KIBAKI PREPARES TO RETIRE .
Tuesday, 19 July 2011 00:05 BY FRANCIS MUREITHI
PRESIDENT Kibaki has started planning for his retirement after 50 years in active politics. The arrangements include thanksgiving ceremonies, completion of a palatial home and construction of three new learning institutions including a university.
Kibaki’s son Jimi has disclosed that the President is planning to return to Nyeri in two months time and hold a party where he will thank the people of Othaya for repeatedly electing him to Parliament. The thanksgiving ceremony will be in a church in Othaya. “We shall hold a thanksgiving ceremony to thank our God for what he has done for our MP for all those years,” said Jimi at the weekend in a fundraiser at Othaya Approved School.
Kibaki entered elective politics in 1963 winning the Doonholm constituency — now Makadara — in Nairobi Province on a Kanu ticket. He shifted to Othaya in 1974 which he has represented uninterrupted until now. Kibaki won the presidential elections by a landslide in 2002 to become Kenya’s third president. His re-election in 2007 was disputed. The constitution bars him from contesting in 2012 as he will have served two five-year terms.
According to reliable sources, President Kibaki is planning to retire at Sasini Estate, 25 kilometres from his Othaya Kanyange home. The 1,000-acre farm is situated near Mweiga town on the Nyeri-Nyahururu Highway in Kieni West district. The contractor has been given until September to complete the palatial Sh500 million home and fencing is expected to end in two months time. Sources yesterday indicated that President Kibaki may tour the farm today to inspect the project and probably commission it.
The estate has been used for growing coffee and rearing grade cows. It has an airstrip making it easier for Kibaki to land and fly from his home. Kibaki presently has homes in Nairobi’s Muthaiga and Othaya. Insiders have hinted that the First Family is planning to use its 1,700-acre Rware farm in Narumoru town in Kieni East to set up education institutions.
First Lady Lucy Kibaki will initiate a multimillion-shilling project at the farm by the end of this year, according to inside sources. It is expected to have private primary and secondary schools and a university as a way of giving back to the community.
The contractor working on Kibaki’s Mweiga retirement home will start construction of the education institutions in October. Kibaki can expect a luxurious life in retirement that includes 38 servants paid by the public. He will collect a Sh17 million lump sum gratuity as a goodbye token from government.
This is calculated as a sum equal to Kibaki’s annual salary for the two terms served as President as stipulated in the Presidential Retirements Benefits Act (2003). He will receive at least Sh950,000 tax-free pension each month — calculated as 80 per cent of the salary of the next President. He will be entitled to a housing allowance of Sh300,000 a month; Sh300,000 each month as electricity, water and telephone allowances; and a further Sh200,000 monthly as entertainment allowance. He will also be entitled to two four-wheel drive cars with an engine capacity of 3,400 cc and two others of his choice with an engine capacity of at least 3,000 cc.
Kibaki will receive Sh200,000 monthly as fuel allowance. A reputable insurance company will provide Kibaki and his wife at government expense with full medical and hospital cover providing for local and overseas treatment. Kibaki will be provided with a fully furnished “suitable” office with office machines and supplies paid for by the taxpayer. Servants to be provided by government include six officers for his personal security and six others to guard his homes.
The others will be personal assistants (2), drivers (4), messengers (4), secretaries (4), cooks (2), housekeepers (2), gardeners (2), laundry persons (2), and house cleaners (4). At the weekend Jimi told Nyeri residents that Kibaki has been very busy with national matters.
Jimi said Kibaki has ensured that 90 per cent of Othaya people have electricity, 95 per cent have piped water and about 150 kilometres of road is being tarmacked. He added that the President has ensured that Othaya District Hospital is being upgraded into a referral hospital at a cost of Sh800 million which will make it one of the best hospitals in Mt Kenya region.
Kenya: How Politicians Exploit Rural ‘Bliss of Ignorance’
By Philip Ochieng, 24 September 2011
That certain individuals organised Kenyans to slaughter Kenyans is not the strangest of the allegations now being made at The Hague.
“Tribal clashes” have accompanied Kenya’s national elections for nearly 30 years – all orchestrated by a small clique of “the ruling tribe”.
I put the term “the ruling tribe” in quotes because there is no such thing as a ruling tribe. These are myths which cabals of ruling individuals create because such myths help to draw attention away from the cabals’ own wickedness.
Nevertheless, this heinous activity is possible only because of the gullibility of the mass. The elite is always aware of this rural “bliss of ignorance”.
Collective sentiments
It is thus easy for the rich and powerful to ruthlessly exploit that ignorance by invoking their cheapest collective sentiments.
This is the point of the myth in which Achilles recruited an army of ants called Myrmidons who perished by the million because they fought with complete brainlessness and without any thought for themselves.
A Myrmidon is a henchman, a goon, a stooge, a marionette, a person who will do any dirty job for the boss.
Whoever commits genocide just because another person has excited his cheapest sentiments is a Myrmidon.
