Thursday, September 30, 2010

PNU CRISIS IN WAJIR SOUTH

The PNU coalition’s preparations for next month’s Wajir South by-election have been thrown into disarray by a decision by Vice-President Kalonzo Musyoka’s ODM-Kenya to field its own candidate.


Mr Musyoka has announced that the party will pull all the stops and campaign for its candidate in the October 13 by-election to recapture the seat it lost in 2007. The seat fell vacant after Abdirahman Ali Hassan’s election was nullified by a petition. Mr Hassan won the seat on a Kanu ticket, an affiliate of the PNU coalition. Sources within the party say there is a lot of disquiet, especially after PNU secretary general Kiraitu Murungi said the coalition will support the incumbent.

“You should not be surprised to see Uhuru Kenyatta, who is Kanu chairman, and the VP campaigning for different candidates in Wajir South,” a coalition member who did not wish to be named said.

The issue is reported to be on the agenda of a meeting expected this week to try and restore order in the coalition. The meeting has not yet been called. Fresh wrangles broke out in the PNU after its dismal performance in by-elections in Makadara, Juja and Starehe a week ago. PNU has won only two of 10 by-elections since 2008.

PSC CHAIRMAN HOM. MOHAMED ABDIKADIR TO OVERSEE THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE NEW KENYA CONSTITUTION


Nominated Hon. Amina Abdullahi (KANU), ODM Mandera West, Mohamud Maalim included in the List. 

Vice President Kalonzo Musyoka is on Thursday expected to table the names of 27 Members of Parliament nominated to sit in the Constitutional Implementation Oversight Committee.

Mandera Central MP, PSC Chairman, Hon. Mohamed Abdikadir who together with Budalangi Hon. Ababu Namwamba Spearheaded Kenya's New Constitution will act as Chair and Vice to the approved Parliament New constitution Implementation powerful Team.


From ODM side, They will be joined by Assistant Ministers Elizabeth Ongoro, Joseph Nkaiserry, Alfred Khangati and Mohamed Maalim,

Others are Danson Mwazo, Benedict Gunda Charles Onyancha, Julius Murgor, John Mbadi, Millie Odhiambo, Racheal Shebesh, Joyce Laboso and Lucas Chepkitony, who is the only member of the No team to be included in the 27 member team.

The PNU team is led by Abdikadir Mohammed, who has been proposed to head the crucial team after he exhibited qualities that saw an end to the more than 20 year wait for the conclusion of the constitution review.

He is joined by Narc-K chairperson Martha Karua, Cabinet Ministers Beth Mugo and Chirau Ali Mwakwere, and assistant minister Kilemi Mwaria.

Others include; Phillip Kaloki, Amina Abdullah, Cecil Mbarire, Wavinya Ndeti, Ekwe Ethuro, Charles Kilonzo, David Ngugi and Wilfred Ombui

Parliament will also be putting into gear the implementation process with two bills coming for first reading in the House, namely the Commission for the Implementation of the Constitution Bill and the Vetting of the Judges and Magistrates Bill.

FREE MOBILE SMS KENYA PROVIDED IN GOOGLE


Free Mobile SMS in Kenya provided by Google. This is in contrast with tariffs of both Bigger Mobile phone Provider Safaricom and Zain (Now to be re-branded Bharti-Airtel).

JUDGE STRIKES BLOW FOR BILL OF RIGHTS : OPINION

So a High Court judge faulted President Kibaki over renditions to Uganda, and in the process, blocked Kenyan security from sending yet another victim of the Abuse of Law to Uganda ! Let us say a rousing Hip, Hip Hooray for Tuesday, September 28, 2010 for it is sure to go down as a historic day in Kenya's judicial history. It is the day when the new Constitution took real meaning for Kenyans for the first time, for it is the day when the Bill of Rights became "armed to the teeth" in the protection of the rights of Muslims to be judged in open court, not prejudged by extra-judicial police.


This is the day when 10,000,000 Muslims can turn and look back as the day when they ceased to live beyond the pale of the law, and brought within its protective threshold. Our dying faith in the Kenyan System has been snatched back, from the jaws of death, in the nick of time. We are not yet where we ought to be: we want to stop living as second-class citizens in our own country. We want an end to renditions - the most horrific application of an oppressive piece of stillborn legislation: the catch-all Anti-Terrorism Bill.

Today, we have reason to smile. We have every right to rejoice.

Stand up Human Rights Commissioner Hassan and hold your head high, for your valiant forum against renditions last Friday was vindicated in our High Court today. The insults of yesterday's scumbag newspaper fade into oblivion. As they say, sticks and stones might break your bones, but words will never do so.

To the enemies of human freedom and human rights, let today's court ruling serve as a warning: Muslim human rights are no longer paperweight; they are for real.

Mohamed Warsame

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

KENYA CENSUS GROUP FACES "AN UPHILL TASK"......

KENYA'S HIGH COURT JUDGE MOHAMED WARSAME "CAUTIONS" THE PRESIDENT AGAINST NEW CONSTITUTION

The high court has stopped the arrest of a Kenyan businessman wanted over the Uganda bombings and ordered that any future arrests of the suspect will have to follow due process. The high court order comes against a hue and cry raised by human rights bodies over previous arrests and extradition of Kenyan suspects to Uganda over the bombing.

