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Archive for September 16th, 2011

Man who killed Kenyan woman in MN by slashing her 63 times says it was self defence

Posted by Administrator on September 16, 2011

 

Prince and Mauryn Moore

Prince and Mauryn Moore

A Brooklyn Park man charged with fatally slashing his wife’s neck and stabbing her dozens of times is claiming that he was defending himself because she had tried to stab him while he slept.

Prince O. Moore Jr., 53, was charged Thursday with second-degree murder in the death of Mauryn E. Moore, 39. He is in custody in lieu of $750,000 bail.

According to the complaint:

Prince Moore called 911 early Tuesday and reported that his wife tried to stab him in his sleep in their apartment on the 8100 block of Zane Avenue N. When police arrived, they found Mauryn Moore face down in the bedroom and Prince Moore lying next to her with his legs over her body.

By her head was a bent knife and a large pool of blood, the complaint said; her neck was cut so deep that knife impressions were left on her spine.

The Hennepin County medical examiner’s office found 63 stab wounds to her hands, back, chest and face, according to the complaint.

Prince Moore had minor stab wounds to his neck and chest.

Charles Goah, senior pastor at United Christian Fellowship in Minneapolis, presided at the couple’s wedding about four years ago. He said he was shocked at the news and had no indication of any trouble between the couple. He had talked to Mauryn Moore about two weeks ago, he said.

“This is shaking our community and our church,” said Goah, whose congregation consists mainly of people from Liberia.

Prince Moore had sung in the church’s choir and was on the building committee, but the couple hadn’t been active lately, Goah said.

Wayne Doe said he knew Prince Moore when they both lived in Liberia. Moore immigrated to the United States in the mid 1990s. Doe also was stunned by Mauryn’s death. The couple was often too busy to socialize, working long hours and attending school, he said. They have no children.

Police hadn’t had any domestic-violence related calls to the couple’s home, said Brooklyn Park Inspector Todd Milburn.

Hennepin County records indicate that Prince Moore had misdemeanor convictions in the early 2000s for disorderly conduct, violation of an order for protection and assault; none occurred in Brooklyn Park.

Authorities said this was the third domestic-related homicide in Brooklyn Park this year. There have been five homicides in the city this year, the most since 1993.

Domestic deaths aren’t random crimes and often have a cycle of violence that police try to break, said Milburn.

The city’s police have specific protocol when responding to a domestic call. An officer will immediately take a detailed report from the victim and witnesses. Even if a victim doesn’t want to pursue charges, police will still proceed with an arrest if there was an assault or credible threat of an assault, Milburn said. Officers will also contact a domestic violence advocacy group.

“We continue to engage the community and provide education,” he said. “There isn’t a community nationwide that isn’t somehow impacted by domestic violence.”

Violent crimes such as homicide, rape, assault and robbery have declined 21 percent in Brooklyn Park this year compared with the same time last year. Since 2007, reports of domestic violence have dropped 25 percent, Milburn said.

Source: http://www.startribune.com/local/north/129952743.html

UPDATED INFO: The late Mauryn Moore is also known as Maureen Masire from Mombasa. Her family hails from Western Province. Maureen’s

RELATED STORY: Kenyan woman killed in Minnesotta

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Are we our own worst enemy?

Posted by Administrator on September 16, 2011

Photo/STEPHEN MUDIARI/NATION Kingwa Kamencu during a press conference where she launched her presidential bid in Nairobi, September 11th, 2011

Photo/STEPHEN MUDIARI/NATION Kingwa Kamencu during a press conference where she launched her presidential bid in Nairobi, September 11th, 2011

When Kingwa Kamencu announced her presidential bid last weekend, she cried.

For most of her potential voters, that was the ultimate deal breaker. And it was not just the men who were put off by her tears; the women too have been unforgiving.

Many saw her crying as proof that she was too womanly to be president, arguing that for a woman who was trying to get into a position of power, she was not hard enough.

She was seen as too tender-hearted and as a person who could not stand up in the brutal, male-dominated field of presidential aspirants.

One would have been mistaken to think that women all over Kenya would welcome the second woman (after Martha Karua) to announce her bid for the presidency with firm support, but they did not.

Instead, they joined in the criticism, terming her an embarrassment. Women have been said to be their own worst enemies in that they do not believe in themselves enough to run for political posts.

Yet when a woman announces her intentions to vie, her fellow women usually shower her with criticism.

Many women detest the bare-knuckle and sometimes violently aggressive campaigns that seem inevitable for anyone who wants to get ahead during elections.

They also shy away from the scrutiny and uncomfortable questions that are brought up about their personal lives on the campaign trail.

And in many cases, being a woman is usually enough persuasion to leave murky politics for those who are ‘men’.

For those like Martha Karua and Kingwa Kamencu who decide to run, there is criticism from all quarters to deal with.