The desperate fear of losing the power with which they protected their extraordinary wealth was what drove a small cabal of individuals to arouse the Kikuyu mass to the zenith of passion.
The clique was aware that its overflowing wealth was the cause even of Kikuyu mass misery. So the clique sought to draw mass attention from that fact by using unmeasured language to claim that the entire Kikuyu community would be driven into the Ocean if Raila Odinga and William Ruto took power.
What is shocking about the proceedings at The Hague, then, is that leaders of certain ethnic communities unleashed mass killers whom the leaders armed with nothing more than cheap tribal sentiments and militancy.
Our murderers took much less than the 30 pieces of silver to spills tons and tons of human blood.
If you asked a Kikuyu murderer of Kalenjin, Luo and Luhya individuals what these individuals had done to him, or a Kalenjin what he had gained by kindling the bonfire that consumed scores of Kikuyu children at an Eldoret church, you would get no cogent answer.
You would be dismayed that youths had accepted as little as Sh200 to kill fellow Kenyans en masse. How could retention of power by certain individuals help either him directly or his “Kikuyuness”? What could an ordinary Kalenjin gain (or lose) if Mr Ruto succeeded (or failed) in his quest for power?
When will Kenyans learn that none of our politicians is seeking power for the sake of their respective ethnic communities but only for the purpose of swelling his personal bank accounts?
Land robbery
Even in the 1970s – at the height of their ethnic excitement and aggression – the Kikuyu masses were the most pitiable victims of land robbery by a “land-buying” gang.
An honest Kalenjin will tell you the same story concerning the tiny Kalenjin cabal that rode roughshod all over the Rift Valley during the Moi presidency.
You don’t need Ezekiel’s vision to see that the Luo mass will suffer massively under a Luo mafia when Raila Odinga is the president or the Kamba when Kalonzo Musyoka is “his excellency”.
That is your reward for succumbing to a scheme to play around with your ethnic psychology. It is what you get for having shouted “Death!” to the Kalenjin (or to the Kikuyu or to the Luo or to the Luhya).
It is your comeuppance for allowing a politician to convince you to subject a fellow human being to the intolerable agony of circumcision with a crude instrument and to kill a woman by gang-raping her. It makes you a beast unworthy of being called a Kenyan.
Eugene Wamalwa thrown out of his house
Posted by The Kenyan DAILY POST
Tuesday, 28th February 28, 2012 – A lot has been happening in this city under the sun. Among the word on the street is an intriguing story on Eugene Wamalwa. Apparently, this presidential aspirant was evicted from his Kileleshwa home. After he was evicted it is said that he moved in to a house in Lower Kabete. Drama mushroomed in his new home following the fact that his house already had owners.
His would be premises was owned by a family man who had forgotten that his daughters had since moved in to that house. The girls would not stand the fact that their father in a bid to please the Saboti MP had traded their home to prove his loyalty to the soon to – be president.
They did not entertain him and he had to take his luggage out and go
look for a new place to stay. Interestingly, the daughters to this man have since moved to court in an attempt to bar him from offering his property as gifts to politicians.
Kenya Govt Should not try to stop One of the most Old Proffession on earth >Allow moms as to sell their Nali-Nali Aka pussy free without any discrimination.
Jonathan Moi Raped And Killed Julie Ward By John Ward
02 Mar 2012
In September 1988, Julie Ward, a young woman enjoying her holiday, disappeared in Kenya’s Masai Mara National Game Reserve.
Immediately, Jonathan Moi was rumoured to have been involved in Julie’s death. The first information concerning Jonathan, the son of Kenya’s former President Daniel Moi, came from a Swiss TV crew working in the park.
They had offered their five radio-equipped vehicles to assist in the search for the missing tourist. Senior warden Simon ole Makallah abruptly told them to mind their own business. The crew had heard rumours about Jonathan being seen with a group of men in the park.
After six weeks of filming, the Swiss left Kenya. By now, some of the dismembered remains of Julie Ward had been discovered in a remote corner of the game park rarely visited by tourists.
Before leaving, they went to the Makallah’s office to settle their account, and found him sitting head in hands. He said he had been summoned to a meeting with President Moi.
Simon ole Makallah
On September 12, 1988, I arrived from the UK to search for my daughter, six days after she was reported missing. I launched an air search on September 13 and located Julie’s Suzuki Jeep. It was in a deep gully, several miles into the harsh bush.
On arrival at the scene, I found an empty vehicle. I assumed that Julie had somehow got stuck in the mud of the gully and was now attempting to walk to safety. Why and how the vehicle had arrived at that remote location remained baffling. But that could wait; the priority was to find her.
Although Makallah was aware of the situation and responsible for all activities and tourists in the park, he had not ordered a search by any of the 113 rangers under his command.
At 11 a.m., on the day Julie’s Suzuki was spotted, Makallah was informed immediately. Instead of rushing to the scene to take command of the ground search, Makallah drove to Serena Lodge, 50km in the opposite direction.
