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DP Ruto mourns death of Kisii deputy governor’s dad

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Kenya’s deputy President William samoei ruto husband the death of kisii county deputy governor’s father Abel Fingers.

” We have lost a devoted, progressive and hardworking man who served the community with diligence. Mzee Abel Gongera was God-fearing, a promoter of peace, unity and education. He was a role-model to many.

Mzee Abel Gongera was the father to Hon. Joash Maangi, the Deputy Governor, Kisii County.

May the Lord rest his soul in eternal peace.”, Ruto wrote

On his part the deputy governor inform the public about the death of his dad and let her run took the opportunity to thank different leaders who took their time to condole with them at their home.

This morning at 4:45 am, my father Mzee Abel Gongera rested from the troubles of this world. Please remember our family in your prayers during these hard times.

DP Ruto mourns death of Kisii deputy governor’s dad

Source: KENYAGIST.COM

Things to learn from President Biden’s Inauguration

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By Silas Nyanchwani via FB

A few things from this inauguration.
1. I was a skinny second year when Obama inaugurated back in January 2009. His victory speech was one of life’s most beautiful moments. His inauguration speech, much less memorable. It was a significant time to be alive.

Obama next inauguration wasn’t as exciting. Now we fully knew that reality and fantasy are slightly different. At this point, having not finished the wars in middle-east he promised to end, the killing of Gaddafi and all that slapped us back to reality that America will always be America.

2. Trump brought a whole different vibe to Washington. I was in America when Trump started his campaign and I knew he would win. I honestly followed everything Trump said and did. It was fascinating. And his presidency has been a nightmare to some, entertainment to others, embarrassment to others. But it was a whole new energy.

3. I am quite unsure of Biden’s America. The older you grow, the less optimism you tend to have in these things. Or in people. Or in politicians.

4. That kid Amanda Gorman is awesome. We need more young and bolder and intelligent kids like that. That poem didn’t shy from the ugliness of America’s daily life. Instead, she called Americans to turn stuff around. The power is there’s.

5. Mike Pence is a man.

6. Biden’s speech was raw and reassuring. After so many years of a man who says anything, it is always reassuring to see a man who knows you don’t have to out others down for you to sign.

7. I am indifferent towards Kamala Harris. But I recognise the historical moment and I wish this opens doors for more women.

8. Vocally, J-Lo has never been that good.

9. Lady Gaga. Was that dress necessary? She sung well though.

10. Here wondering how Trump will relate with Mike Pence?

12. What is the future of the Republican Party. Trump has been a monumental disruption. How do they move from Trumpism but still sticking to their core messages and beliefs?

Anyway. Sijui kitu.

Things to learn from President Biden’s Inauguration

Source: KENYAGIST.COM

Pizzo – Basi Tena

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“Basi Tena” is the new record from Pizzo.

WHAT YOU MUST KNOW about Mzee Simeon Nyachae, the former powerful cabinet minister

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History of Mzee Simeon Nyachae

Former Moi era Chief Secretary Mzee Simeon Nyachae’s early years were spent with his mother. He was later to remark, “In a polygamous home the women tend to take hold of the children [especially when they are young], leaving the father nowhere.” As Nyachae grew up he became unusually close to his father, but in the years before his schooling he belonged to his mother. Pauline Bosibori had but two children, and James Oiruria was only two years older than Nyachae. The two brothers were very close.

Nyachae was brighter, more aggressive, and more talkative (like his mother), so that he tended to dominate Oiruria. But whatever conflicts they had were quickly compromised in their friendship. These earliest years included ones on the mission station while their mother was learning to read.

When Nyachae was about eight years old his father employed a teacher for several of his boys at his home. After a year or so, in 1941, Musa Nyandusi sent Nyachae and Oiruria to begin their formal education at Nyanchwa Primary School, which was run by the Seventh-Day.