In his order, high court Judge Justice Mohammed Warsame questioned whether the institution of the president was protecting, preserving and safeguarding the interests and rights of Kenyan citizens as contained in the new constitution. Ten Kenyans have so far been arrested and charged in Uganda over the bombings. The case will be heard on September 30th.

Justice Mohammed Warsame questioned why President Mwai Kibaki, who recently swore allegiance to the new Constitution, allowed state agents to infringe on the rights of Kenyans.


“That kind of behaviour --- raises basic issues of whether a president, who has just sworn in and agreed to be guided by the provisions of the Constitution can allow his agents to breach with a remarkable arrogance or ignorance,” ruled Warsame.

Warsame said the action by the Kenyan authorities showed “yesteryears’ impunity is still thriving in our executive arm of the government.”

“I direct the attorney general, police commissioner and internal security minister to ensure that the applicant is not handed over, transported and or transferred to Uganda or any other country without further orders from this court,” the judge ruled.

A total of 13 Kenyans are already facing terror-related charges in Uganda. Kana says in his affidavit that six of those Kenyans are personally known to him as they worship with him at Jamia Mosque and elsewhere in Nairobi where they socialise in coffee houses.

Kana said Mbugua Mureithi, a lawyer who was arrested and later released as he went to Uganda to represent the Kenyans in custody, had told him that he and a Muslim human rights activist, Al Amin Kimathi, who is also in custody, were interrogated about him.

In his affidavit Kana also claimed that he is a frequent visitor to Yemen, where his first wife and five of his children reside. Yemen is categorised by the American Government as a terrorist/al-Qaeda main cell.

The court directed that its orders be also served on the Office of the President.



Hon. Mr. Justice M. A. Warsame
Date of First Appointment: December 10, 2003
Date of Current Appointment: December 10, 2003
Years of Service: 2
Station: Nairobi

WFP, GOVERNMENT SQUABBLES AS PEOPLE DIE OF "DROUGHT & FAMINE"


A row between the government and the World Food Programme over the distribution of relief food has erupted which is quite unfortunate. Apparently, the relief agency is making demands on who should give out the food, a move the government is viciously opposed to. But as the two parties engage in an unseemly spat, hundreds of people are starving in the traditionally food-deficient regions of Northern Kenya and other areas.
Admittedly, both sides have valid reasons for holding fast to their positions. But here we are dealing with a matter of life and death. It is inconceivable that people should be dying of hunger when there is food in stores, just because of conceptual differences between the relevant authorities. There is evidence that the relief food has been misappropriated and the programme badly managed in the past. But that is not to say that there are no cases of good practices to be emulated.

The government and the WFP must resolve their differences quickly and resume distribution of relief food. People cannot die of hunger just because some bureaucrats differ over the logistics.

On Monday, Bura MP Dr Abdi Nuh, Dujis MP Mr Aden Duale and Turkana Central MP Mr Ekwee Ethuro claimed politics were at play and said locals would not allow WFP to force or dictate any agency on them. However, in a swift rejoinder, WFP denied claims that it was imposing any agency stating that applying agencies must meet the criteria set for selecting distributing partners.

WFP Public Information Officer Ms Rose Ogola said there was a lot of political interference in the Turkana Central case in particular and that distribution was going on in areas that have no interference. "We don’t make any impositions, Kenya Red cross is our largest distributing partner already in six districts and nobody else has that kind of distribution," she said.
She said the agency has to meet the procedures in Garissa and Turkana Central before it is picked.
"Due process was not followed in Turkana central and there is a lot of political interests and we don’t feel we should be pushed," she said. The officer said the agency will be meeting with the Government to resolve the issue by the end of the week. "We cannot just pick anyone, it is a fair process," she said.

WFP in collaboration with the Government selects agencies that are used in food distribution. The Government provides a fraction of what is distributed by the relief agency.


Meanwhile, The US has donated Sh2.4 billion ($30m) to boost food security even as thousands of people are starving in Northern Kenya.

The row over delay in the distribution of relief food escalated even further with Fafi MP Aden Sugow telling off three colleagues for criticising the World Food Programme. Sugow said WFP provides more than half of food aid distributed in the affected regions and, hence, was justified to demand transparency in the distribution. A dispute involving the lucrative deal to distribute relief food in Turkana, Garissa and Tana River districts has stalled the emergency programme amid reports famine stricken residents have turned to dog meat.


On Tuesday, Sugow, who is Public Service assistant minister, said fellow lawmakers in Garissa County couldn’t purport to block the WFP from operating in the region. MPs Abdi Nuh (Bura), Aden Duale (Dujis) and Ekwee Ethuro (Turkana Central) on Monday accused the WFP of attempting to impose international agencies as lead distributing agencies over the Kenya Red Cross Society.