Makallah already knew a search would be pointless. It was not until mid-afternoon that Makallah finally arrived at the scene. By then, over 30 other people – rangers, police, council workers – had been to the scene and left for the search. Before leaving the vehicle, a police inspector known as Anthony Mwaura instructed two constables to remove Julie’s personal possessions from the vehicle and take them to the Sand River Police Post for safe keeping. The constables removed maps, a pair of trainers, two bottles of beer, a pair of binoculars and various other items, including tents and sleeping bags.
Then the police and rangers commenced the search. When Makallah arrived at 3p.m., there was no one at the vehicle.
While giving evidence in court during the trial of two rangers, Makallah was asked by the trial Judge, Mr Justice Fida Hussien Abdullah, what he had done when he arrived at the vehicle. Makallah said he “peeked” inside the vehicle. He listed what he saw: some maps, a pair of trainers, two bottles of beer, a pair of binoculars. These items had already been removed by the police three hours before he arrived.
However, Makallah was only a witness. The accused were two rangers, who had been arrested and charged with murder on the advice of Scotland Yard. They were eventually acquitted. Nonetheless, the trial Judge said that Makallah must have had prior knowledge of Julie’s Suzuki before the afternoon of the September 13. Therefore, Makallah had knowledge of the circumstances of the murder that he had not disclosed to the Court.
The spotlight of suspicion fell squarely on Makallah – and for good reason.
Back to the afternoon of the September 13, the vehicle was discovered. Makallah had stayed at the scene of the stranded Suzuki for an hour. This was confirmed by several witnesses, including his driver John Teeka, an inspector Odhiambo (who was in Makallah’s vehicle), a group of rangers and Assistant Warden James Sindyo, who arrived at the scene in a separate vehicle.
At 4p.m., Makallah joined the ground search. The gully where Julie’s Suzuki was found is a tributary of the river, on the north side of the Sand River. The river flows through the game park contained within steep sided banks. There is no vehicle crossing at this point.
Even on foot, the river would normally be impassable. On this day, September 13, the water level was low and it would have been just possible to slide and scramble down the steep bank, wade across the river, and scramble up the opposite side.
Why on earth would anyone think Julie had done that? Her vehicle had left clear tyre marks in the long grass on the North side. Logically, if she had got the vehicle stuck in the gully, she would have followed these tracks across country, back to the road between Keekorok and Sand River Gate, from where she had allegedly started her journey.
However, logic has no place in the events surrounding Julie’s disappearance. She was returning to Nairobi to fly home, after her brief visit to the Masai Mara. The allegation that she had decided to turn off the main road, drive across the trackless, rockstrewn bush before attempting to drive through a deep gully, is as ridiculous as it is illogical.
It became obvious that someone else had driven Julie’s vehicle across the bush and into the gully. The spotlight of suspicion on Simon ole Makallah became brighter and even more focused, thanks to his actions.
Instead of searching on the north side of the Sand River (where the Suzuki was stuck), Makallah went to the south.
To cross the river, Makallah had to drive along the top of the bank of the Sand River for three kilometres to a place called the Sand River Crossing. Here the riverbanks are less steep and crossing with a 4×4 vehicle is possible at certain times of the year.
Once on the South side, Makallah was confronted with a vast vista of featureless bush, stretching a full half circle of 180 degrees from the distant horizon in the east to the west. For Makallah, it should have been a difficult decision to pick possible directions to take to start his search.
Makallah had left the Suzuki in the gully at 4p.m. At 4.26p.m., he sent a radio signal to park headquarters, informing them he had found Julie’s remains. The place was 10km, in a south-easterly direction, a desolate corner of the Masai Mara. There are no tracks leading to it and it is identifiable only by a distinctively shaped large tree set among dozens of other smaller trees and bushes.
Police have retraced Makallah’s movements for that day. They have re-enacted Makallah’s journey from the gully, across the Sand River, and to the site of Julie’s remains.
Even though the police now knew where the site of Julie’s remains were located, the quickest time for their journey was exactly 26 minutes. (And, because this evidence is so crucial, the journey has been re-enacted many times and 26 minutes is the shortest elapsed time).
Twenty-six minutes is also the precise time it took Makallah to drive from the Suzuki in the gully to the site of the Julie’s remains. Makallah claimed he had no idea which direction to take and that his search had been random and his discovery was just a matter of chance.
It was clear that not only had Makallah lied about his prior knowledge of the items in Julie’s vehicle, he had also lied about his knowledge of the location of Julie’s remains. He undoubtedly knew where to go. By sending a timed radio message on his arrival, he confirmed his own lies.
A copy of the timed radio signal was discovered at park headquarters. It is now with British Police.
In trying to extricate himself from the situation, Makallah claimed he had been led by vultures circling in the sky. It was pointed out to Makallah that you could not see an elephant at that distance, let alone the speck of a vulture in the sky. Makallah stopped offering that particular explanation but was not able to offer any alternative.