Women who shared their views with Saturday Magazine after Ms Kamencu’s announcement gave her unfavourable ratings.

As a young unmarried woman, they questioned whether she would need to go on maternity leave, take a honeymoon break or deal with relationship problems if she ascended to the presidency.

Others argued that she should first get married and prove her ability to run a family, before she attempted to run a country.

Whenever we asked what women thought about supporting the youthful presidential candidate, they would laugh in jest and exclaim: That girl who cried on TV!

“She should toughen up first. Is she going to be crying every time she is confronted with a challenge,” poses Kinoo resident Eunice, who says she has never voted for a woman.

Eunice explains that the reason she does not vote for women is that they are rarely strong contenders compared to male candidates.

“I would hate to waste my vote on a woman who will not win the race. It is better to vote for the candidate who is most likely to win, and that candidate is usually a man,” she explains.

However, Eunice believes that in the coming years, a woman like Ms Kamencu might have a better chance. By then, she will have matured enough to understand Kenyan politics and toughened up.

Eunice adds that it was disappointing for women when Ms Kamencu broke down during a press conference to announce her presidential bid.

She says that was the one thing that lost her potential votes. “The reason why most of us cry in private is because men look for a way to use our emotional side against us. ”

Kamencu said she was upset about the long suffering of Kenyans, but it came across as unprofessional.

“The political environment is harsh. We need women who are strong enough to stand up to men and who will not break down over every crisis,” she stresses.

But Eunice agrees that perceived weakness aside, when a woman announces her candidacy for a political post, the first impulse by other women is to look for ways to discredit her rather than support her.

“Maybe we do not believe in the female candidates because we have never had a female president,” she says.

Wanjiru Muthoni, a 27-year-old law student, says she would like to see more youth and women run for political office, but she believes the thing that could be standing in the way of young women like Ms Kamencu is lack of resources and the power to mobilise funds.

“For a young woman, this is a long shot. Most of these male politicians have groups of people who oil their campaigns. I do not think many young women have the resources to finance a presidential campaign,” she says.

Wanjiru adds that women who enter political races have a lot going against them, the first being opposition from their fellow women, who have a deeply rooted culture of not supporting female candidates.

She boils it down to feelings of inferiority among women to the extent that they will not vote for another woman who they consider lesser than male candidates.

“Secondly, women are judged based on different standards. If, as a woman in a position of power, you blunder, you have spoiled it for all women.

“I think women can only vote for a woman who is hard-core. To be president, you have to be man enough and that is just the way it is.

”If you lower your guard as a woman, people will see you as weak. And weak women will not get any votes,” the aspiring lawyer says.

Njeri Wachira, from Thika, says that women should cut Ms Kamencu some slack, seeing as it is her first time to run for President of Kenya.

“I would give Kamencu a chance, but not now. However, we need to believe in ourselves as women.

“As any woman will tell you, it takes guts to go for the highest office. Few women have enough faith in themselves to vie for a local political seat let alone the presidency.

To make matters worse, we get jealous of women who think they have a shot and I think we are out to prove them wrong,” she explains.

Njeri, who says she has voted for female candidates before, wonders why women refuse to support fellow women, yet there are numerous examples of female leaders running companies successfully.

“That is proof enough that women can lead, and we should give them a chance to see what they can do,” she says.

Rebecca Mwicigi, a former aspirant for the Westlands constituency seat in 2007, says that for now, the younger women should give older women a chance to lead because it is only now that opportunities are opening up.

Rebecca, who has been involved in politics as a politician’s wife and a community leader through her church says that young women need to lay a foundation first on which they can run if they are to make successful bids in future.

“Of course mentorship is important, but if you are young and you know you want to vie for the presidency, lay out your groundwork first,” she advises.

Rebecca says that a young woman cannot come straight from school or from an office job and expect to sail through smoothly.

“You have to get involved in politics and work in the community to prove your skills if voters are to give you greater responsibility as a head of state,” she counsels.

All the same Mrs Mwicigi is convinced that this is a good time to vote for a woman president.

“It is time we gave a woman the green light. Men have had their chance. Let us now test and see what a woman can do,” she challenges.

Rebecca reckons that women have more empathy and hence a competent female president can deal with the pressing needs facing Kenyans.

Source: http://www.nation.co.ke/Features/saturday/Are+we+our+own+worst+enemy/-/1216/1237266/-/11tmbk8z/-/index.html

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Kenya’s Newest City built only for refugees

Posted by Administrator on September 16, 2011

The Dadaab refugee camp in Kenya is the world's largest. The machinery of international famine relief is in full gear there, but hundreds of thousands of people may become long-term residents. Conditions have prompted a camp manager to transform a temporary refuge into a city of the future.

The Dadaab refugee camp in Kenya is the world's largest. The machinery of international famine relief is in full gear there, but hundreds of thousands of people may become long-term residents. Conditions have prompted a camp manager to transform a temporary refuge into a city of the future.