Adventists. During these years the boys lived at home, and Pauline Bosibori watched over their education. She would punish them with a switch if they missed classes, and she drilled them on their arithmetic. The boys would cry if they got a sum wrong and laugh if it was right. Because they had a literate mother, Oiruria and Nyachae got more help at home with their education than was usual for those of their generation. Simeon Nyachae was the timekeeper at Nyanchwa, the one who hand rings the bell that signals the start and end of classes. There would be twenty to thirty children in a class at Nyanchwa. All writing was done with chalk on wood-frame slates. The first several years of primary education were in the local vernacular, after which teaching in Swahili (East Africa’s Bantu lingua franca) was begun. Instruction in English began in intermediate school. All the national examination hurdles through which Kenyan children pass were (and still are) taken in Swahili or English. A gift for languages therefore is a prerequisite to education in Kenya.

In 1947 the two brothers and two of Nyandusi’s other sons graduated to intermediate school and were sent to Kereri. It was too far away for the boys to stay at home, so Nyandusi arranged a place for them with Stephen Obure, an African Native Council employee whose son much later became a member of Parliament from Kisii. Nyachae left his brother behind at Kereri in 1949 and joined the Kisii government African High School, which was built on land donated by his father. This secondary school was not as cosmopolitan as those attended by Karanja, Mule, and Muriithi, for only 20 percent of its students came from outside Kisii District. Chief Nyandusi would visit the school regularly to check on his son’s progress, until Nyachae terminated his secondary education in 1953.

During his school years Nyachae excelled in athletics. He was first in Nyanza Province in the hurdles and the long jump, and his record in the latter stood for thirteen years. He ran the 100- and 440-yard dashes as well, but he did not play football (soccer). When he was young he had hit his head on a goalpost playing the game, and his father forbade his further participation in the sport.

Most of Musa Nyandusi’s sons did poorly in school. This was common for the children of chiefs, unlike the other African elites. The chiefs were more likely to be polygamous and to have illiterate wives. Their many children also suffered from being too visibly close to wealth and power, and so they often would be bossy, flash money around, and fail to apply themselves seriously to their studies. Given the extreme competitiveness of education in that generation, this lack of attention was fatal to their progress. Simeon Nyachae was different; he was bright, more serious about his studies, and less affected by his father’s status.

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Nyandusi’s first son, Ayako, had also done well in school, and the chief had hoped that he would succeed him in office, although the post was not hereditary. Ayako died in 1951, however, and Musa Nyandusi increasingly came to focus on Nyachae. He would take him in his car to meetings, send him round to collect the money from his several flour mills, and delegate him to report on coffee Cooperative Society meetings.

Although Nyachae did well in school, he was more of an all-rounder than a scholar. It appeared to his teachers that his maturity was ahead of his academic development. Thus some of them concurred with Musa Nyandusi when he withdrew Nyachae from the system in 1953 when he was a year shy of the secondary Ordinary Level School Certificate exam. Nyandusi felt that a higher education was unnecessary for the chief’s career that he wanted for his son.

In 1954 Nyachae began work as a district clerk, stationed in Nyaribari Location where his father was chief. In effect he was being apprenticed. During the time that he worked there he was sent for some basic administrative courses at Maseno Government Training Institute.

In 1954 the elders also helped him select a wife, Esther Nyaboke, who came from a prominent family in a neighboring clan, was sixteen years old, and had gone as far as Standard 4 in primary school. Later that year she bore him a daughter. She was ultimately to bear him several more children, including sons. But in the first years of the marriage the elders were concerned that the couple had not had a son. The elders and Musa Nyandusi put considerable pressure on Nyachae to take a second wife, which he did in 1955. This wife, Druscilla Kerubo, died three months after she gave birth to a daughter, who was then reared in her early years by her grandmother, Pauline Bosibori.

In 1957 Nyachae took as his wife Martha Mwango, who like Esther was sixteen at the time and had left school after Standard 4. She came from another prominent family and was the half-sister of Lawrence Sagini, who was a close friend and adviser to Nyachae and later became Kisii’s first member of Parliament. Sagini’s influence was important in gaining consent for the marriage, for Martha was to have the lower status of being a second wife. Between 1958 and 1975 Martha gave Nyachae several more children.

