have arrested two flying squad officers from Naivasha for robbing sh868,000 from a businessman who had arrived from Southern Sudan

The two robbers in conjunction with a trader allegedly accused the businessman of having committed a criminal offence in  Sudan before fleeing to Kenya.
Naivasha OCPD Charles Kortok confirmed the arrests saying that they were holding two men and and the trader in connection with the robbery and they will be arraigned in court.
Meanwhile police in Naivasha have heightened their patrols along banks in Moi Avenue following cases of robbery in the area.
This came after a trader lost over Sh150,000 to robbers who were posing as police officers.
In the last one month cases of robbery along the banks have increased with the suspects posing as police officers.
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Woman killed, throat slit in brutal attack in Naivasha

Updated Wednesday, July 17th 2013 at 15:42 GMT +3
By Antony Gitonga
Naivasha,Kenya:Residents of Naivasha are in shock after a mother of two aged 28 was brutally murdered by unknown people who slit her throat using a sharp object.

The incident occurred near the Naivasha police line.
The victim who worked in a nearby hardware shop was  murdered a few meters from her home.
Contacted on phone, Naivasha OCPD Charles Kortok confirmed the incident saying that they were looking for a man who she was seen last with to record a statement as investigation are going on.
Meanwhile police have arrested a mother of two for the murder of a 22-year-old university student in Mai Mahiu two months ago.
The woman was arrested after a mobile phone belonging to the student was found in her homestead.
The disfigured body of the student was found dumped along the Narok-Mai Mahiu road.
“All indications are that the woman could have been involved in the murder of the university student and hence the arrest,” said the police.
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The prodigal father



World Vision writer and photographer Laura Reinhardt writes today about a father in Honduras whose faith brought him back to his family.
*     *     *
Francisco Rodriguez took any work he could find, usually construction. He had to leave his family to find day jobs in the nearby town of La Esperanza, in western Honduras.
“Sometimes he would work and only make enough money for the day, so it was really, really a difficult life,” says his wife, Carmen Arriaga.
Struggling to survive in Honduras’s Yamaranguila region, this family of eight faced other challenges, too. When Francisco couldn’t find work, he often stayed in town drinking. Carmen and her daughters never knew whether he would come home drunk or with money; if it turned out to be the former, they never knew what was going to happen.
Sometimes Carmen locked him out of the house. She knew it would make him angry, but she was angry, too.
In 2003, Carmen was pregnant with the last of the couple’s six children. Because she always came to her appointments alone, her doctor thought she was a single mother. When Francisco finally went with her, the doctor reprimanded him and asked him if he attended church, wondering why his faith wasn’t influencing his behavior.
Francisco did go to Mass, but only to keep the seat warm. Still, the doctor’s words got him thinking.
That year, World Vision invited Francisco to participate in agricultural training. Francisco owned land, but it lay fallow because Francisco had to travel to La Esperanza for work so often. But with World Vision’s training, Francisco was soon equipped to grow crops, and he embraced the new opportunity to support his family — an opportunity that kept him away from the city and all of its temptations.
Participating in World Vision’s work, Francisco began to see how faith in Christ motivated the staff. As a result, Francisco’s own faith began to grow.
Also that year, Father Lucio arrived to serve in Francisco’s community. Dividing his parish into smaller groups, he hoped to strengthen the communities. Inspired by Father Lucio’s teaching, Francisco began to attend church regularly.
As Francisco’s relationship with Father Lucio grew, the priest asked Francisco to be in charge of one of the community groups. Francisco agreed, but wondered whether he could handle that responsibility.
Through that leadership role, Carmen remembers that her husband “was touched by God, so he could change.”
In April 2012, World Vision introduced Channels of Hope in Yamaranguila — a multi-faceted program that encourages Christians to understand their role as followers of Christ. The program is designed to help them to combat deeply-held cultural beliefs that have a negative impact on their communities, including HIV and AIDS stigma and gender inequality.
As Francisco attended the program’s training, he became more open to Carmen’s participation. “Now there is no longer any chauvinism,” he says. “It’s the church that has changed us and shown us that men and woman are worth exactly the same in the eyes of the Lord.”
Francisco with his family.
Francisco with his family. (Photo: Laura Reinhardt/World Vision)
Carmen has blossomed and grown more confident. “It’s been a transformation that is incredible, and every day I thank God because this has totally changed every step I take,” says Carmen. “World Vision has been like a right arm for us.”
Today, as part of World Vision’s focus on maternal and child health, Carmen is leading a support group for pregnant women and new mothers. She speaks confidently, providing community members with health information she learned through World Vision.
Carmen is often out working with women in the community. On these days, Francisco prepares dinner for his children, something he never would have dreamed of doing just a few years ago.
Their only son was born just as Francisco’s life began to change. He attends many of the spiritual trainings with his father. “I think that he is learning all this, and that is what will make a better man out of him,” Francisco says.
The whole Rodriguez family works together in the fields. Francisco looks at his fields of corn, radishes, and beans and says, “I’m really thrilled about this, because when you work together it really motivates you to continue to grow. All this is a result of the training that we have received.”
The man who used to disappear and keep his family on edge now works and prays with his family. He even makes time to play with his children.
A single tear of joy slips from Carmen’s eye as she acknowledges the amazing transformation that has taken place in her family.
“I’m just happy,” Francisco says, “having a life that I have with my wife, with the daughters, and doing what we’re doing. There are many people who are tired of life, but we aren’t. We all have the drive to continue developing and to continue forth. And so, we’re very happy and satisfied.”