PROTESTS OVER "VETTING" OF ID CARDS IN NORTH EASTERN PROVINCE

The registration of Kenyans in the northern frontier districts took centre-stage in Parliament on Wednesday, with MPs pointing to open discrimination of Kenyan Somalis in the issuance of National Identity cards. Mr Mohammed Hussein (Mandera East, ODM), Ms Sophia Abdi Noor (nominated, ODM), Mr Mohammed Dor ( nominated, ODM)  and Dr Boni Khalwale (Ikolomani, new Ford Kenya) were up in arms that the vetting process in North Eastern Province was meant to make it difficult for residents to get the national IDs. The MPs said that it was wrong for the locational vetting committees composed of elders and security officials, to thoroughly vet applicants at the grassroots, only for their applications to be rejected in Nairobi.


 
“Is the minister in order to tell us that a machine in Nairobi can reject applications after they
have been approved by the vetting team?” posed Ms Sofia.

Nominated ODM MP Sophia Abdi Noor joined other legislators in protesting that the vetting process in North Eastern province is meant to make it difficult for residents to get the national IDs

Immigration assistant minister Francis Baya was hard-pressed to explain to Parliament why the government was strict on northern Kenya residents and not in other districts. He said that of the 9,320 applications made since 2008,  a total of 2,013 had been rejected because the applicants’ names appeared in the refugee databases maintained by the United Nations.

Mr Baya said some Kenyans are forced to masquerade as refugees so as to get food rations and some money; benefits only accorded to the refugees. On this, Ms Sofia said that it happens as the residents run away from the biting drought that hits the area every year.
But even so, she said, the government was at liberty to cancel the UN refugee status for all applicants whose applications have been certified by the vetting committee, instead of rejecting the applications altogether.


Mr Baya replied: “Those Kenyans who are sure they are Kenyans and that their applications have been rejected will be assisted.” He denied the existence of a policy skewed towards the Somalis saying all border districts faced the same vetting exercise.


However, the chairman of Parliament’s Committee on security, Mr Fred Kapondi (Mt Elgon, ODM) and Dr Khalwale accused the minister of misleading the House on the matter.
Mr Kapondi said that refugees were getting IDs due to corrupt officials, yet genuine Kenyans were denied their cards. He gave an example of the Daadab camp.


On Tuesday, Parliament heard that the Ministry had a countrywide shortage of 500 senior registration officials.


But even with this shortage of personnel, Mr Baya said the Ministry delivered according to the service charter, which stipulates that the people in arid and semiarid lands have to get their national identity cards within 38 days after sending in their application. The assistant minister made the remarks after Samburu East MP Raphael Letimalo (ODM) sought to know why the posts of District Registrar of Persons and the District Civil Registrar were still vacant. The MP complained that the application process was “slow” and that there was a very high number of rejected applications. He asked the assistant minister to consider decentralising the services from Nairobi.


However, Mr Baya remained firm that the rejected applications arose if fingerprints could not be read and if the photos could not be processed on the machines at headquarters. “The processing system is so complex that it needs to be centralised for cost-effectiveness. The specialised equipment used also means that it will be expensive to decentralise because of the security and personnel cost associated with the machines,” said Mr Baya.

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

SHIFTA WAR: INDEMNITY BILL MUST BE SIGNED



MPs voted to scrap the law shielding soldiers from prosecution over past human rights violations. It was a big win for the Truth, Justice and Reconciliation Commission, when Parliament on Wednesday deleted the Indemnity Act from the country’s laws.

The Indemnity (Repeal) Act quashes the law passed in 1972 aimed at shielding public officials and soldiers from civil or criminal liability, regarding human rights violations in the course of security operations.

The decision was spearheaded by Mr Mohammed Affey (nominated, ODM-K) who had argued that the law was an obstacle to unearthing the truth behind injustices committed in the country since independence.

The House unanimously endorsed the Bill that seeks to repeal the Act. It now goes to President Kibaki for the assent.

Security officers who participated in the Shifta War may soon face the law to account for their participation. Parliament approved the Indemnity (Repeal) Bill, which if assented to by the President, would repeal the draconian law passed in 1970. The Indemnity Act shields officers from prosecution and bars victims from seeking compensation.
MPs were outraged by the Act barring residents from filing any claims for compensation with respect to the period of the war or legal proceedings against public officers or members of the armed forces who had anything to do with that war. The Act bars any court or tribunal from entertaining legal proceedings with respect of the prescribed area after the December 25, 1963, and before December 1, 1967. This is the period of the so-called Shifta War during which the  Kenya Government deployed security forces to crush insurgents in the Northern Frontier that threatened to secede.

NEP Kenya, where Kenya Somali Ethnic tribe lives has been marginalized for over three decades without access to Government budget related to the establishment of schools, roads, hospitals and other social amenities. Local MP, Hon Adan Keynan once estimated more than Ksh. 39 Billion has been lost from the time Kenya government implemented the "Emergency Laws"....

Recently, The Truth Commission said

“The Commission takes the position that the Indemnity Act does not and will not affect its ability to fulfil its mandate of investigating all violations of human rights committed throughout the country,” read a statement posted on the commission’s website. “These include those violations that occurred between 1963 and 1967 in the areas covered by the Indemnity Act (North Eastern Province, and Isiolo, Marsabit, Tana River, and Lamu districts),” the statement quoted commissioner Ronald Slye as saying.