Both of these wives remained in Kisii when Nyachae moved to a national-level career in 1960. He himself feels that his polygamy was a mistake, that a father cannot give adequate attention to a family of this

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nature, and that there is a danger that his children will be emotionally lost to him. The marriages of these years reflected the image his father and the elders held of the type of wives that were appropriate to a chief. He himself would never say so, but these women clearly were not ideally suited to help him in the national arena in which he was to operate subsequently. Polygamy at least enabled him to marry more advantageously later without severing his responsibilities to his early wives through divorce.

By 1957 it was evident to both Nyachae and Musa Nyandusi that they had made a mistake in renouncing his higher education. Ghana won its independence from Great Britain in that year, and it was clear that able Africans could aspire to considerably higher offices than that of chief. His mother, Pauline Bosibori, dreamed that Nyachae would not become a chief, and he himself was quite upset when his friend and brother-in-law, Sagini, won a scholarship to pursue his B.A. in the United States.

With the help of the district commissioner and Robert LeVine, an American anthropologist, Nyachae found a place at South Devon Technical College at Torquay in the United Kingdom, where he could pursue a one-year Diploma in Public and Social Administration. To get him there Musa Nyandusi shrewdly insisted on raising assistance for his expenses through the African District Council (of which he was vice-chair) so that Nyachae and the Gusii would both feel that he had an obligation to serve them in administration.

Torquay was a relatively small and provincial college of three thousand in those days, and its public-administration program was designed for those who would serve in local governments and the middle levels of welfare administration. Those who were expected to hold the highest administrative posts in Great Britain and the colonies would have studied instead at Oxford or Cambridge. The particular program in which Nyachae participated was designed for students from the colonies; a group photo from the period shows Nyachae with students from Sarawak, Zambia, Borneo, and Malawi. (See plate 11.) The curriculum covered the geography of developing countries, community economics, social policy, law, government, and administration. The things that struck Nyachae about the program were the comparisons of administrative systems that it offered and the openness to criticism of British government. Visits to farms, local council debates, and central ministries were frequent.[4] His “digs” were with a local family. The amount, quality, and breadth of Nyachae’s education were limited, compared with the other three managers and with most of those who achieved the most senior administrative (as opposed to political) positions in independent Kenya.

Upon his return to Kenya, Nyachae became a district assistant in the Provincial Administration. This position was the African equivalent of

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the district officer, the office that an Englishman first held on entry to this elite cadre, which was responsible for the general administration of the colony. Through Nyandusi’s influence Nyachae’s first posting was to Kisii. There his main duties were assisting the cooperative movement, supervising the traditional courts, and facilitating the expansion of education. More schools were needed as the political struggle for independence burst out of the strictures of the Emergency. But the missions, which were still the primary vehicle for education, had difficulty in getting land. Nyachae spent a great deal of time working with the District Education Board to get land set aside for the purpose. He also supervised Kisii’s four tribunal courts, making sure that their application of customary law did not contradict the Penal or Civil Procedure Codes. As a district assistant, he had the powers of a third-class magistrate and could overturn certain classes of cases. Others could be referred to the district commissioner in his capacity as a first-class magistrate. The colonial Provincial Administration combined aspects of the executive, legislative, and judicial functions in its governance of Africans. In Kisii, though adjustments to fines were common, it was rare for the Provincial Administration to have to overturn a tribunal court decision.

Nyachae wanted to move out from under his father’s wing and finally succeeded in getting transferred out of Kisii in 1960. He was posted to Ukwala in Siaya District, a Luo area. There was tension between the Luos and the Gusii at the time, and Nyachae did not feel comfortable administering the Luo; he resigned immediately. He became instead the labor and welfare officer and the first African in management of the East African Breweries. Musa Nyandusi’s shrewdness in asking council assistance for Nyachae’s studies in the U.K. became evident at this point. A delegation of eight Kisii chiefs, including Nyandusi, was sent to Nairobi, and Nyachae was summoned to the office of the chief native commissioner. Under great pressure Nyachae finally consented to rejoin the Provincial Administration, but only on condition that he not be sent back to Ukwala.