Child sponsorship is the cornerstone of World Vision’s approach to community development. Join us! Reflect God’s love to a child in need. Sponsoring a child helps provide life-saving basics to address the child’s physical, social, and spiritual needs. Consider sponsoring a child today!

President Uhuru Kenyatta urge Nigerians to visit, invest in Kenya

Updated Wednesday, July 17th 2013 at 14:37 GMT +3
By PSCU
ABUJA, NIGERIA: President Uhuru Kenyatta has encouraged Nigerians to visit and invest in Kenya.

Speaking during a meeting with President Goodluck Jonathan at State House Abuja, Uhuru said Nigeria has a large middle class population, which would enjoy the numerous tourist attractions in Kenya.
“We want to see Nigerians stopping in Kenya for business and tourism not just transiting through Nairobi,” he said.
The Head of State also encouraged Nigerian entrepreneurs to take advantage of the attractive investment opportunities available in Kenya to conduct businesses.
He announced that Kenya Airways will soon commence direct flights to Abuja in Nigeria to encourage frequent exchanges in the tourism and trade sectors.

The President said the recent review of Bilateral Air Services Agreement between the two countries was an important milestone that allowed Kenya airways to fly directly to Abuja.
He pointed out that tourism was an untapped potential area in the bilateral relations between the two countries.

He noted that the Memorandum of Understanding on cooperation in the field of tourism under consideration by the two countries will also offer other avenues for exchanges in this important sector.

He further called for closer interaction between business communities from both countries through the respective chambers of commerce and relevant trade and investment institutions to facilitate and expedite trade and
investments.
Saying trade is the key driver of economic growth and poverty alleviation, President Uhuru stressed the need for the two countries to take charge of their economic destinies through increased intra-African trade.

The Head of State said the two countries enjoyed cordial and fraternal relations nurtured over the years through friendly interaction in various spheres.

President Goodluck, on his part, assured President Kenyatta that his Federal Government will do everything possible to enhance the bilateral relations existing between the two countries.

President Uhuru was accompanied by Cabinet Secretary Amina Mohamed and her Nigerian counterpart Mr.Olugbenga Ashiru among senior government officials from the two countries.


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School meal kills 22 children in India's Bihar state

Updated Wednesday, July 17th 2013 at 14:02 GMT +3
At least 22 children have died and dozens more have fallen sick after eating a tainted school meal in India's eastern state of Bihar.
The poisoning occurred at a government school in the village of Masrakh in Saran district.

India's Mid-Day Meal Scheme provides free food to try to boost attendance, but often suffers from poor hygiene.
Angry parents joined protests against the deaths, setting at least four police vehicles on fire.
An inquiry has begun and 200,000 rupees ($3,370) in compensation offered to the families of each of the dead.
Twenty-eight sick children were taken to hospitals in the nearby town of Chhapra and the state capital, Patna, after the incident.
A total of 47 students of a primary school in Dharmasati Gandaman village fell sick on Tuesday after eating the free lunch.
'Food poisoning'
There are fears the number of dead could rise as some of the children, all below the age of 12, are critically ill.
The father of one sick child, Raja Yadav, said his son had been vomiting after returning from school and had to be rushed to hospital.
The state education minister, PK Shahi, told the BBC a preliminary investigation indicated that the food was contaminated with traces of phosphorous.
"The doctors who have attended are of the tentative opinion that the smell coming out of the bodies of the children suggests that the food contained organo-phosphorus, which is a poisonous substance," he said.
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More chaos as police vote in Zimbabwe poll





 
  
 