Saturday, September 25, 2010

NOW CATHOLIC PEOPLE GIVE ADVISE TO OUR "SOMALI GIRLS"

N REACHING THE UNREACHABLE:

Catholic fathers reaching The Somali Prostitutes in Kenya


Before you read the article,  Please click here to check the Video

"I read in the paper that the Kenyan prostitutes are getting very angry with the Somali prostitutes, because they are gaining the market. So with Undugu social workers, I went to the nightclubs in Nairobi, and to my astonishment these Somali girls, from 18-22 look so beautiful, that there must be somebody behind them, because they dress so well. I wouldn't say expensive, because often expensive clothes don't look well. But they are so refined in their taste for Europeans that we started looking after them.

Now my way to get at people who are unreachable is through medicine. When they say to me in the nightclub that they want to go to the hospital, I ask what illness? If they tell me it is malaria, I know what side of the body the 'malaria' is. It is generally the rather low parts-- it is just a name for another illness.

Now there is so much Aids, I know that 80% of the girls are sero-positive, have Aids in one form or another. So I take them to the hospital, and that is going to the heart.


I reach the unreachable by taking them to the hospitals. We have a holistic approach. We are teaching the Somali prostitutes English and Swahili, and at the same time teach them about Aids, about health care, looking after yourself. Especially once we have taught them enough English, we say now learn hairdressing, we will pay for you."

UN: NEP KENYA NOW CLASSIFIED AS "PHASE THREE SECURITY ZONE"...


Imagine people coming out of ruin, from the effects of the Shifta War to The Emergency Era of the Kenyatta and Moi's Government only to return to Insecurity once again.....That is a full cycle...A cycle we will accept...But This is what is happening in North Eastern Kenya. As you are reading this article, Agencies like The UNHCR, UNICEF, ICRC, Care International and host of many others are contemplating the security situations of NEP which is deteroriating.....Ask yourself why.....It is because we accepted Somalia's Problem to cross over to the border of Kenya....Somalia is a failed state with clan elders fighting for everything and there is no hope for peace. Kenya has a hegemonous Somali Ethnic tribe, although from different Somali clans but relatively work well together.

If you have been reading my articles, I have said many time before, Somalia's Issues are theirs to solve....and because we are Kenyans, let us concentrate on our issues here...We don't need Somalia's issues to spill over to Kenya and mess the little community empowerment we already achieved since the era of Former PC Mohamud Saleh in which NEP residents decided it wa stime to move ahead......Take their Children to Schools, Universities and Prosper........We don't need to go back to Somalia's issue, else we will lean back.  The Islamist insurgency in Somalia has had a spillover effect on security in the northeast of neighbouring Kenya, affecting livelihoods and the delivery of services, say residents and officials. The worst crimes reported in the region recently include killings, carjackings and abductions – including, in 2009, of aid workers and, in 2008, of two nuns. Insecurity in the borderlands has led thousands of livestock herders to abandon their traditional grazing land, say locals. Dozens of community programmes have been disrupted, notably those dealing with reproductive health, sanitation, food security and education, according to NGOs working in the region.

“There is a direct effect of insecurity in Somalia for the humanitarian operations in northeast Kenya,” Patrick Lavand’homme, deputy head for Kenya of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, told IRIN. “One of these effects is that Somali rebels enter Kenyan territory. Messages and threats have been received by humanitarians about their own security from some of the Somali groups,” he added, noting that as a result of these incursions and indigenous banditry and armed cattle rustling, the UN classifies the region as a phase-three security zone, “which means no [UN] movement can be done without armed escorts”.


A senior UN source working with security concurred, asking not to be named because he is not authorized to speak to the media. “I think it [insecurity in Somalia] has worsened the situation in northeast Kenya. There is no government on the other side. Nobody knows how many weapons go back and forth across the border. That is always a concern,” he said.


Messages and threats have been received by humanitarians about their own security from some of the Somali groups. “Northeast Kenya, and Mandera specifically, is just across the border, and this is not a real border, there is no fence. There are known Al-Shabab elements in control on the other side of the border,” he said, adding, however, that it was impossible to say how much of the criminality in the region could be attributed to Somalis rather than Kenyans. “It makes it harder for the UN to do business, there is no freedom of movement without escorts, there is a 6pm to 6am curfew. It is not an area where humanitarian workers move freely,” he said.


The difference between the two sides of the porous border, he added, was that Kenya had an active police unit that provides “some level of security” in the region. Kenya Police spokesman Eric Kiraithe told IRIN: “The spillover effect is mainly in terms of firearms and lawlessness. The legal way of solving disputes has also been suspended on the other side such that disputes are sometimes solved with shooting. “The frequency [of attacks] may be small but the impact is high… humanitarian workers may not be able to do all they would like to or they may not go to the areas at all,” he said adding “This feeling of vulnerability has caused a disproportional deployment of security officers there. Going by the population of the area and the economic activities, that place should not be taking the number of security officers it takes.”