The Political Struggle for Independence
In November 1961 Nyachae was posted to Kangundo Division in Machakos District, where he served first as a district assistant and then as the district officer for the division. This was one of the more difficult Provincial Administration postings in Kenya at the time because it was a center of agitation against British rule.

The earliest forms of resistance to colonialism had been directed against the state itself. However, beginning with what are known as the Harry Thuku riots of 1922,[5] protest turned to a demand for increased rights for Africans within the state. Jomo Kenyatta, a nationalist Kikuyu,

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was the leader of this struggle from the late 1920s, even during his extended stays in England.[6] As the people most disrupted and changed by colonialism, the Kikuyu played a leading role in the accelerating progress of African nationalism, and it was among them that the Mau Mau uprising occurred. From the 1930s, however, Kenyatta had used the vehicle, first, of the Kikuyu Central Association, and second, of his Kenya African Union (KAU) to spread the nationalist gospel among the country’s other peoples. Although Kenyatta denied to his death that either he or the KAU had any involvement in Mau Mau, he and five other officers of the KAU were detained when the State of Emergency was declared. Among those so imprisoned without trial or sentence was Paul Ngei, a Kamba who would serve in the independent country’s cabinet into the 1980s. Kangundo, to which Nyachae was posted, was his home.

During the time of the Emergency, African politics were heavily restricted, especially in Central Province. Country wide African political parties were banned, for example, and the district-level parties that were permitted contributed to the fragmented, ethnic politics that were to trouble Kenya after independence.[7] Men such as Tom Mboya used the labor movement and other vehicles to keep the struggle for African political rights alive with a momentum that accelerated through the 1950s despite (or perhaps because of) the Emergency.[8] African demand for the vote and the end of colonialism became genuinely nationwide, and political participation was truly a mass movement. By the end of the decade it was evident that universal suffrage, majority rule, African governance, and independence were on the horizon. As a result of sustained pressure by the “legal” African nationalist parties, Jomo Kenyatta and the rest of the KAU executive were released from detention in August 1961. An African coalition government was formed in 1962 under the authority of the colonial governor.[9][*] With full internal self-government coming in 1963, the air was filled with excited anticipation on the part of Africans and with dread anxiety from Europeans and those who had supported their colonial endeavor.

Kangundo was Paul Ngei’s constituency as well as his home, and he did nothing to ease the task of the colonial administration during this difficult time of transition. People were expecting to be given land for free and therefore were refusing to cooperate in settlement schemes in which they would be expected to pay. Kenyatta had not yet given his “no free things” speech, and Ngei was encouraging people not to buy. The colonial chiefs were deeply unpopular and subject to constant harassment. A great deal of the antagonism was directed at the senior chief,

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Uku, who was taking a hard line in his insistence on order. Having a senior chief for a father himself, Nyachae was sympathetic to the chiefs and gave them public backing. But he also recognized the forces of change at work and tried to turn the uncompromising ones such as Uku from their self-destructive course. Even at this early stage in his career Nyachae seemed to have his characteristic ability to sort out the essential from the peripheral objectives and to be unbending in his pursuit of the former and flexible about the latter.

In these times it was imperative to be in close touch with the people, particularly as Nyachae was frustrated by Ngei’s unwillingness to listen to reason. “A leader is bound to be able to listen carefully to what other people are saying and [Nyachae] was of that caliber. He would think carefully before deciding.” Public meetings (barazas ) did not work as a means of communication. As Nyachae recalls:

It is extremely misleading to go to a public meeting and see people clapping. It doesn’t mean that they are convinced. . . . We traveled in the countryside and slept in tents to let them understand me and vice versa. . . . We had the best understanding when we walked. Though we have more administrators now, they do not understand the ordinary people the way we did. The most effective communication is to visit in their homes.