The Dadaab refugee camp in Kenya is the world’s largest. The machinery of international famine relief is in full gear there, but hundreds of thousands of people may become long-term residents. Conditions have prompted a camp manager to transform a temporary refuge into a city of the future.

This morning the Somali refugees are trying, again, to bury a child in his new city. Henok Ochalla sees them digging up red earth with their hatchets. He stops his SUV, plods over to the parents and tells them this camp is a place for life, not a cemetery.

Life here admittedly drags on in filthy conditions, in hot tents surrounded by prickly shrubs cluttered with black plastic bags. But it could become a more nourishing life.

“You have to bury your child someplace else,” Ochalla says.

Less than an hour later he drives past the improvised gravesite again and nods with satisfaction. “They understood,” he says. The family has removed the small body and taken it to the place where a new sign reads “Graveyard.” Children are still dying in the camp from the effects of malnutrition, pneumonia and infection. “They are digging everywhere,” says Ochalla. “I can’t allow that. Order is critical here now.”

Ochalla is a powerful-looking man, a 39-year-old Ethiopian with a big, white smile, a smile that reassures people in Dadaab — otherwise a hellish, chaotic place.

Kenya’s Newest City

Ochalla works for the United Nations. He is one of the five camp managers, a sort of humanitarian mayor, in the world’s largest refugee camp, located on the Somali border in Kenya. He’s also a builder, a logistician and a registration office. His job is to find places to live for the thousands of refugees that have stubmled across the border every day for months now, their feet sore, their stomachs empty and their heads full of expectations. He allocates plots and makes arrangements to provide them with water, latrines, tents and addresses.

In fact, Ochalla is in the process of building a new city. It will be called “Ifo Extension” — a new wing of the twenty-year-old UN facility known as the Ifo Refugee Camp, outside the town of Dadaab. The new extension will be the size of the German city of Tübingen, about 90,000 people, and it will come complete with schools, market squares and police stations.

Ochalla wants to build a real city, a more tolerable place than the camp is today, and a place “made for the future.” He needs to provide a home for 90,000 refugees by December. Once emergency conditions are over, he hopes that stone houses will stand where there are tents today. A dust cloud engulfs Ochalla’s UN vehicle and a group of thin children, who stare as if it were a spaceship that had landed on their dried-up planet.

His two mobile phones, an iPhone and a Nokia, ring constantly. “It’s not going fast enough with the water tanks,” he says into one of the phones. “We need four more tents in section S today,” he says into the other. He wears suede shoes and a safari hat. Three tents were stolen during the night, he says.

Ochalla and his colleagues from the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR), the World Food Program and the other aid organizations working in Dadaab need to come up with quick answers to the questions posed by refugees and politicians, or by donors, like a German family that gives €50 of its monthly budget to the camp. Questions like: How does the world’s largest refugee camp, a place with 450,000 residents, function?

And how does one bring structure to a place where the life of each individual is in a state of almost complete chaos, where people have no homes, no food and no plan for the future? Aside from giving them a few sacks of flour every month, is it possible to give these people a future?

Africa is the continent of human suffering, but it is also a place where people are constantly in flux, constantly trying to make its 30 million square kilometers (11.6 million square miles) more habitable. It has the African Union, which seeks “African solutions for African problems.” And it has Jeffrey Sachs and the UN Millennium Project, Bill Gates and his attempt to develop genetically modified plants to fight hunger, Bob Geldof, Bono, Angelina Jolie and all the other celebrities who have turned Africa into a canvas for their humanitarian efforts. Finally, it has Henok Ochalla of the UNHCR, who sets out every morning and tries to bring a little order and hope to this new wave of suffering.

‘I Can’t Count Them All’

But can anyone give hope to people like Nuriya Ali, a woman who fled the worst drought in a decade and arrived in Dadaab with nothing but her four daughters? It’s 6:30 a.m., and the sun is still pale in the sky above the reception center in the Ifo Extension, when Nuriya Ali and her daughters reach Dadaab, after walking for 10 days through the arid Somali steppe and wandering around the camps for two days and two nights. Nuriya is waiting to be granted entry into the world’s largest city of hungry people.

She presses her hand against her breast and squats on the ground in front of the gate, trying to nurse her four-month-old baby girl. Nuriya’s breast milk stopped flowing several days ago. Now the baby just lies there, lacking even the strength to cry. Her three other children — Sowdo, 7, Maryan, 5 and Amina, 3 — cling to her veil. The girls haven’t eaten in three days. They don’t speak, play or laugh. They simply stare into space. Hunger has made them apathetic.

Nuriya has a thoughtful look in her eyes and the smooth skin of a young girl. She is from Afmadow, a small city in southern Somalia, where the Shabab militias, armed with assault rifles, control everyday life. She believes she is 26. Her husband died of a snakebite when she was pregnant. He couldn’t be driven to the hospital because the family had no car. “Everything is gone, everything,” she says. “We don’t even have a plastic jug anymore.”