Within a few days, after the discovery of Julie’s remains, he disappeared from the park. At first the official line was that he was “on leave”. But when weeks turned into months, the story changed. Makallah had been suspended. In fact, he never returned to his position of Senior Warden of the Masai Mara Game Reserve.
However, before he disappeared, Makallah wrote a report to the clerk of the Narok County Council, dated September 24, 1988. It claimed he was absent from the game park at the time of the murder and implied that Julie had committed suicide.
In an attempt to support this suggestion, he said Julie and her companion had been involved in an argument at Serena Lodge and she was upset. But documentary records show that Makallah was in the game park at the time of the murder.
His allegation of an argument was also untrue. This was subsequently confirmed by her companion, whose passport showed he had left Kenya and was actually in Rwanda at the time of Julie’s death.
In any case, medical and all other forensic evidence showed that Julie had been murdered.
In an attempt to prove he could not be responsible for driving Julie’s vehicle into the gully – thereby gaining knowledge of the vehicle’s contents – Makallah visited Kilgoris Police Station on September 16, 1989. He recorded a voluntary statement claiming that he could not drive a motor vehicle. He had never driven a motor vehicle. He did not know how to drive and did not possess a driving licence.
A copy of his statement is retained by British Police. Makallah’s statement was completely untrue.
Makallah’s driver, John Teeka, has said that Makallah often took over the driving. Makallah’s assistant warden, James Sindyo, gave evidence that he had often seen Makallah driving. Makallah had, in fact, driven me and Frank Ribeiro to Sand River Gate. The police discovered records of a motor accident involving a vehicle Makallah was driving.
After giving evidence on oath in court, again stating his inability to drive, Makallah was followed by a newspaper reporter. He watched Makallah take his vehicle from Kenya Wildlife Services headquarters and drive to his house. The reporter gave evidence the following morning about what he had seen. Nothing happened to Makallah as a result of his perjury.
The secondhand clothes seller
Nonetheless, while the evidence against Makallah grew, information concerning Jonathan Moi’s involvement continued to emerge, suggesting a linkage between the two.
One afternoon, as I was waiting for transport outside Keekorok Lodge, I was furtively approached by a large lady, who pressed a tightly folded note into my hand. She sidled away. Opening it later, it read simply, “The man who killed your daughter is Jonathan Moi” There was also a post office box number for Mombasa.
Later, I contacted the lady and asked how she was able to make the allegation against Jonathan. She explained that she was a second-hand clothes dealer.
The lady regularly visited Masai Mara and surrounding villages, selling the second-hand clothes. She said local women, who were her customers, included the wives of park rangers. She said she had heard the allegations about Jonathan Moi everywhere in the park, but particularly in the villages near Sekanani Gate and Olaimutiek Gate. The latter gate and adjacent village are near the location Julie’s dismembered remains were found. The world famous Cottar’s Tourist Camp, then owned by the equally famous, Glen Cottar, is also in the same area.
I retained the folded note and passed it, with the information, to Scotland Yard.
Jonathan Moi’s farm
In early 1989, soon after Julie’s death, I received information that required a visit to Lolgorien. The route from Serena Lodge was via the 0101010 Gate, then climbing up the steep winding track onto the escarpment and from there towards the Lolgorien-Kilgoris main road. On the way, the vehicle passed many small farms and villages. At one point, a very impressive farm came into view. Whereas the local farms consisted of small huts, with thorn hedges, this property was modern and with good fencing. The crops were planted in neat rows and the whole complex was obviously well run and maintained.
Out of curiosity, I asked the Serena driver who owned the farm? “It belongs to Jonathan Moi, one of the President’s sons,” the driver replied.
About two years laters, I had reason to visit Kilgoris and once more, the driver took the same route from Serena Lodge. On passing the same farm, I noticed that it appeared to be nearly derelict. The previously neat fencing was sagging and damaged, and the place appeared to be deserted and generally in a state of disrepair. Uncertain whether it was the same farm I had seen, I inquired whether that was Jonathan Moi’s farm. The driver confirmed, adding: “He doesn’t come here anymore.” I asked: “Since when? “About two years,” the driver replied.
Beth Mugo and Nyong Nyongo Should resign and concentrate on their ailing health both are sick with Cancer and therefore they cannot run their ministries>
So Bwana Ngatia is Right when he tells us how his govt will hang corrupt Vultures that has been de-vouring kenyans at Uhuru Park.
Another Worst Graffiti>Kweli Central People are Bewitched >What is happening In Kikuyu-Land>The Army Soldier had returned From War-Front in Somali>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qzbcnBWpB84&feature=player_embedded
KIBAKI PREPARES TO RETIRE .
Tuesday, 19 July 2011 00:05 BY FRANCIS MUREITHI
PRESIDENT Kibaki has started planning for his retirement after 50 years in active politics. The arrangements include thanksgiving ceremonies, completion of a palatial home and construction of three new learning institutions including a university.