ELECTION | Army bosses back Mugabe Rowdy officers break barrier to cast ballots as Premier blames `disorganised' agency
imbabwe’s riot police were called control security officers who tried to force their way into a Harare polling station on Monday night, as a two-day special voting exercise was extended to midnight. Polling stations were initially expected to close at 7 pm but many of the security forces and civil servants who will be on duty during the July 31 election had not voted due to delays in the distribution of ballot papers.
A number of polling stations closed yesterday morning after thousands of armed forces turned up to vote at night.
At the voting centre in central Harare, impatient officers broke a security barrier manned by police before making their way into the polling station.
The riot police contigent had to be called in after pleas by senior officers for calm fell on deaf ears.
Police blamed Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai’s Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) for the chaos, saying the party did not want the security forces to cast their votes.
MDC has gone to the High Court to challenge the special voting, arguing that the number of police voters was inflated. The party says only 41,133 members of the police are eligible to vote, instead of the 69,000 approved by the Zimbabwe Electoral Com
mission (ZEC). The case will be heard today. Police spokesperson Charity Charamba said the court case had hampered ZEC’s preparations for the polls.
“The electoral commission was therefore unable to print ballot papers as they did not have the final list of candidates,” she claimed.
“It is now clear that members of the Zimbabwe Republic Police have been unable to exercise their constitutional right to vote.” Commanders of Zimbabwe’s security forces have been openly campaigning for President Robert Mugabe, vowing that Mr Tsvangirai must never be allowed to rule the country.
Meanwhile, the Southern African Development Community (SADC) has called for a peaceful election in Zimbabwe.
“Voters must have unfettered access,” Tanzanian Foreign Affairs minister Bernard Membe who is heading a SADC observer mission told journalists in Harare.

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Sudan's Bashir leaves Nigeria as Hague court demands his arrest ABUJA, Tuesday





 

WAR CRIMES | President wanted by ICC in Netherlands to face charges of genocide Pre-trial chamber requested Abuja to immediately arrest leader, as a Rome Statute obligation `` Hosting Bashir is an affront to victims of the Darfur conflict....How can the court be targeting (African countries) if they are responding to direct requests from governments affected or the council" Elise Keppler of Human Rights Watch
Sudan’s President Omar al-Bashir left Nigeria on Monday with the International Criminal Court demanding his arrest, but Sudanese officials denied the departure was due to the warrants against him. Controversy had swirled over Bashir’s visit, and the ICC issued a statement yesterday confirming it had requested that Nigeria arrest him on charges of war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide.
Bashir left on Monday, a Sudanese embassy spokesman said, though the African Union health summit he was attending in the Nigerian capital Abuja was not due to end until yesterday.
The spokesman, Mohammed Moiz, told AFP Bashir had returned to Khartoum for another engagement, but gave no further details. He had arrived on Sunday.
Sudan’s ambassador to the African Union also said Bashir’s departure was not due to calls for his arrest, adding he would “never flee.” “He’s the bravest,” Abdelrahman Sirelkhatim Mohamed told AFP at the summit venue. “If he’s afraid of arrest, he would not have come here.” The ICC in 2009 and 2010 issued two warrants against Bashir for war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide over the conflict in Sudan’s Darfur region. The ICC said its pre-trial chamber on Monday “requested the Federal Republic of Nigeria to immediately arrest Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir and surrender him to the ICC”.
It added that Nigeria, as a member of the court, had an obligation to arrest wanted suspects.
Should Nigeria fail to comply “the court may make a finding and refer the matter to its Assembly of States Parties or the (UN) Security Council,” the judges warned.
Nigeria’s presidency had defended welcoming Bashir to the country for the summit on Monday and Tuesday despite the charges against him, say
ing it cannot interfere in AU affairs. Some African Union members and officials have criticised the Bashir indictments, and the body has passed a
resolution calling on members not to cooperate with the warrants. Rights activists harshly criticised Bashir's visit and said they were planning to go to court to try to force Nigeria to arrest him.
Britain's minister for Africa, Mark Simmonds, also said Nigeria's decision to host Bashir “undermines the work of the ICC and sends the victims a dismaying message that the accountability they are waiting for will be delayed further.“
Bashir has previously visited ICC member states, including Chad, Djibouti and Kenya, but countries like South Africa and Botswana have ensured he stays away.
Human Rights Watch has said the AU resolution to ignore the warrants has “no bearing on Nigeria's obligations as an ICC member“.
Hosting Bashir is an “affront to victims“ of the Darfur conflict, said Elise Keppler of Human Rights Watch.
The court has been accused by some of unfairly targeting Africans, while others have argued that the arrest warrants against Bashir complicate peace efforts. Rights activists say many current investigations came about because governments where the crimes were committed asked for the court’s involvement or the UN Security Council referred the situation due to the gravity of the crimes.
“How can the court be targeting (African countries) if they are responding to direct requests from governments affected or the council?” Keppler said.
She added that “even though the claim of targeting flies in the face of the facts, it continues to have great resonance in public debate likely due to the damaging legacy of colonialism, and it is being leveraged and manipulated to undercut efforts to give access of African victims to justice.”