Nuriya Ali is a nomad. She remembers that her family once had 25 cows, but when the drought came they had to travel ever-greater distances to find even a small amount of water. Sometimes they would walk for two days before reaching water, and at other times there was no water to be found. First the animals died, and then the people started dying. “I can’t count them all,” says Nuriya, referring to the neighbors and friends who died. Those who were still able to flee left Somalia, and Nuriya joined the exodus.

Hunger threatens more than 12 million people in the Horn of Africa. Some 38 percent of the population is malnourished in southern Somalia. Thousands have already starved to death this year, and the death toll could continue to rise, possibly reaching several hundred thousand in the coming weeks. No one knows how many will flee to Dadaab, or how many more people the enormous refugee camp can still support.

Nuriya looks at the gate, where hundreds of other refugees sit or squat on the ground, including women with up to seven children and old people dragging themselves along on sticks. An entire village has gathered under a single tarpaulin.

They’re all waiting to be ushered into this gigantic aid machine, where people are processed into computer files and sorted by health status and family size, and where tons of relief supplies and tents have been purchased with the money the aid organizations have raised.

In recent weeks, $251 million (€178 million) have been donated for drought victims in the Horn of Africa, including $21 million from the German government. Once again, the money is far from sufficient to meet the refugees’ needs.

Somalia suffers from the double curse of drought and war. The situation has worsened in the twenty years since the nation’s central government collapsed. And now international speculators, betting on agricultural commodities markets, have driven up prices and forced people like Nuriya to leave their homes. The West gives millions of dollar every year; but the West also takes. Dadaab and its residents are a microcosm of Africa, a place full of people forced by war, global markets and drought into a life that could not exist without the global aid machine.

Tons of Aid, and Famine

Every day, Ochalla’s colleagues with the World Food Program drive their trucks to the warehouses. Each truck is loaded with 28 tons of relief supplies, including corn meal from the United States and porridge from Turkey. The logistics experts’ goal is to maintain a three-month inventory of food, but at the moment there is only enough food available for two months.

 

Once every 15 days, each camp resident can expect to receive 3.36 kilograms (7.4 lbs.) of wheat flour, 3.36 kilos of cornmeal, 0.96 kilos of lentils, 0.48 liters (16 oz.) of vegetable oil, 0.72 kilos of porridge and 80 grams of salt. It isn’t much, but it’s enough to stay alive.

The aid arrives by air and sea from all over the world. The refugees arrive at the border, some in shared taxis, but most on foot, after enduring a trek through the harsh Somali landscape. It is as if two unending tides were advancing toward one another, the refugees and the aid. The only question is: Which tide will ebb first?

It is 8 a.m. An aid worker carrying a megaphone walks among the refugee groups and tries to organize them by family size. Once Nuriya and her children have been classified as “Family Size 5,” they are allowed through the gates. The three-year-old is crying. No one says a word.

Before Nuriya can become a camp resident, and before she and her girls are given anything to eat, they are required to pass through various stations. At one station, she dips her finger into black dye for identification purposes. At another station, an aid worker asks her whether she was raped or attacked by wild animals. Nuriya shakes her head. “I saw four children die,” she says. “We buried them by the side of the road.”

Now the sun is beating down on the square, and the waiting refugees cower under the UNHCR tents. The refugee agency acts as the lead organization in Dadaab. Its workers attempt to coordinate the contributions and efforts of 25 other aid organizations, so that they don’t all do the same thing, money isn’t wasted and things are done fairly. If someone were to randomly start distributing rice in the camp, it could trigger a riot.

In the reception area, the German Agency for International Cooperation conducts the medical examinations, CARE manages food distribution and the International Organization for Migration brings refugees from the border to the camp. Yet another group of rickety buses has just arrived at the gate.

Nuriya sits on a bench and watches as the doors open and more refugees, a group that has just been collected at the border, emerge from the buses. Children are handed down across the steps. One boy isn’t wearing shoes or underpants. The women carry cloth bundles.

Ochalla, the unofficial camp mayor, stands at the main gate, less than 10 meters away from Nuriya, and observes the same scene, but with different eyes. He is leading a delegation from Japan on a tour of the camp, including the reception area and the new city for refugees. The Japanese take pictures. Ochalla says: “We are in trouble. We thought the numbers were going down, but more and more people have been coming in the last few days.” The aid workers expect 1,500 new arrivals on this particular day.

For Nuriya, this means that perhaps hardly any Somalis will be living in Somalia soon, and that she may never be able to return to her country. For Ochalla, it means that even more refugees will become residents of his refugee city, and that he will have to work more quickly.

Waiting for Food

Ochalla considers it a good day when he can house 1,000 people in the new tents; 1,500 is a different story. He works nonstop, rushing from one area to another, and wherever he goes, refugees hold out their hands, asking: “Where is the water? Where is my tent?” He gathers the Japanese visitors and climbs into the UN vehicle. Nuriya continues to sit there, watching and waiting.