He remained in Kangundo Division for only six months, too short a period to have a real impact on it, but he considered the experience to be a seminal one in his career. From it he understood what field administration really means and that independence would bring problems as well as prospects.

Nyachae’s next assignment was to the Kenya Institute of Administration, where he took the district officer’s course. There he took the law exam and qualified as a first-class magistrate, a role which at the time was combined with that of district commissioner.

That course and the one on colonial administration to which he was sent in 1963 at Cambridge University were also designed to socialize the new recruits into their roles as their colonial predecessors had understood them.

In addition to training in the law and administrative practice, there was instruction in small arms, horseback riding, and table manners. These courses symbolized the kind of administrative and social role they were expected to play in Kenyan society. The socialization process was clearly rushed, and one would have expected its impact to be diminished as a result. For example, Nyachae was able to stay for only six of the nine required months at Cambridge because the Kenyan government needed him. But the instruction had its effect nonetheless. The law-and-order component of the role remained the primary concern of the Africans inducted into the Provincial Administration in this period, and they re-

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sisted attempts by a later generation of expatriate administrative trainers to shift the courses decisively toward the primacy of a developmental role by stressing economics, sociology, and planning.[10] Although many of them were strong supporters of economic and social development, they firmly believed that it could be achieved only if law and order were maintained, and they considered the latter their first priority.

How were the British administrators able to socialize their successors into a law-and-order orientation when they failed to transmit many of the other values they held dear? First of all, this was the role to which they actually gave primacy, whatever their intentions. Actions speak louder than words, and the Provincial Administration had just emerged from a period of intense effort to suppress the Mau Mau rebellion. Second, the law-and-order role not only was the one their first superiors expected them to play, it also was the one they had been able to observe from afar as they were growing up.

It was a role in which many of their parents had assisted, and the public expected them to play it when they put on the Provincial Administration uniform. Third, the role met the requirements of the newly independent African state. Despite the sincere rhetoric of development which African politicians used, they were most concerned with the survival of the regime itself in the face of deep inter-ethnic conflicts and dangerously inflated expectations.[11] They perceived the new state as needing security even more than it needed prosperity, and they rewarded careers accordingly. Thus the traditional role expectations of the Provincial Administration were reinforced from all directions.

Between the Kenya Institute of Administration and the Cambridge courses Nyachae also served briefly in Makweni Division of Machakos District. During this period Nyachae had a serious accident in his Land Rover, which left him with recurrent back troubles. When Nyachae returned to the Provincial Administration from Cambridge, England, in March 1964, he was to face the challenge of governing an independent, not a colonial, Kenya.

Nyachae’s entire upbringing aimed him toward the Provincial Administration and its law-and-order orientation. His father’s example and wishes so inclined him, and his early withdrawal from secondary school precluded more professional options.

WHAT YOU MUST KNOW about Mzee Simeon Nyachae, the former powerful cabinet minister

Source: KENYAGIST.COM

Tanga Tanga in Panic as ODM declares interest in 2022 presidential election

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By Dennis Itumbi via FB

ODM Party Leader Raila Odinga, assured President Kenyatta that he was NOT interested in the 2022 Presidential elections and he would NOT vie.

The President believed him. He could NOT understand why anyone doubted

President Kenyatta told friends and confidants that Tinga was very clear in private – he will not be on the 2022 ballot.

A majority of those he told, responded with caution, ” You cannot trust Tinga”

The President insisted “Tinga is genuine this time round, “I am the one who spoke to him”

Today ODM has announced the Party will be on the ballot.

Of Course the Presidential candidate is NOT my friend James Orengo, or Sifuna the LSK noisemaker or Philip Etale

It shall be Raila Odinga.

And Tinga has done that after sensing a BBI defeat pale kwa ballot!

Once again, I am happy that our bold and firm positions in private, Vindicated!