Kibaki’s son Jimi has disclosed that the President is planning to return to Nyeri in two months time and hold a party where he will thank the people of Othaya for repeatedly electing him to Parliament. The thanksgiving ceremony will be in a church in Othaya. “We shall hold a thanksgiving ceremony to thank our God for what he has done for our MP for all those years,” said Jimi at the weekend in a fundraiser at Othaya Approved School.
Kibaki entered elective politics in 1963 winning the Doonholm constituency — now Makadara — in Nairobi Province on a Kanu ticket. He shifted to Othaya in 1974 which he has represented uninterrupted until now. Kibaki won the presidential elections by a landslide in 2002 to become Kenya’s third president. His re-election in 2007 was disputed. The constitution bars him from contesting in 2012 as he will have served two five-year terms.
According to reliable sources, President Kibaki is planning to retire at Sasini Estate, 25 kilometres from his Othaya Kanyange home. The 1,000-acre farm is situated near Mweiga town on the Nyeri-Nyahururu Highway in Kieni West district. The contractor has been given until September to complete the palatial Sh500 million home and fencing is expected to end in two months time. Sources yesterday indicated that President Kibaki may tour the farm today to inspect the project and probably commission it.
The estate has been used for growing coffee and rearing grade cows. It has an airstrip making it easier for Kibaki to land and fly from his home. Kibaki presently has homes in Nairobi’s Muthaiga and Othaya. Insiders have hinted that the First Family is planning to use its 1,700-acre Rware farm in Narumoru town in Kieni East to set up education institutions.
First Lady Lucy Kibaki will initiate a multimillion-shilling project at the farm by the end of this year, according to inside sources. It is expected to have private primary and secondary schools and a university as a way of giving back to the community.
The contractor working on Kibaki’s Mweiga retirement home will start construction of the education institutions in October. Kibaki can expect a luxurious life in retirement that includes 38 servants paid by the public. He will collect a Sh17 million lump sum gratuity as a goodbye token from government.
This is calculated as a sum equal to Kibaki’s annual salary for the two terms served as President as stipulated in the Presidential Retirements Benefits Act (2003). He will receive at least Sh950,000 tax-free pension each month — calculated as 80 per cent of the salary of the next President. He will be entitled to a housing allowance of Sh300,000 a month; Sh300,000 each month as electricity, water and telephone allowances; and a further Sh200,000 monthly as entertainment allowance. He will also be entitled to two four-wheel drive cars with an engine capacity of 3,400 cc and two others of his choice with an engine capacity of at least 3,000 cc.
Kibaki will receive Sh200,000 monthly as fuel allowance. A reputable insurance company will provide Kibaki and his wife at government expense with full medical and hospital cover providing for local and overseas treatment. Kibaki will be provided with a fully furnished “suitable” office with office machines and supplies paid for by the taxpayer. Servants to be provided by government include six officers for his personal security and six others to guard his homes.
The others will be personal assistants (2), drivers (4), messengers (4), secretaries (4), cooks (2), housekeepers (2), gardeners (2), laundry persons (2), and house cleaners (4). At the weekend Jimi told Nyeri residents that Kibaki has been very busy with national matters.
Jimi said Kibaki has ensured that 90 per cent of Othaya people have electricity, 95 per cent have piped water and about 150 kilometres of road is being tarmacked. He added that the President has ensured that Othaya District Hospital is being upgraded into a referral hospital at a cost of Sh800 million which will make it one of the best hospitals in Mt Kenya region.
Attacks on the Press in 2011
A Worldwide Survey by the Committee to Protect Journalists
Murder in Remote Kenya Reverberates Across Nation, World
By Tom Rhodes with reporting from Clifford Derrick
http://cpj.org/attacks_on_the_press_2011.pdf
MUNGU NI MWEMA >http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wZkb6ulpreI&feature=player_embedded#!
We always eat Monkey Meat in 2(two) different ways and fashions either boiled (or) grilled >This is Kenya >http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AtwycDy5sYA&feature=player_embedded
Kenya: How Politicians Exploit Rural ‘Bliss of Ignorance’
By Philip Ochieng, 24 September 2011
That certain individuals organised Kenyans to slaughter Kenyans is not the strangest of the allegations now being made at The Hague.
“Tribal clashes” have accompanied Kenya’s national elections for nearly 30 years – all orchestrated by a small clique of “the ruling tribe”.
I put the term “the ruling tribe” in quotes because there is no such thing as a ruling tribe. These are myths which cabals of ruling individuals create because such myths help to draw attention away from the cabals’ own wickedness.
Nevertheless, this heinous activity is possible only because of the gullibility of the mass. The elite is always aware of this rural “bliss of ignorance”.
Collective sentiments
It is thus easy for the rich and powerful to ruthlessly exploit that ignorance by invoking their cheapest collective sentiments.
This is the point of the myth in which Achilles recruited an army of ants called Myrmidons who perished by the million because they fought with complete brainlessness and without any thought for themselves.