At about 10 a.m., her exhausted three-year-old daughter falls backward off the bench, bumping her head on the ground. She screams and screams, while her mother tries desperately to calm her down, fearing that her family will be rejected if the aid workers notice the girl crying, and that she won’t get any food for her children. After she has been waiting for five hours, without water or food, Nuriya is finally ushered into the receiving office.

A volunteer takes her fingerprint. Another worker brings five blue plastic bracelets, placing one around Nuriya’s wrist and the others around her children’s’ wrists. The bracelets are numbered in black ink: 519 846 to 519 850. They serve as a means of identification, transforming Somali refugees into Somali camp residents. Nuriya leaves the receiving area with five 500-gram packages of high-energy biscuits, which contain 11,450 kilocalories. The children shove the crumbly biscuits into their mouths and chew them with the serious expressions of old people.

They’ve been vaccinated, and doctors have examined them to determine whether they are severely or only moderately malnourished. Nuriya has been given cooking utensils, a few grass mats and a tarp. She has also received a 21-day food ration that includes flour, oil and salt. A new life is about to begin for Nuriya and her family. If all goes well, they could soon be living in a tent in Ochalla’s city, and eventually in a stone house. For the time being she has no choice but to sleep outside.

The tent distribution office consists of a tarp, a generator, two employees and three laptops. This is the place where the future city begins. Every morning, a group of people sit in the sand outside the field office of camp mayor Ochalla, old men who no longer have families and women in colorful veils, holding up their papers and calling out the number of children they have. Ochalla raises his hands into the air and says: “suk, suk, suk.” Suk, which means “wait,” is one of the few Somali words he knows. Refugees do a lot of waiting.

Dadaab, a Boomtown of Need

By entrusting themselves to the care of the aid machine, the refugees have lost control over their lives. Arriving in Dadaab also means abandoning one’s freedom.

Dadaab is now the third-largest city in Kenya, but there are no Kenyans living there. Instead, it is home to 450,000 Somalis in a camp that was built for 90,000 people. Refugees like Nuriya are not permitted to leave the camp, because the Kenyan government wants them to remain refugees and not become illegal immigrants. The government also prohibits them from working.

To get a sense of what his city could look like one day, Ochalla drives to another section of the camp, Ifo 2, where the first stone houses have been built for refugees. There are 116 red brick model houses with corrugated metal roofs in Ifo 2, but all are still empty, making the place look like a very orderly ghost town. It also has schools, a police station and a water supply. The Kenyan government put a stop to the project, fearing that it would encourage the refugees to settle there permanently. But that has been a reality for some time now.

Ochalla does what is normally avoided in refugee policy: He tries to give people a permanent place to live, a home. Refugee policy makes things as uncomfortable as possible for refugees, so they’re encouraged to leave. But, says Ochalla, “we learned this from the other camps. We too thought it would only be for two years, but then two years had suddenly turned into 20. I don’t believe that these people can return to Somalia.”

In mid-July, the Kenyan prime minister allowed the development of the new city to continue, partly because of overcrowding and the acute needs of the refugees, but international pressure probably played a role, too. The city could mark the beginning of a refugee policy that recognizes that starving people need more than food. They need a future, one that includes a place to live, perhaps a plot of land and the right to support themselves through work. This rethinking of refugee policy is also needed to prevent the aid machinery from eventually collapsing.

‘First the Misery, Then the Successes’

“Salam alaikum,” Ochalla says to a group of Somalis gathered around his desk. “Would you please get back in line?” He types a number into an Excel table on a laptop. A family sits in front of him. “Name: Kenda. Family size: 4. Origin: northeastern Somalia.” He says that this method enables him to find each of the 450,000 residents of Dadaab. A staff member writes an address for the family onto a white piece of paper: Section S, Block 51, Community 11. It’s the family’s ticket for a new beginning.

 

Ochalla and his staff have given these pieces of paper to 30,000 people since the end of July. Armed with the document, they gather their few belongings and move onto a piece of land, even if the plot isn’t quite ready yet. “There is currently a latrine for 25 families,” says Ochalla. “I want to have one for each family in six months.” There are currently only 10 water tanks, he says, “but there will be 68 tanks in a few months.”

Ochalla was once a member of the Ethiopian national football team, a defensive player with jersey number 5. He studied agriculture and worked for a cotton producer, until the UNHCR recruited him 16 years ago. Since then, he has spent his life traveling from one African refugee camp to the next. After eight and a half years in Ethiopian camps, he went to Sierra Leone and then to Liberia, becoming acquainted with hunger, drought and war. He met German Chancellor Angela Merkel when she visited a refugee project in Liberia in 2007. Ochalla remembers that he was wearing a suit.