For such security officers, according to a recent Chatham House report, “being posted to the arid northeast, and particularly to administer the border area, is not an attractive proposition. “It entails dealing with a ‘strange terrain’, ‘strange people’, a ‘strange culture’ (pastoralism) and ‘strange way of life’ (relentless insecurity),” Hussein Mahmoud wrote in Livestock Trade in the Kenyan, Somali and Ethiopian Borderlands. "As a result, soldiers’ morale is usually low, and this seriously affects their performance. The problems of effectively controlling the border are compounded by its length and rough terrain,” the report added.


To minimise risks, many agencies review security on a daily basis. Measures, often costly, such as not travelling at night, avoiding certain routes and areas, moving in convoys, ensuring field staff keep in regular radio contact with head office and using local staff to work in more sensitive areas are also employed. "Current security management procedures and adherence have been made very strict, the security situation along the border is frequently monitored with all staff and volunteers under instructions to liaise with the security forces about any changes in the security situation," said an NGO worker. “The [Somali] militias have made several attempts to abduct other workers and steal vehicles but failed; the threat, however, still looms,” he added.


NGOs are opting to ground their own vehicles, relying on hired transportation instead. “The police stations and patrol bases in Mandera resemble a parking bay... all the vehicles owned by NGOs have been parked and instead we hire vehicles to do our work. It’s expensive as transporters charge exorbitant prices and we use a lot of money to pay for security,” said a member of the Mandera NGO Forum, who asked not to be named. He said the insecurity had denied hundreds of needy families assistance because few skilled personnel were willing to work for NGOs in the insecure areas. Voluntary staff, who lack insurance, are particularly reluctant to work in risky areas. “The NGOs which have left Mandera are not cowards… Their reasons for leaving are justified as some had been attacked and threatened as being agents of western countries and spreading Christianity,” the Forum member added.


A ban, reportedly imposed by clerics with links to Al-Shabab, on public screenings of films and football matches has cut off the income of many video parlours, said one trader in Mandera. “It’s a very sad situation that a group of [foreigners] can disrupt our lives, deny young children, poor families and women the support they need most,” added another resident. The situation is similar in the neighbouring districts of Garissa and Wajir, said Irshad Yussuf, the Sisters for Maternity Health Organization Community Health Programme Manager. “Our budget has considerably increased; this has forced us to evaluate some of our projects in areas along the border.


“The expenditure on security is enormous, our reproductive health programme is at risk because we propagate the use of condoms for family planning, raise HIV/AIDS awareness and campaign against FGM [female genital mutilation/cutting]. I am sure the guys across the border consider our mission to be anti-Islam. This is wrong. We are also Muslims,” he said. Health programmes such as child immunization suffer the most, with some community organizations unable to monitor their projects, Yussuf told IRIN.


According to the Kenya Red Cross Society, the insecurity has also complicated the planning of prompt disaster response.

Friday, September 24, 2010

KENYA URGES US,UN, AU TO DO MORE ON SOMALIA CRISIS

 
Kenya's Foreign Minister Moses Wetang'ula is pushing hard at the United Nations this week for an end to the US policy of “benign neglect” towards Somalia.

There are signs that Kenya's diplomatic campaign for greater US involvement is having a strong impact on influential figures outside government and a limited impact on officials in the Obama administration. Kenya has a Somali Ethnic Tribe numbering more than Three Million and a further quarter a million Somali refugees in it's hands.

Susan Rice, the US ambassador to the United Nations, said on Wednesday that Mr Wetang'ula “has made a very powerful plea” for the international community to recognise the gravity of the threat posed to Kenya by lawlessness in Somalia. “We're very close to Kenya,” Ambassador Rice noted.
Asked in an interview with National Pubic Radio about Mr Wetang'ula's call for UN “peace enforcers,” rather than peacekeepers, to be deployed in Somalia, Ms Rice said she had spoken with the foreign minister in New York this week.

The US is trying, she said, to muster support for an increase in African Union troop levels in Somalia. But Ms Rice did not specifically endorse Mr Wetang'ula's proposal for a more aggressive military strategy in Somalia.

The minister had said on Tuesday that the United States is failing to devote adequate resources to the Somalia crisis. He suggested in a talk at the non-governmental Council on Foreign Relations in New York that the US remains traumatised by its bloody and unsuccessful intervention in Somalia in the early 1990s.
Citing a need for the US to “rejuvenate thinking” on Somalia, Mr Wetang'ula argued that what happened nearly 20 years ago “should not make us hostages to issues of history. We must move forward. We need engagement at the highest levels.”
Mr Wetang'ula indirectly chided President Obama for “skipping” a mini-summit on Somalia at the UN this week. The minister noted that Mr Obama is, however, attending a mini-summit on Sudan.
The contrasts in Mr Obama's engagement with two countries bordering Kenya is “very telling,” Mr Wetang'ula observed.
Former US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, who took part in the discussion with Mr Wetang'ula at the think tank, said the foreign minister had made “an accurate statement about the lack of US appetite” for direct engagement in Somalia.
Mr Wetang'ula said earlier in the session that he had seen a State Department document that acknowledges “the US is guilty of benign neglect of the Somalia problem.” He said Kenya has been asking the US to help provide social services —“things that don't cost a lot of money” — as well as security for Somalia.
But Kenya's pleas have gone unheeded, Mr Wetang'ula added, because the US is “too committed in Afghanistan, too committed in Iraq.”