Fresh twist as officers free 12 arrested youths

Updated Tuesday, July 16th 2013 at 23:22 GMT +3
By Vincent Mabatuk
Nakuru, Kenya: Police in Nakuru County have released 12 youths suspected of engaging in acts of prostitution in as-yet-unexplained circumstances.

The seven women and five boys were set free by Nakuru North police boss Duncan Ngutho after spending Monday night in police cells over what he termed as lack of compelling evidence against them.
The group was cornered by members of the public who suspected them of engaging in human trafficking activities at Kiamunyeki on Monday and informed the area chief.
They were allegedly hiding in a house together with three alleged masterminds, including a mother and daughter.
They were later taken to Dundori DO’s office where they recorded statements. But the OCPD accused his AP counterparts, saying they did not follow the right procedure while arresting them and handing them over to regular police.
“Why hold them until 5pm and start bringing them to me now? There is nothing here and I am releasing them right away,” he said.
The OCPD insisted that there was no evidence to connect them with the alleged crime that could hold substance in a court of law.
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Physically healthy woman wants spinal cord cut to disable her

Updated Wednesday, July 17th 2013 at 12:44 GMT +3
A Cambridge University educated research scientist is so desperate to live the life of a wheelchair-bound person she is prepared to pay a doctor help her become disabled.
Since childhood, Chloe Jennings-White has made several attempts at injuring herself so she can finally climb into her own wheelchair.

In 2010 she even found a doctor overseas willing to help her become disabled by cutting her sciatic and femoral nerves, but she could not afford the £16,000 costs.
'I might never be able to afford it, but I know, truly and deeply, I won't regret it if I ever can,' she said, referring to the doctor who might be able to help her become disabled.
According to Daily Mail, Chloe, 58, from Salt Lake City, Utah, suffers from a rare condition called Body Integrity Identity Disorder, or BIID.
Some experts believe it is caused by a neurological fault, in which the brain's mapping system cannot see a certain body part.
The Cambridge graduate believes both of her legs do not belong to her and dreams of being paralysed from the waist down.
'Something in my brain tells me my legs are not supposed to work,' she said. 'Having any sensation in them just feels wrong.'
For years she bandaged herself secretly, but now lives openly with her condition despite facing intolerance, insults, and sometimes online threats.
Chloe first realised she was different at the age of four, after visiting her Aunt Olive, who was using leg braces after a bike accident.
'I wanted them too,' she said. 'I wondered why I wasn't born needing them and felt something was wrong with me because I didn't have them.'
At the age of nine, Chloe even took action and pedalled her bike off a four-foot high acting stage on Hampstead Heath, north London, landing on her neck.
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It’s a family affair at Kenya Pipeline Company, bosses stun MPs


Former managing director Salest Kilinda told parliamentary Committee on Energy chaired by Kigumo MP Jamleck Kamau that he employed his two sisters and a brother.
Some of his juniors also have as many as five blood relatives working at the company.
The embattled former managing director and the senior managers at the State Corporation influenced employment of their sons, daughters, sisters and nephews for various positions.
They used a loophole in the management policy that allows for workers to be taken in as casuals then are assessed and employed by the company on permanent terms.
Ms Rose Osiako, human resource manager, admitted she employed her daughter, while Mr Samuel Odoyo, finance manager, employed his sister. Only board chairman Samuel Maluki and chief human resource manager Rose Manji have no relatives at the company.
Kilinda confirmed that two of his sisters Agnes and Marietha and his brother Donald are employed at KPC but he was at pains to explain how they were hired.
Two sisters
“I have been accused of hiring clerks, welders and telephone operators but it should be known that it is done by the company and not me,” Kilinda said.
He said he approved the employment of his relatives based on recommendations of the managers of the company.
“I got requests from State House and Cabinet ministers to employ people in the company because it is a stable institution,” Kilinda said.