“She’s one of the good ones,” he says, “one of the Iron Ladies of the world.” He also met Angelina Jolie, twice, he says. “She’s very easy to handle.” And, only recently, he met the “German Minister Niebel” ( Dirk Niebel, Germany’s minister for economic cooperation and development).

Ochalla has a map on his laptop of his future city, with street names like Hope Road, Unity Road and Friends Road. According to the plan, each family will receive a 10 by 12-meter (33 by 39-foot) plot of land. There are 18 sections, which are divided into nine blocks with 192 plots in each block. The plan includes mosques, child-friendly zones and health units. “Here,” says Ochalla, pointing to pink rectangles on the map, “are eight elementary schools and a high-school. And then life begins.”

A Vision of a Functioning Piece of Africa

When German Minister Niebel visited Dadaab, he was first shown the squalor and then the new city. Ochalla needs money, and he believes that this approach will enable him to raise most of it. “We always show both sides,” he says, “first the misery, then the successes.”

Ochalla has a budget of $24 million to build his refugee city. He has already spent $16 million of the money. According to UN figures, $2.5 billion are needed to save the people in the entire Horn of Africa. So far less that half of the money has been provided. Critics claim that this is primarily because the rich donor countries prefer to pump their billions into rescuing banks, so nothing is left over for famine relief. They also say the African countries are not doing enough to address the problems.

There was a donor conference in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa two weeks ago. The African Union sought to use the opportunity to prove the opposite — that African governments were, in fact, helping. Fifty-four African countries pledged $46 million for famine relief in the region, with Algeria and Egypt leading the pack. Oil-rich Nigeria will donate only $1 million, while South Africa pledged the paltry sum of $1.3 million.

Belated and insufficient as it may be, the charity brings some hope. Ochalla has his work cut out for him. He’ll need to present the same examples — first misery, then success — to celebrities, journalists and cabinet ministers. When he met with German Development Minister Niebel, he talked about the 1,000 people he and his staff resettle on a single day. They toured the unpaved roads of Ifo Extension, the site of Ochalla’s future refugee city. He explained to the minister how, with international assistance, he intends to expand this tiny segment of African earth into a functioning piece of Africa.

He envisions a city where water flows from wells, where tents have turned into stone houses, where the dusty square has become a market, where the children have turned into pupils and waiting has turned into a life. The Bill Gates Foundation envisions a more nutritious type of sweet potato, which could potentially feed millions. Bob Geldof has established a fund that hopes to invest in African companies and jump-start the economy. Jeffrey Sachs, with his UN program, hopes to cut the number of people suffering from hunger in half.

For now, Nuriya Ali just wants a tent.

She is standing in an open area filled with children, puddles of sewage and garbage. “We had to sleep outside the first night,” she says. “It was cold, and the children were coughing.” But, she adds, it was a happy night.

A female friend from her village, who has been in the camp for five days, found Nuriya and brought her to where she is living in an area known as the Outskirts, the camp’s ghetto. Nuriya stowed away her high-energy biscuits, oil and cooking utensils in an old woman’s tent. “I cooked,” she says. “I made tea and flatbread.” Her children were able to eat their fill for the first time in weeks. Afterwards, she fetched some water and poured into a large bowl. Then she placed her children into the bowl, one at a time, and bathed them.

Source: http://www.spiegel.de/international/spiegel/0,1518,784682,00.html

Posted in Kenya | 1 Comment »

Kenyan woman killed in Minnesota

Posted by Administrator on September 16, 2011

United States authorities are trying to locate relatives of a Kenyan woman suspected to have been murdered on Tuesday.

The woman, identified by close friends as Maurlyn Moore, was found dead in her apartment in Brooklyn Park in Minnesota.

Minnesota Kenyans’ Association Secretary Albert Nyamari told the Nation on phone Friday that the woman had been married to a Liberian and had changed her maiden name.

“We do not know her middle name but we understand she comes from Western Kenya, probably in Busia or Butere,” he said.

She was working as a nurse in the US and was married to a Liberian plumber. They had no children.

Police suspect that the woman was murdered by her husband over what they describe as “marital issues”.

On Tuesday night, police were called to the Villa Del Cornado apartments on the 8100 block of Zane Avenue North, an hour after midnight, after being tipped of a domestic stabbing, said Mr Nyamari.

“When they arrived they found the female victim dead on the scene, and immediately took an adult male into custody.”

The suspect was taken to the North Memorial Medical Centre, where he is being treated for injuries sustained in the conflict.

Police say they might charge him for homicide.

But they might bury Ms Moore’s remains if no one claims it.

Source: http://www.nation.co.ke/News/Kenyan+woman+killed+in+US+/-/1056/1237694/-/asjil/-/index.html

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The story of Simiyu Samurai

Posted by Administrator on September 16, 2011

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Boniface Simiyu 21 is the son of a Kenyan diplomat who  has been stationed all over the Far East for the Last 12 Years. Simiyu an avid Martial Arts Student has studied Martial Arts in all the countries his parents have been posted to.