A Myrmidon is a henchman, a goon, a stooge, a marionette, a person who will do any dirty job for the boss.
Whoever commits genocide just because another person has excited his cheapest sentiments is a Myrmidon.
The desperate fear of losing the power with which they protected their extraordinary wealth was what drove a small cabal of individuals to arouse the Kikuyu mass to the zenith of passion.
The clique was aware that its overflowing wealth was the cause even of Kikuyu mass misery. So the clique sought to draw mass attention from that fact by using unmeasured language to claim that the entire Kikuyu community would be driven into the Ocean if Raila Odinga and William Ruto took power.
What is shocking about the proceedings at The Hague, then, is that leaders of certain ethnic communities unleashed mass killers whom the leaders armed with nothing more than cheap tribal sentiments and militancy.
Our murderers took much less than the 30 pieces of silver to spills tons and tons of human blood.
If you asked a Kikuyu murderer of Kalenjin, Luo and Luhya individuals what these individuals had done to him, or a Kalenjin what he had gained by kindling the bonfire that consumed scores of Kikuyu children at an Eldoret church, you would get no cogent answer.
You would be dismayed that youths had accepted as little as Sh200 to kill fellow Kenyans en masse. How could retention of power by certain individuals help either him directly or his “Kikuyuness”? What could an ordinary Kalenjin gain (or lose) if Mr Ruto succeeded (or failed) in his quest for power?
When will Kenyans learn that none of our politicians is seeking power for the sake of their respective ethnic communities but only for the purpose of swelling his personal bank accounts?
Land robbery
Even in the 1970s – at the height of their ethnic excitement and aggression – the Kikuyu masses were the most pitiable victims of land robbery by a “land-buying” gang.
An honest Kalenjin will tell you the same story concerning the tiny Kalenjin cabal that rode roughshod all over the Rift Valley during the Moi presidency.
You don’t need Ezekiel’s vision to see that the Luo mass will suffer massively under a Luo mafia when Raila Odinga is the president or the Kamba when Kalonzo Musyoka is “his excellency”.
That is your reward for succumbing to a scheme to play around with your ethnic psychology. It is what you get for having shouted “Death!” to the Kalenjin (or to the Kikuyu or to the Luo or to the Luhya).
It is your comeuppance for allowing a politician to convince you to subject a fellow human being to the intolerable agony of circumcision with a crude instrument and to kill a woman by gang-raping her. It makes you a beast unworthy of being called a Kenyan.
Eugene Wamalwa thrown out of his house
Posted by The Kenyan DAILY POST
Tuesday, 28th February 28, 2012 – A lot has been happening in this city under the sun. Among the word on the street is an intriguing story on Eugene Wamalwa. Apparently, this presidential aspirant was evicted from his Kileleshwa home. After he was evicted it is said that he moved in to a house in Lower Kabete. Drama mushroomed in his new home following the fact that his house already had owners.
His would be premises was owned by a family man who had forgotten that his daughters had since moved in to that house. The girls would not stand the fact that their father in a bid to please the Saboti MP had traded their home to prove his loyalty to the soon to – be president.
They did not entertain him and he had to take his luggage out and go
look for a new place to stay. Interestingly, the daughters to this man have since moved to court in an attempt to bar him from offering his property as gifts to politicians.
NYER WOMEN>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Htv6AlnqjY0&feature=player_embedded
Kenya Govt Should not try to stop One of the most Old Proffession on earth >Allow moms as to sell their Nali-Nali Aka pussy free without any discrimination.
Jonathan Moi Raped And Killed Julie Ward By John Ward
02 Mar 2012
In September 1988, Julie Ward, a young woman enjoying her holiday, disappeared in Kenya’s Masai Mara National Game Reserve.
Immediately, Jonathan Moi was rumoured to have been involved in Julie’s death. The first information concerning Jonathan, the son of Kenya’s former President Daniel Moi, came from a Swiss TV crew working in the park.
They had offered their five radio-equipped vehicles to assist in the search for the missing tourist. Senior warden Simon ole Makallah abruptly told them to mind their own business. The crew had heard rumours about Jonathan being seen with a group of men in the park.
After six weeks of filming, the Swiss left Kenya. By now, some of the dismembered remains of Julie Ward had been discovered in a remote corner of the game park rarely visited by tourists.
Before leaving, they went to the Makallah’s office to settle their account, and found him sitting head in hands. He said he had been summoned to a meeting with President Moi.
Simon ole Makallah
On September 12, 1988, I arrived from the UK to search for my daughter, six days after she was reported missing. I launched an air search on September 13 and located Julie’s Suzuki Jeep. It was in a deep gully, several miles into the harsh bush.
On arrival at the scene, I found an empty vehicle. I assumed that Julie had somehow got stuck in the mud of the gully and was now attempting to walk to safety. Why and how the vehicle had arrived at that remote location remained baffling. But that could wait; the priority was to find her.