Graft blamed for poor Mututho law policing


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PHOTO | TOM OTIENO | FILE An apparently inebriated young man lies in a street in Kisumu.
PHOTO | TOM OTIENO | FILE An apparently inebriated young man lies in a street in Kisumu.  NATION MEDIA GROUP
By OUMA WANZALA owanzala@ke.nationmedia.com
Posted  Tuesday, July 16  2013 at  23:30
In Summary
  • Nacada accuses police of doing little to enforce regulation
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Failure by the police to enforce the Alcoholic Drinks Control Act has been blamed on corruption.
National Campaign Against Drug Abuse (Nacada) national co-ordinator William Okedi said police were doing little to ensure that the law was implemented.
Dr Okedi said Nacada had no powers to arrest those who broke the law on drinking hours.
“We have seen bars operating beyond the stipulated time as well as opening early yet the owners are not arrested,” he said.
Dr Okedi, who was speaking in Eldoret, said Nacada would be launching an initiative targeting the youths in all the 47 counties.
“We have identified TNA nominated Senator Naisula Lesuda to lead the initiative as youth ambassador. Each county will have an ambassador and it is the youth who will decide what it entails to be a youth ambassador in the war against drug abuse,” said Dr Okedi.
At the same time Uasin Gishu Governor Jackson Mandago has said his county government would put in place measures to ensure drug peddlers were arrested.
“We will target all persons who are engaged in the business. We will not spare anyone,” he warned.
“We have information about two buildings that are notorious for being the source of drugs and we understand youths go there to take drugs. We will not allow these people to destroy the lives of our youths,” he said.
Mr Mandago asked the media to focus on the county’s development agenda and ignore sideshows by politicians.
He said the media had an important role to play in development and should not focus on issues that divided Kenyans. “We have seen politicians getting a lot of time and space in the media to say nothing,” said Mr Mandago.

                 

Algerian President Back Home After Three Months In Hospital


Algerian President Back Home After Three Months In Hospital
Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika has finally flown home after close to three months of medical treatment in Paris.
President Bouteflika, 76, arrived at a military airport on Tuesday evening.
Bouteflika went to Paris after a mini-stroke in April where he was hospitalized for specialized medical care.
According to BBC, analysts say his health issues have all but ended his chances of running for another presidential term next year.
On arrival to Algeria, a statement published by the APS News Agency said that the President "will continue a period of rest and rehabilitation".
Since his hospitalization in April, information about his health has remained scarce creating room for speculations.
Some opposition figures suggested that the Constitutional Council in Algiers ought to declare the presidential post vacant, and appoint an interim leader until new elections were held.
“On 12 June, Algerian state media released images and video of Mr Bouteflika convalescing. State television showed him meeting his prime minister, Abdelmalek Sellal, and the army chief, General Salah Gaid, at the Invalides National Institution,” reported the BBC.
Bouteflika becamePpresident in 1999 and is regarded as being among the last of a generation of leaders who fought in the 1954-1962 war of independence from France.
He was in hospital in France for nearly a month in 2005, for the treatment of a bleeding ulcer, the AFP news agency reports.
By Koome Kimonye

Nandi Illicit Brewers End Business

 

Nandi Illicit Brewers End Business
Local brew drinkers have suffered a major blow in Biribiriet village, Nandi County after brewers joined hands to end the production of illicit brews.
With the help of area Chief Laban Sirma, chang’aa brewers organized a one day event where leading brewers in the village confessed in public at Mlango trading centre.
The brewers said that the brew brought them several problems including massive fines from the court after being arrested severally.
The brewers further demonstrated the risks of local brewing and urged the residents to accept their new lifestyle.
According to Caroline Jeptum, one of the confessed brewers, many youths are turning into illicit brewing due to unemployment which is also a challenge across the country.
Jeptum said that she decided indulge in local brewing after completing high school because her parents were not able to pay her school fees and had to take care of her children.
The women are now looking forward to involving themselves in legal businesses and farming activities.
The women later raised some funds to enable them start self sustaining developments.
By James Kariuki

Uhuru Kenyatta, Goodluck Jonathan warn criminals


They also agreed to establish structures to exchange information and encourage more direct contacts between authorities in the two countries.
“The contacts will assist combat international terrorism and other transnational crimes such as drugs trafficking and money laundering,” said a communiqué released by the leaders.
The agreement signed in Abuja comes few weeks after a diplomatic standoff when Kenya deported six Nigerian nationals for allegedly engaging in drug traffic.
Education and energy
The row led to confiscation of a Kenyan jet at Murtalla Mohammed International Airport in Lagos and the brief restriction of Kenyan pilots and staff aboard the aircraft from returning to Nairobi.
Tuesday, the leaders re-affirmed their commitment to further promote and strengthen existing cordial relations between the two countries and further agreed to promote trade, investment and agriculture.
Other key areas of cooperation to be exploited will include tourism, mineral exploration, financial services, education and energy.
“This is to harness enormous potential existing in the sectors to create employment and sustainable business and investment opportunities for citizens,” said the statement.