Posted in Kenya: Entertainment | Tagged: | 4 Comments »

US lecturer enters race for Kisumu Governor

Posted by Administrator on September 16, 2011

Barack Otieno Abonyo Ph.D

Barack Otieno Abonyo Ph.D

Barack Otieno Abonyo Ph.D isn’t your average professor at Florida A & M – he is running for governor of Kisumu County, Kenya.

The Kenyan native of the Nyando District, Abonyo has an extensive résumé, with attributes ranging from being a published author to an award-winning physiologist.

After earning a Ph.D in physiology in 2001, Abonyo became a postdoctoral fellow in the department of infectious diseases at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. He later joined the faculty of the College of Pharmacy of and Pharmaceutical Sciences as a visiting biology professor in 2005, and was soon promoted to an associate professor of pharmacology in 2008.

“Education is the key to all success,” Abonyo said. “It is imperative that we as a people continue to spread this message. Any goal one wants to achieve, with hard work it is accessible.”

Since being at FAMU, Abonyo has earned a plethora of awards recognizing his work,

In 2010, he won the “Teacher of The Year” award and the university-wide “Emerging Researcher of the Year.” His most renowned research contribution is currently helping to develop a safe lung cancer and asthma gene therapy.

His research on the food habits of Tilapia in Lake Naivasha, Kenya helped fish farmers thrive in Kenya’s largely agrarian economy, which has since generated major revenue for the community bordering the lake.

Abonyo’s ambition is to become the governor of Kisumu County, located in western Kenya. The district, which borders Lake Victoria, has a population of about half a million according to the latest statistics from the Central Bureau of Statistics in 1999.

His platform promotes a variety of issues such as, self-reliance and free education for the country. He described his decision to run for governor as pressing and compassionate, and spoke of the great pride he has for his country and its potential.

“I went home a few months ago, and seeing the poverty hurt my heart,” Abonyo said. “People don’t have food. Kenya has human resources there but has a great lack of leadership. I will do my best to use my country’s resources to build up.”

Ren Moses has known Abonyo for more than eight years and will serve on his campaign team.

“Dr. Abonyo can change the country within five years. He is a very honest man, we are energized and working hard to win this election,” Moses said.

The election is December 2012 and Abonyo has already launched his campaign, hosting events such as soccer tournaments and small receptions, and making sure his message is heard through different realms of the media.

He explained the importance of FAMU’s support of his campaign, stressing that the university’s support would help alleviate poverty in his home country.

“You need capitol to run for a position at that level,” Abonyo said. “I am going there as an ambassador of FAMU. It would be excellent for all organizations to help me anyway they can. All donations, no matter how big or small, will help the cause.”

Source: http://www.thefamuanonline.com/news/famu-professor-enters-kenyan-politics-1.2629770#.TnNF2U9n-Bg

Posted in Diaspora News | Tagged: | 6 Comments »

Kenyan gay community launches website and demand human rights

Posted by Administrator on September 16, 2011

APPEAL: Ms Kate Kamunde at the launch of the LGBT website

APPEAL: Ms Kate Kamunde at the launch of the LGBT website

THE gay community has appealed to the government to accord it equal rights and the protection enjoyed by other Kenyans. The gay have also appealed for civic obligations from the state to ensure that human rights apply to all without discrimination. Speaking at the launch of their website, Gay and Lesbian Coalition of Kenya general manager Eric Gitau said the community is part of Kenya and should be involved in its development. “Kenya’s lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans-gender and intersex (LGBTI) persons are now more than ever before concerned with their welfare and national development issues,” Gitau said.

He called on the public to respect and uphold everyone’s right to express themselves saying there needs to be a platform for the engagement in vital debates through the provision of freedom of speech. He added that there are many stories from sexual and gender minorities in Kenya which have not been aired and appealed to the media to air positive stories about the group’s operations.

Gitau appealed for sober reporting in order to present a balanced and unopinionated look at the community. “Go beyond rhetoric and live with the reality that the LGBTI community is now a core and integral population of Kenya that needs to be included in positive light,” he said. Kate Kamunde from AfraKenya appealed to the public to abide by the constitution and co-exist with the community. She lamented the gay are discriminated and stigmatised when attempting to access basic services. “We are human beings and should be given an opportunity to enjoy life like other people,” she said.

Source: http://www.the-star.co.ke/national/national/40620-gay-launch-website-and-demand-human-rights

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BISHOP WANJIRU BANNED FROM DOING WEDDINGS

Posted by Administrator on September 16, 2011

BISHOP Margaret Wanjiru, the Housing assistant minister, has been banned from conducting marriages. The Kenya Gazette notice dated September 9 signed by the Senior Deputy Registrar of Marriages FSM Ng’ang’a withdrew Wanjiru’s licence with immediate effect.