AFTER THE NEW CONSTITUTION..............WHAT ABOUT WAGALLA MASSACRE...?


26 years after the Wagalla massacre when 3,000 people were killed men in what was intended to be a disarmament exercise, it appears that time has done little to erase the memories of the pain of the people in Wajir district. Apart from the loss, justice for the victims and survivors is proving elusive. No conclusive investigations have been carried out since 1984 and no perpetrators brought to book. In commemoration of the 26th anniversary of the incident, the community took to the streets demanding some action from the government.


Follow up the Following Report from Wajir.

Other Videos...........


& Some More

Mr Benson Kaaria was the North Eastern PC when the infamous Wagalla Massacre of February 10, 1984 took place. The government had launched a disarmament campaign in the Wagalla expanse of Wajir District. Security officers from the airforce, the army, the police, and the provincial administration burnt down houses and rounded up thousands of people from the minority Degodia clan.

Monday, September 20, 2010

GARISSA COUNTY MUST DEAL WITH THESE ISSUES..............


This Sept. 14, 2010 photo shows children studying under a tree in a makeshift settlement outside the village of Dertu in northeastern Kenya. Dertu looks no different from thousands of villages that dot the impoverished landscape of sub-Saharan Africa, except for the cell phone tower that keeps it in touch with the outside world. This is one of 14 "Millennium Villages" envisioned as launch pads for a mass leap out of poverty, one of the targets which the U.N. set itself a decade ago, and which will be reviewed at a summit opening Monday, Sept. 20, 2010, in New York. (AP Photo/Khalil Senosi)

Read More

Friday, September 17, 2010

PROFILING OF SOMALIS IN KENYA MUST STOP


Look at the following Story and see how some Kenyan people still think of you....as a Somali


There is this story/article that appeared in one website purporting to speak for Kenyans...Expressing Kenyan views to Kenyans.....as if we are not Kenyans.....They call it Breaking newsKenya............that keep educating how Somalis have taken over Kenya.....as if Somalis are not Kenyans....and creating animosity within Kenyan Tribes.....FYI, Somalis are also Kenyans. I was saying surely, Circulating such an article beats my mind of How seriously Kenyan people think of us Kenyan Somalis...........

Assume or refuse to assume, believe or never believe, Kenya Somalis and Somalis have been subjected to Ethnic Profiling in Kenya which we will never accept forthwith. The Kenya National Commission on Integration & Truth Commission knows these issues and keeps mum about them for so long.....It needs our response....There is a lot of Somali profiling going on in Kenya......not any other tribe is profiled more in Kenya than Somalis....nor even foreign citizens including Indians, Italians, Nigerians, Ethiopians who settled in Kenya are profiled like us.... Ask Yourself why....

Just recently, The Kenya National Census Mentioned...Kenya Somali in the list of tribe's census.....There was no mention of Kenya Gikuyus, Kenya Kalenjins.....While not mentiong Kenya Massais, Kenya Luos, Kenya Luhyas etc, The List mentions Kenya Somalis.....Wait a bit....Excuse them, May be, they wanted to differentiate between Kenya Somalis and Somali Somalis.....but that was wrong...That was profiling one community from the rest of Kenya. Why Somalis.....Why not border tribes like Massais....Turkanas....Luos...Luhya etc...Why Somali.......The Somali community owns the third biggest province in Kenya and are number Six in General Population of the Whole Kenya. We Border Somalia where our brothers came from....but many other Tribes border their fellow from other countries.....Massais....are in Kenya and Tanzania....no one profiles them.....Luos are in Uganda, Tanzania and Kenya....No one profiles them...Why Somalis..... But Who cares....This is the cause of worry. The National Cohesion Commision admits there are growing trends of alienating Somalis who are classified as among the Big Six Tribes in Kenya....

Many atimes, Editors from Blogs, Facebook threads from the like of BreakingnewsKenya Site put offensive and bigoted articles about Somalis. In one Instances, from the comments of such a website, came the following Comments from a very angry Kenyan....who belives Somalis must leave Kenya....as if Kenya is for "HIS TRIBE"....

"You Somalians .. you take all the money from canada .. WELFARE Europe .. then you come to build houses in kenya .. im a KENYAN CITIZEN . grew up in eastleigh GO BACK TO SOMALIA . LEAVE MY KENYA ALONE OO . Just messing up my home town . LEAVE US ALONE . please and thank you :) .".....

If you read between the Lines.........This means that the writer of the comment having read the article, found that Somalis are not Kenyan Citizen and that he wish them to go back to Somalia...He claims Eastleigh is his home and that he doesn't want to see Somalis im Eastleigh grabbing Land, Buying Land etc. He has or refuse to have a clue that Kenya has almost 3million Somalis as Citizens.....He assumes those are not Kenyan Citizens.....or he is the only one who was born and brought up in Eastleigh.....and forgets that we own our own land in Kenya sio kama yeye.....