Tanga Tanga in Panic as ODM declares interest  in 2022 presidential election

Source: KENYAGIST.COM

NMS to Issue Statement on Fleet of Cars Causing Speculation

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  • The Nairobi Metropolitan Services has noted the concerns raised over vehicles branded Nairobi Metropol Police and bearing unique number plates not seen before in Kenya. 

    The vehicles which bear the navy blue colour scheme associated with the police were spotted in different areas of the Nairobi Metropolitan Area such as Machakos, Nairobi CBD as well as Juja. 

    Speaking to kenyagist.com on a query seeking clarification about the vehicles, the NMS communication desk stated that it was preparing a statement to address the issue. 

    Vehicle branded Nairobi Metropol Police
    File

    The cars also have conspicuous number plates such as KOW and KOQ – that are not consistent with any of the government-issued number plates.

    The registration numbers are in a white colour scheme which is used for private vehicles, yet the NTSA skips the series of registration numbers bearing the letter O. 

    Kenyans have raised concerns about the legality of the move to designate special police for the Nairobi Metropolitan Area.

    It also brings into question the fate of the Nairobi County Government Inspectorate, popularly known as askaris or kanjo.

    Journalist Eliud Kibii raised concern that the Nairobi Metropol Police would result in an extortion cartel. 

    “This is so illegal, Kenya is a unitary state and not a federal republic! We can’t just sit and watch our nation plunge this low. Soon every county will want to have its own militia in the name of county cops,†Cleophas Bumula opined. 

    Kenyans have in the past accused President Uhuru Kenyatta of militarising the city which he refuted.

    “I have no such intention (militarising the nation). But it is only a fool who would not use those who can perform to help him achieve his intended goals.

    “I am not militarising anything. I am using reliable Kenyan citizens to fulfill my agenda for this Republic. And the KDF are part of us and are also part of our citizens,†the President said in October 2020.

    Nairobi Metropolitan Services (NMS) boss Mohammed Badi speaking on the Jeff Koinange Live show on October 28, 2020.
    Nairobi Metropolitan Services (NMS) boss Mohammed Badi speaking on the Jeff Koinange Live show on October 28, 2020.
    YouTube
  • Source: KENYAGIST.COM

    US Ambassador’s Goodbye Message to Kenyans Elicits Debate

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  • US Ambassador Kyle McCarter’s goodbye message to Kenyans has elicited debate among Kenyans.

    The ambassador took to social media to give gratitude to Kenyans after he resigned from his post.

    In a video posted on his social media accounts, he addressed the Kenyan youth stating that they are the future of the country.

     “I envision that the youth will build Kenya’s democracy for the future. The youth of Kenya. Don’t give up! You are the future of Kenya,” he stated.

    This however did not sit well with a section of netizens who were tired of the future narrative that had been sold to them on numerous occasions.

    US Ambassador to Kenya Kyle McCarter (Right) with President Uhuru Kenyatta.

    “Mr Ambassador, with all due respect, the youth of Kenya have been repeatedly promised about this  elusive “future”. Sir, I was told the same in my youth more than half a decade ago. I’m still looking out the window for it.

    “See how Selfish you are. You want us to wait until the future while you take everything that today brings along.

    “Sir with due respect! stop hallucinating! You would have helped the youths during your service. But all you did was to learn fluent swahili. 

    “Mr ambassador that future is nowhere to be seen this is kenya goodbye balozi see you again.

    However, a section of Kenyans lauded the ambassador for his tenure.

    “Thank you so much for serving Us. May God be with you always and I salute you.

    “Ambassador, you have been an inspiration to many youths. Personally I’m gonna miss you and the online interactions we have had for the last 4 years,” read some of the comments.

    McCarter announced on Sunday, January 17 that he would resign from his post. This came days before Biden’s administration was set to take over. As at the time of publishing, Biden has been sworn as the current President of the United States. 

    McCarter had been picked as a political appointee by former US President Donald Trump in January 2019 to replace Bob Godec.