Although Makallah was aware of the situation and responsible for all activities and tourists in the park, he had not ordered a search by any of the 113 rangers under his command.
At 11 a.m., on the day Julie’s Suzuki was spotted, Makallah was informed immediately. Instead of rushing to the scene to take command of the ground search, Makallah drove to Serena Lodge, 50km in the opposite direction.
Makallah already knew a search would be pointless. It was not until mid-afternoon that Makallah finally arrived at the scene. By then, over 30 other people – rangers, police, council workers – had been to the scene and left for the search. Before leaving the vehicle, a police inspector known as Anthony Mwaura instructed two constables to remove Julie’s personal possessions from the vehicle and take them to the Sand River Police Post for safe keeping. The constables removed maps, a pair of trainers, two bottles of beer, a pair of binoculars and various other items, including tents and sleeping bags.
Then the police and rangers commenced the search. When Makallah arrived at 3p.m., there was no one at the vehicle.
While giving evidence in court during the trial of two rangers, Makallah was asked by the trial Judge, Mr Justice Fida Hussien Abdullah, what he had done when he arrived at the vehicle. Makallah said he “peeked” inside the vehicle. He listed what he saw: some maps, a pair of trainers, two bottles of beer, a pair of binoculars. These items had already been removed by the police three hours before he arrived.
However, Makallah was only a witness. The accused were two rangers, who had been arrested and charged with murder on the advice of Scotland Yard. They were eventually acquitted. Nonetheless, the trial Judge said that Makallah must have had prior knowledge of Julie’s Suzuki before the afternoon of the September 13. Therefore, Makallah had knowledge of the circumstances of the murder that he had not disclosed to the Court.
The spotlight of suspicion fell squarely on Makallah – and for good reason.
Back to the afternoon of the September 13, the vehicle was discovered. Makallah had stayed at the scene of the stranded Suzuki for an hour. This was confirmed by several witnesses, including his driver John Teeka, an inspector Odhiambo (who was in Makallah’s vehicle), a group of rangers and Assistant Warden James Sindyo, who arrived at the scene in a separate vehicle.
At 4p.m., Makallah joined the ground search. The gully where Julie’s Suzuki was found is a tributary of the river, on the north side of the Sand River. The river flows through the game park contained within steep sided banks. There is no vehicle crossing at this point.
Even on foot, the river would normally be impassable. On this day, September 13, the water level was low and it would have been just possible to slide and scramble down the steep bank, wade across the river, and scramble up the opposite side.
Why on earth would anyone think Julie had done that? Her vehicle had left clear tyre marks in the long grass on the North side. Logically, if she had got the vehicle stuck in the gully, she would have followed these tracks across country, back to the road between Keekorok and Sand River Gate, from where she had allegedly started her journey.
However, logic has no place in the events surrounding Julie’s disappearance. She was returning to Nairobi to fly home, after her brief visit to the Masai Mara. The allegation that she had decided to turn off the main road, drive across the trackless, rockstrewn bush before attempting to drive through a deep gully, is as ridiculous as it is illogical.
It became obvious that someone else had driven Julie’s vehicle across the bush and into the gully. The spotlight of suspicion on Simon ole Makallah became brighter and even more focused, thanks to his actions.
Instead of searching on the north side of the Sand River (where the Suzuki was stuck), Makallah went to the south.
To cross the river, Makallah had to drive along the top of the bank of the Sand River for three kilometres to a place called the Sand River Crossing. Here the riverbanks are less steep and crossing with a 4×4 vehicle is possible at certain times of the year.
Once on the South side, Makallah was confronted with a vast vista of featureless bush, stretching a full half circle of 180 degrees from the distant horizon in the east to the west. For Makallah, it should have been a difficult decision to pick possible directions to take to start his search.
Makallah had left the Suzuki in the gully at 4p.m. At 4.26p.m., he sent a radio signal to park headquarters, informing them he had found Julie’s remains. The place was 10km, in a south-easterly direction, a desolate corner of the Masai Mara. There are no tracks leading to it and it is identifiable only by a distinctively shaped large tree set among dozens of other smaller trees and bushes.
Police have retraced Makallah’s movements for that day. They have re-enacted Makallah’s journey from the gully, across the Sand River, and to the site of Julie’s remains.
Even though the police now knew where the site of Julie’s remains were located, the quickest time for their journey was exactly 26 minutes. (And, because this evidence is so crucial, the journey has been re-enacted many times and 26 minutes is the shortest elapsed time).
Twenty-six minutes is also the precise time it took Makallah to drive from the Suzuki in the gully to the site of the Julie’s remains. Makallah claimed he had no idea which direction to take and that his search had been random and his discovery was just a matter of chance.
It was clear that not only had Makallah lied about his prior knowledge of the items in Julie’s vehicle, he had also lied about his knowledge of the location of Julie’s remains. He undoubtedly knew where to go. By sending a timed radio message on his arrival, he confirmed his own lies.
A copy of the timed radio signal was discovered at park headquarters. It is now with British Police.