Somalis never displaced anyone and they never grabbed anyones’s land, neither did they steal anyone’s wealth. Sometimes, you are amazed that the writer, as in the case of the article, chose to highlight Migori’s Mayor. He is a Migorian, born in Migori, doesn’t he have a right to lead his fellow Migorians if they find him up to the task? How come you forgot to highlight Kisumu Town MP Shakeel Shabir? Is he a Luo? What Basil Criticos who was the former MP for Taita despite being a Greek? What about the Italian who was narrowly defeated in Magarini by Kingi? Is he a Mijikenda? There are so many thousands of Kikuyus and Kambas who have flooded North Eastern Kenya markets and opened business and took over the barbershops, vegetable stalls and other stuff. Do we complain? no.....we appreciate these brave enterprising Kenyans and work with them or do we blame them and even try to subjugate them. Finding excuses in defeatism and blaming others won’t help. Somalis worked hard to be where they are. While there are some miscreants and petty elements, (and every community has that), the majority are genuine people who toiled hard to be where they are.

From the comment came, Mohamed Hersi, One of the few Somalis who speaks for the community.........and goes

"Stop the hate speech not all Somalis are pirates and thugs. Somalis have very strong communal set up and they are good in business. Thanks to the Somalis that today kenyans can afford to acess reasonably prized goods. The Somali hate campaign that is building in our country is not helping anyone. We equally have so many Kenyans who earn a living abroad some as illegal immigrants and you would not like them to be singled out for discrimination. We also have so many Kenyan somalis from North eastern who have sold their livetsock to invest in other business lines like import export,real estate etc. Not all the properties in Eastleigh are owned by Somalis from somalia many are owned by hard working kenyan somalis. As Kenyans we should spend more time fighting our own who steal our tax money meant for school kids, maize scandals, we cant even spare land meant for the dead. Somalis have not denied Kenyans anything and let us move away from this scarcity mentality"...

From that concept, we think there are growing tendencies to see Somalis from an ethnic profiling angle yet no one can do anything to Somalis. If the Worst comes to Worst, Everyone will go to his home and nothing is better than Home. We have our home right here in Kenya...Kenya for your information is a country of patched tribal regions to form a unity government. Each tribe has it's own region............

KENYA WILDLIFE IN THE NORTH AT A GLANCE


An 18-year-old herder was seriously injured by a buffalo in Ijara District. The animal attacked Hashim Aden Abdow in the stomach and left his intestines protruding on Monday afternoon.

The victim also sustained severe chest fractures, according to Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) assistant director in charge of Coast Province, Mr Simon Gitau. On receiving the report, he said, KWS headquarters sent a two-seater aircraft to Ijara but returned to Nairobi without the victim due to the magnitude of the injuries.

“At around 6am (yesterday), an African Medical Research Foundation aircraft left Nairobi to pick up the injured herder and take him to Nairobi for specialised treatment but he could not be flown by that plane due to his condition,” he told the Daily Nation by telephone.

Rangers deployed


He said a contingent of rangers was combing the area in search of the animal and drive it away.


Villager Abdi Jele said the buffalo attacked the young man as he was herding cattle near Worabesa Forest. He said that a villager found the injured Abdow in a pool of blood and alerted other residents, KWS personnel and police officers. A KWS vehicle took him to Ijara District Hospital, where doctors recommended specialised treatment.  Mr Jele said the animal had been seen in the area in the past one week and local KWS personnel informed of its presence.

Recently, Five hyenas believed to have eaten about 260 goats in Hola have been killed. The beasts also attacked a woman and her son in Haroresa and Wayu locations two weeks ago.



The acting Kenya Wildlife Service warden in Tana River, Mr Alio Adan, said the animals were trapped following a public outcry. He said the operation to eliminate the rogue hyenas was still going on in all affected areas. He said the woman and her 14-year-old boy were severely injured by the animals that had attacked goats in their homestead.

The two were treated at Hola district hospital and discharged.


 
Mr Adan said elephants which had invaded irrigation scheme farms had been chased away and were now in Kora game reserve, Merti district. (KNA)

Friday, September 03, 2010

MAENDELEO YA WANAWAKE(MYWO) CRITICIZES "KENYA CENSUS RESULTS"


The Maendeleo Ya Wanawake Organisation (MYWO) on Wednesday joined the criticism against the government for canceling the Census results of eight districts citing inconsistencies. MYWO said the move was uncalled for and argued that it was a threat to national cohesion and integration.

Chairperson Rukia Subow further asked the government to release the results of the affected regions in order to avert unnecessary tensions.



“To say the truth, foreigners having genuine Kenyan documents like Identity Cards or passports can happen because our institutions have failed but Kenyan Somalis should not get punished because of that. It is not fair and it is not their mistake,” she said noting that Kenya had witnessed an influx of refugees from war torn Somalia. “We know that we have three refugee camps in Garissa district and this will be very unfair for the Kenyans living in those areas.”