    The sentiments shared by the Kenyan youth reflect the current crisis that they face in the country. According to a report by Kenya National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS), about 800,000 youth enter the labour market every year.

    However, youth unemployment within the country is still estimated to be as high as 35 per cent.

    Furthermore, owing to the Covid-19 pandemic, thousands have been rendered jobless which has prompted the majority to resort to crime in order to make ends meet.

    Job seekers in Kenya.
    Job seekers in Kenya.
    File
  • Source: KENYAGIST.COM

    Protests Over Diani Airport Expansion

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  • Residents of Mkokuani, Diani protested the expansion of Diani Airport, citing that they were yet to be compensated for the land.

    They argued that they have for over a decade held talks with the Kenya Aviation Authority (KAA) regarding compensation with little luck.

    “What is shocking is that we have held talks with KAA since 2007. Up to date, we have not reached an agreement,” a resident argued.

    File image of a light carrier aircraft at Diani Airport.

    “KAA is using force to intimidate us into surrendering our land without compensation. We are not against, the expansion of the airstrip, we just want what is rightfully ours,” another added.

    They argued that they were not against the expansion project, but are seeking rightful compensation before they lose their land.

    The new airport is expected to replace the Ukunda Airstrip, the current gateway to the South Coast and the sandy white beaches of Diani. 

    Elsewhere, Msambweni Member of Parliament Feisal Bader has hit the ground running following his election to office in December 2020.

    The legislator led residents of Diani on January 20, 2021, in protesting the acquisition of land in the area by a private investor, which had resulted in the eviction of members of the public.

    Bader was accompanied by Kwale Governor Salim Mvurya and Deputy Governor Fatuma Achani. The leaders expressed their displeasure at the incident vowing to block the investor from accessing the land.

    The leaders stated that the lease for the 1000-acre land expired in 2013 and the land was to be returned to locals.

    They argued that the manner in which the said investor acquired a lease for the land, for another 900 years was illegal.

    “You will have the papers and we will have the land, Period. We will not listen to anything.  We will go head-on with them. We will not relent. If the land is rightfully ours, it is ours,” Bader pronounced.

    Governor Mvurya weighed in on the matter, stating that the national government should step in and grant justice to the poor families from the region. He argued that the Building Bridges Initiative (BBI) would not benefit the region if their land is taken away.

    The county boss further stated that the people would not leave the land as it is their home and they had nowhere else to go.

    “We are behind the BBI but we want the issue of land in this country to have a permanent solution. If there is no lasting solution BBI cannot help us,” Mvurya stated.

    “How will there be common ground if one person will have 1000 acres and poor women and men don’t have land and home. There is no reason for them to leave because this is their home,” he added.

    Deputy Governor Achani stated there was no logic behind a single individual leasing land for 900 years, yet there was no significant development of the land up until the expiry of the lease in 2013.

    It is not possible for one rich person to get a lease for 900 years, we as residents of Kwale say our BBI is the right to our land,” Achani stated.

    “People know the lease had expired. They tell us the lease has been renewed. We don’t know how. The lease is being renewed for 900 years yet the investor has done nothing,” she added.

    Msambweni Member of Parliament Feisal Bader during a past address.
    Msambweni Member of Parliament Feisal Bader during a past address.
  • Source: KENYAGIST.COM

    Kenya Records 2 Cases of Highly Infectious Covid-19 Strain

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  • Kenya has recorded 136 more Covid-19 positive cases in the last 24 hours, out of which two people were found to have the highly infectious variant that was first recorded in South Africa. 

    In a press briefing on Wednesday, January 20, Acting Health Director-General Patrick Amoth noted that the two cases of the new mutation were picked up by scientists in Kilifi. Both cases were foreigners. The country’s total caseload rises to 99,444.

    He affirmed that the new variant is 50 percent more transmissible hence pose a greater risk to Kenyans. Amoth pointed out that the 2 foreigners travelled back to their respective countries as advised by the Ministry. 