In trying to extricate himself from the situation, Makallah claimed he had been led by vultures circling in the sky. It was pointed out to Makallah that you could not see an elephant at that distance, let alone the speck of a vulture in the sky. Makallah stopped offering that particular explanation but was not able to offer any alternative.
Within a few days, after the discovery of Julie’s remains, he disappeared from the park. At first the official line was that he was “on leave”. But when weeks turned into months, the story changed. Makallah had been suspended. In fact, he never returned to his position of Senior Warden of the Masai Mara Game Reserve.
However, before he disappeared, Makallah wrote a report to the clerk of the Narok County Council, dated September 24, 1988. It claimed he was absent from the game park at the time of the murder and implied that Julie had committed suicide.
In an attempt to support this suggestion, he said Julie and her companion had been involved in an argument at Serena Lodge and she was upset. But documentary records show that Makallah was in the game park at the time of the murder.
His allegation of an argument was also untrue. This was subsequently confirmed by her companion, whose passport showed he had left Kenya and was actually in Rwanda at the time of Julie’s death.
In any case, medical and all other forensic evidence showed that Julie had been murdered.
In an attempt to prove he could not be responsible for driving Julie’s vehicle into the gully – thereby gaining knowledge of the vehicle’s contents – Makallah visited Kilgoris Police Station on September 16, 1989. He recorded a voluntary statement claiming that he could not drive a motor vehicle. He had never driven a motor vehicle. He did not know how to drive and did not possess a driving licence.
A copy of his statement is retained by British Police. Makallah’s statement was completely untrue.
Makallah’s driver, John Teeka, has said that Makallah often took over the driving. Makallah’s assistant warden, James Sindyo, gave evidence that he had often seen Makallah driving. Makallah had, in fact, driven me and Frank Ribeiro to Sand River Gate. The police discovered records of a motor accident involving a vehicle Makallah was driving.
After giving evidence on oath in court, again stating his inability to drive, Makallah was followed by a newspaper reporter. He watched Makallah take his vehicle from Kenya Wildlife Services headquarters and drive to his house. The reporter gave evidence the following morning about what he had seen. Nothing happened to Makallah as a result of his perjury.
The secondhand clothes seller
Nonetheless, while the evidence against Makallah grew, information concerning Jonathan Moi’s involvement continued to emerge, suggesting a linkage between the two.
One afternoon, as I was waiting for transport outside Keekorok Lodge, I was furtively approached by a large lady, who pressed a tightly folded note into my hand. She sidled away. Opening it later, it read simply, “The man who killed your daughter is Jonathan Moi” There was also a post office box number for Mombasa.
Later, I contacted the lady and asked how she was able to make the allegation against Jonathan. She explained that she was a second-hand clothes dealer.
The lady regularly visited Masai Mara and surrounding villages, selling the second-hand clothes. She said local women, who were her customers, included the wives of park rangers. She said she had heard the allegations about Jonathan Moi everywhere in the park, but particularly in the villages near Sekanani Gate and Olaimutiek Gate. The latter gate and adjacent village are near the location Julie’s dismembered remains were found. The world famous Cottar’s Tourist Camp, then owned by the equally famous, Glen Cottar, is also in the same area.
I retained the folded note and passed it, with the information, to Scotland Yard.
Jonathan Moi’s farm
In early 1989, soon after Julie’s death, I received information that required a visit to Lolgorien. The route from Serena Lodge was via the 0101010 Gate, then climbing up the steep winding track onto the escarpment and from there towards the Lolgorien-Kilgoris main road. On the way, the vehicle passed many small farms and villages. At one point, a very impressive farm came into view. Whereas the local farms consisted of small huts, with thorn hedges, this property was modern and with good fencing. The crops were planted in neat rows and the whole complex was obviously well run and maintained.
Out of curiosity, I asked the Serena driver who owned the farm? “It belongs to Jonathan Moi, one of the President’s sons,” the driver replied.
About two years laters, I had reason to visit Kilgoris and once more, the driver took the same route from Serena Lodge. On passing the same farm, I noticed that it appeared to be nearly derelict. The previously neat fencing was sagging and damaged, and the place appeared to be deserted and generally in a state of disrepair. Uncertain whether it was the same farm I had seen, I inquired whether that was Jonathan Moi’s farm. The driver confirmed, adding: “He doesn’t come here anymore.” I asked: “Since when? “About two years,” the driver replied.
http://www.nairobilawmonthly.com/modules/frontpage/php/fullview_content.php?mode=0&multi=0&type=0&pos=0&limit=0&id=330&
Beth Mugo and Nyong Nyongo Should resign and concentrate on their ailing health both are sick with Cancer and therefore they cannot run their ministries>
http://narwhaler.com/woke-up-today-made-4-million-enemies-kony-2012-xen5ym
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4mys1aM8z-M&feature=player_embedded
A Woman handikap was run over by a train in Nairobi >http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4mys1aM8z-M&feature=player_embedded