Ms Subow added that some of the reasons given by the government over the nullification held no water as the communities in the affected areas were largely pastoral.  One of the arguments held by the government was that the birth and death ratios in the areas did not balance. Other reasons were that the men outnumbered women by the ratio of 3:1 and that the household size was not consistent with the population size.

“People are not even registered when they die because of the inaccessibility of hospitals. Some die and are buried on the same day and no records are kept. Many children are also born in the bushes and are not registered so some of the excuses given by the government are just baseless,” Ms Subow protested.

She said that there was no need for a re-count as the results would be the same: “We cannot have another recount because it would be expensive. The only way forward is releasing the results.”  She also criticised the government for using tribe as an indicator arguing that it went against the spirit of the new Constitution. She said that the move would encourage negative tribalism instead of promoting cohesion.

“We have started on a very bad footing because listing people according to their tribe takes us back to tribal majorities and minorities. Some tribes are listed as the big five and this might make others feel like they are discriminated against,” she said.

She further said that the lobby group would move to court over the nullification if the government continued withholding the results: “If the government comes up with a better solution, I don’t think we will go to court because it will only prolong the issue.”

The government on Tuesday released the census results but cancelled those from North Eastern’s Lagdera, Wajir East, Mandera Central, Mandera East and Mandera West districts. Results from Turkana Central, Turkana North and Turkana South were also cancelled.

According to Planning Minister Wycliffe Oparanya, the inconsistencies in the results were discovered after a post analysis of the August 2009 census.

KENYA SOMALIS NOW THE 6TH BIGGEST TRIBE IN KENYA



The average Kenyan woman is having 4.6 babies, pushing up the country’s population by a million people every year. As a result, the population now stands at 38.6 million nationally, up from 28 million in 1999.  But it is the growth in population of the Somali community, now Kenya’s sixth largest community, that is most noticeable in the results of the 2009 census figure released by Planning Minister Wycliffe Oparanya on Tuesday.


At nearly 2.4 million people, Kenyan Somalis are now classified as more than the Kisii (2.2 million) and the Mijikenda (nearly two million). Census results released by Kenya’s Planning Ministry show Kenyan Somalis are the sixth most populous ethnic group with 2,385,572 people, behind the Kikuyu, Luhya, Kalenjin, Luo and Kamba.


North Eastern Province has grown from 371,391 in 1989 to the present 2.3 million people.The sharp rise in the population of Somalis is due to a high birth rate. The Immigration ministry said it was not due to the influx of refugees from war-torn Somalia, as advanced by some experts. Immigration Minister Otieno Kajwang’ ruled out the influx of refugees saying there were not more than 350,000, most of whom are in refugee camps and were counted.


NEP residents contacted have resolved not to be recounted again and we don't know how the government will embark on the recount.

CENSUS OPINIONS: DR. ALI MAALIM

Kenya Somalis: Population hype



Published 09/03/2010 by  alimaly@gmail.com

Planning Minister, Wycliffe Oparanya and population expert Dr. Lawrence Ikamari of Nairobi University are too naïve to speak to the socio-cultural structures of Northern Kenya Somalis. If that is not the case, then they are deliberately undermining the veracity of the region’s census. The assumption that the current census of North Eastern province is bloated while the previous ones were accurate is unfounded.




On three ontological accounts, the census of North Eastern province has never been nearly accurate; first, census agents often conduct counts in major cities and mid-sized villages. Greater part of Somali population in this region is pastoral and rarely in sedentary structure. On this basis, only a small portion of the population could be reached. Second, head counting family in the Somali norm is not embraced kindly and implicitly implies sinister motive. Third, suspicion embedded in historical marginalization and perpetual discrimination naturally limits census process.  Dr. Ikamari and Oparanya could do justice to the census-2009 by looking beyond the natural population pattern argument espoused in text books. Instead, it would be prudent to take a more in depth analysis of the dramatic population shift. In the last decade, there has been mass sedentarization of the pastoral communities spawning settlements around Garissa, Mandera, Wajir and other small towns.

El-Nino rains, La-Nina and subsequent draughts left widespread bankruptcy in livestock. Hundreds of thousands camel, cattle, goat and sheep perished leaving legions of pastoral communities destitute. These communities were left with no option but sedentary lifestyle. The upsurge in population around existing towns and villages were not captured by the census-1999 as the settlements were gradual throughout the last decade. That means the enumerators were able to reach more of the population this time than they were able to do in the past. The recent counts that is now touted as bloated is more likely a fair representation of the population. Numbers recently quoted by the Interim Electoral Commission of Kenya (IIECK) show stark similarity to those shown in the census 2009.

According to the Interim Independent Electoral Commission the region has 232,099 registered voters which represent 10 per cent of the total population. This numbers extrapolated to 100th percentile means the regions’ population is around 2.3 million, congruent with the result garbaged by the planning minister. The argument by some pundits that high birth rate has contributed to the puzzling numbers is also defunct. Population growth in the Somali community assumes a linear trajectory barring any significant natural disaster or manmade human cleansing. Nothing indicates an upward shift in birth rate between the last few decades as claimed by the government ill-luminaries. On the contrary, at least theoretically, birth rate may have been lowered in the last two decades due to education and awareness around HIV/AIDS in the region.