    Health Cabinet Secretary Mutahi Kagwe addressing the media.
    File

    Unfortunately, two more patients have succumbed to the disease bringing the cumulative fatalities to 1,736.

    Health CS Mutahi Kagwe also announced that 3,787 samples had been tested over the period. The country has so far conducted 1,134,494 Covid-19 tests. 

    Of the positive cases, 85 are male and 51 are female. The youngest is a two-year-old child while the oldest is 98.

    176 patients have recovered from the disease, 162 being from the Home-Based Care Program, while 14 have been discharged from various hospitals. The total recoveries now stand at 82,654. 

    Currently, there are 686 patients admitted to various health facilities countrywide and 1,625 on Home Based Isolation and Care. 

    30 patients are in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU), 14 of whom are on ventilatory support, and 14 on supplemental oxygen. Two are on observation. 

    Another 11 patients are separately on supplementary oxygen with 10 of them in the general wards.

    There is one patient in the High Dependency Unit (HDU).

    Nairobi still recorded the highest number of cases with 69, followed by Homabay 11, Mombasa 11, Meru 10, Kisumu 8, Kiambu 5, Kilifi 4, Nakuru 3, Kajiado 3, Siaya 3, Kakamega 2, Machakos 2, Taita Taveta, Garissa, Turkana Bungoma and Narok recording 1 case each.

    CS Kagwe noted that the positivity rate, which is below five percent, is a good sign that the virus could be on a downward trajectory. He however pointed out that the Ministry would not ease the Covid-19 protocols.

    “We are not going to ease any measures right now. We intend to beef up surveillance. The curfew has played a big role in the numbers going down,” he stated.

    He attributed major progress to the curfew rules implemented by President Uhuru Kenyatta. He noted that the Ministry is ready to carry out the vaccination across the country. 

  • Source: KENYAGIST.COM

    New Ksh1.8B Bypass Connecting Thika Road Takes Shape [PHOTOS]

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  • Residents living along Thika Road and its environs are expected to get a boost in connectivity as major road projects estimated to have cost at least Ksh12.8 billion near completion.

    The Ksh1.8 billion Thika Town Bypass road which is being implemented by the national government is set to ease traffic along the busy Garissa highway and increase access to Thika town for those using the superhighway. 

    So far, 70% of the road under the Kenya Urban Roads Authority (KURA) has been done.

    According to the contractors, the new bypass road touching four counties (Kiambu, Murang’a, Machakos, and Nyandarua) will be ready for use by June this year.

    Ongoing construction on an access road in Thika town.
    File

    The BAT-Kiganjo and the Athena-Witeithie-Thika Super Highway; a bypass intended to ease congestion on the busy Thika-Garissa Highway are some of the roads currently being tarmacked.

    The upper road from the Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) Thika offices to County Stadium is one of the key access roads under construction as it will serve as a bypass to Garissa Road through General Kago Road. 

    Work has also started at Kenyatta highway to Joytown school which is the major road for Thika town and the project is expected to be complete by June 2021.

    Most of the roads under construction are used by heavy trailers to and from the many industries in the area.

    As a result, the contractors have been expanding the access roads to a width of approximately 7.5 meters, with pedestrian walkways.

    The tarmacking of access roads undertaken by the County Government in Thika town is part of ongoing infrastructural development in the country.

    The national government of Kenya through the state-owned Kenya National Highways Authority (KeNHA) is targeting to upgrade 62-kilometers of road connecting Kiambu road and Thika superhighway.

    The road expansion projects starts at Junction B32/B30 on Kiambu Road (near Kiambu Institute of Technology) and proceeds through Kirigiti, Riabai, Ngewa, Kibichoi, Nembu, Ichaweri, Gatundu, Kang’oo, Mang’u and ends at Thika Superhighway.

    Ongoing construction on the Thika Town Bypass road..
    Ongoing construction on the Thika Town Bypass road..
    File
  • Source: KENYAGIST.COM