Wanjiru, the MP for Starehe, is also the presiding bishop of Jesus is Alive Ministries which is part of the Redeemed Gospel Churches of Kenya.  “Notice is given that in exercise of the powers confirmed by section 6 (1) of the African Christian Marriage and Divorce Act, the ministers named in the schedule hereto have had their licence to celebrate marriage under the provisions of the said Act cancelled,” said the notice.

The decision will affect thousands of Wanjiru’s followers who jampack the JIAM church and offices on Haile Selassie Highway, Nairobi, every Sunday. Other church ministers whose licences have been cancelled are Rev Perminus Kinyua, Rev Julius Kigunda and Rev Joseph Kamau Njoroge of Christian Church International.

The registrar also banned Pastor Job Ngugi of Vision and Hope Revival Centre, Rev Joseph Boro of Nairobi Community Centre, Rev Robert Wafula of Jesus Worship Sanctuary, Rev Paul Mulatya Makula of Agape Community Ministry Kenya and Rev Gabriel Wanjohi Waweru of the Christian Church International from solemnising marriages.

Wanjiru is known for her catchphrase ‘The Glory is Here!’. She told the Star that the notice in the Kenya Gazette was “procedural” and did not mean she cannot conduct marriages. She said she had been licensed to marry couples but her status has changed. “I was then registered a pastor under the Redeemed Gospel Churches but now l am an ordained Bishop of the Jesus is Alive Ministries,” she told the Star yesterday.

Wanjiru explained that she could not be registered both as Pastor Margaret Wanjiru of Redeemed Gospel Church and Bishop Margaret Wanjiru of JIAM and had to choose one between them. Senior Counsel Paul Muite said it was “strange” that such action would be taken by the registrar.

He explained  that it is the responsibility of the church to seek  registration of ordained clergy with authority to solemnise marriages. “The only time someone can be  deregistered is if the recommending church is not registered; or the  individual has not been ordained or has been excommunicated by the  church,” Muite said.

Wanjiru was ordained by Bishop Arthur Kitonga when he was the head of the Redeemed Gospel churches. Kitonga, who has since retired, was yesterday not available for comment. However, a church bishop who cannot be identified because he is not authorised to make an official comment said of Wanjiru, “She first applied for the licence under the Redeemed Gospel Churches  many years back and she was granted.

Now for her to claim that the reason her licence has been cancelled is just because she has applied for a new one is rather peculiar. She simply could have updated her status since she now runs her own church.” Bishop Wanjiru’s JIAM is described on her website as one of the fastest growing churches in Africa.

Source: http://www.the-star.co.ke/national/national/40601-bishop-wanjiru-banned-from-doing-weddings

Posted in Kenya | Tagged: | 1 Comment »

Chinese condoms too small for South Africans

Posted by Administrator on September 16, 2011

JOHANNESBURG, Sep 16 – A South African court has blocked the government from buying 11 million Chinese condoms, saying they are too small, a newspaper reported on Friday.

The finance ministry had awarded a contract to a firm called Siqamba Medical, which planned to buy the Phoenurse condoms from China, the Beeld newspaper said.

A rival firm, Sekunjalo Investments Corporation, turned to the High Court in Pretoria after losing the bid, arguing that their condoms were 20 percent larger than the Chinese ones.

Judge Sulet Potterill blocked the deal with Siqamba, ruling that the condoms were too small, made from the wrong material, and were not approved by the World Health Organisation, the paper said.

South Africa has more HIV infections than any country in the world, with 5.38 million of its 50 million people carrying the virus.-AFP

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Kayamba Africa faces Sh1 million suit for ‘Copyright Infringement’

Posted by Administrator on September 16, 2011

The popular Kayamba Africa group faces a lawsuit for alleged copyright infringement. Word Is is in possession of a demand letter sent to Kayamba Africa Ltd demanding Sh1 million compensation, an immediate stop to further infringement and admission of liability for infringing on copyright for two songs owned by Webuye Jua Kali.

The letter dated September 14 was sent to Kayamba Africa from lawyers Wesonga and Company Advocates. It states: “That on diverse dates during you live performances at various functions, you performed/sang our client’s songs namely “Mulongo” and “My Dear” without their consent, authority or permission. “The performance of these songs during various functions brought you monetary gains without any benefit to our client. Your actions also contravened the express provisions of the Copyright Act, 2001, No. 12 of 2001 regarding copyright protection.”

The letter warned, “That should we not hear from yourselves within seven days from the date hereof, we shall proceed to court without any reference to you.” Kayamba Africa is popular for their traditional and ethnic style of music. The group of six is the to go to band for high profile events and wedding ceremonies.

Source: http://www.the-star.co.ke/word-is/word-is/40696-kayamba-africa-faces-sh1-million-suit-for-copyright-infringement

Posted in Kenya | 1 Comment »