Tag: Kenya

  • Kenya Forfeits AFCON Hosting Right, CAF Shops for New Country

    Kenya Forfeits AFCON Hosting Right, CAF Shops for New Country

    Confederation of African Football (CAF) is now faced with getting a new host country for  the January 2018 African Nations Championship.

    This development came as Kenya were stripped on Saturday of the right to host the African Nations Championship after CAF executive committee meeting in Accra.

    The decision was announced at a media conference after a one-day meeting of the African football “cabinet” headed by President Ahmad Ahmad from Madagascar.

    Slow preparations for the January 12/February 4 tournament led to a decision widely anticipated for several weeks.

    A CAF inspection team departed Kenya in September to report that only one of the four venues was ready to stage the tournament restricted to home-based footballers.

    Some CAF officials in Accra also expressed concern about the political situation in Kenya, where recently annulled presidential elections are set to be rerun late October.

    It is the second time the regional economic powerhouse has lost the right to stage a CAF competition after being replaced by South Africa as 1996 Africa Cup of Nations hosts.

    Kenya would have been the second successive east African country to stage the CHAN after Rwanda in 2016.

    Other hosts since the 2009 inception of the Nations Championship were the Ivory Coast, Sudan and South Africa.

    There has been media speculation that Morocco or South Africa may replace Kenya.

    Angola, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Congo Brazzaville, Equatorial Guinea, Guinea, Ivory Coast, Libya, Mauritania, Morocco, Namibia, Nigeria, Sudan, Uganda and Zambia have qualified for the 2018 finals.

    Kenya completed the line-up as the host nation — a position they now forfeit.

  • Pfizer supports GPs in Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya

    Pfizer supports GPs in Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya

    General Practitioners (GP) in Nigeria, Ghana and Kenya have benefited from Pfizer’s General Practitioners’ (GP) programme, a corporate social responsibility initiative of the company.

    The GPs medical skills and education got a boost through the pharmaceutical company’s ‘Learning Exchange Advancement Programme (LEAP).

    The initiative, which began three years ago, has reached 5,000 doctors, with 2,000 being reached between July and  last month through technology.

    Pfizer explained that the objectives of LEAP are two-fold: First, it wants to be close to the GPs, who are the first point of call for patients,  to get a deeper understanding of their peculiar practice-related circumstances and needs, and second, to contribute to updating their knowledge and skills on trends in medical practice.

    Pfizer Essential Health Marketing Director, Winston Ailemoh, who spoke on the reasons the company focused on general practice physicians, said: “We believe at the end, if the patients get better care, Pfizer’s mission of saving lives will be achieved. But our primary target is to improve the knowledge of the GPs and make them better in diagnoses, management of the patients and recommending what is best for the patients. We have realised over time that this is one segment within the healthcare sector that had been neglected by a lot of pharmaceutical companies.

    “The focus of most pharmaceutical companies is on specialists. They invest in cardiologists, oncologists, diabetologists, etc. But when an individual is sick, he or she usually goes to the general practice physician first. So, our focus is on the general practitioners.’’

    Explaining the importance of general practitioners in the medical ecosystem, Ailemoh said when a patient goes to the hospital, the first doctor he will usually encounter is a general practice physician, who conducts initial checks and tests and makes a provisional/preliminary diagnosis.

    The programme has engaged doctors in all the geo-political zones of each country (Nigeria, Ghana and Kenya). However, the company recently re-strategised on how to reach more doctors leveraging modern technology.

    Ailemoh said: “Three years ago, we started this programme with two or three meetings in a year; one in the north, one in the south and one in the west. But now we are doing it differently.”

    He added: “We started asking ourselves towards the end of last year, how we could reach more doctors, and we decided to leverage technology monthly to attain a wider coverage across multiple centers in Nigeria, Ghana and Kenya.

    “From May, this year, we started experimenting with a broadcast centre in Lagos and receiving centres in different parts of Nigeria, Ghana and Kenya. Four months down the line, it has been an amazing success story for us,” he said.

    Corroborating the marketing director, the Brand Manager, Primary Care, Olakunle Ogunlowo, said the programme had achieved its two critical objectives.

    On how the participants are sourced, Ailemoh said: “We have medical representatives engaging the GPs daily in both private and public hospitals across Nigeria, Ghana and Kenya. Invitations are extended through the medical representatives and their managers, who engage not less than 50 hospitals weekly,” he informed.

    The marketing director emphasised that the impact had been tremendous, adding that the main objective is to reach more GPs with the medical education programme by continuous innovative approach leveraging technology.

    “In terms of impact, it has been tremendous. For instance, the impact of over 2000 general practitioners well equipped with such knowledge could bring about a great improvement in health care delivery to patients,” he added.

    The company plans to extend its tentacles  to Benin, Calabar, Enugu and Kano.

  • ‘Kenya, Ethiopia compete with Nigeria for investment’

    Nigeria, South Africa and Egypt are facing increasing competition for investment from Kenya and Ethiopia, a newly released Africa Risk-Reward Index, has said.

    The Africa Risk-Reward Index provides investors with a synthesis of risks and opportunities across the African continent. The Index was developed by Control Risks and Oxford Economics.

    Control Risks is a global risk consultancy, which helps organisations in the world to understand and manage the risks and opportunities of operating around the globe, particularly in complex and hostile markets.

    Oxford Economics is a world leader in global forecasting and quantitative data analysis, acting as a key adviser to corporate, financial and government decision-makers, and thought leaders.

    The report showed that Africa’s economic giants including Nigeria, South Africa and Egypt have been stumbling recently.

    It stated that economic downturn and militancy in Nigeria, rising security risks and political instability in Egypt, and escalating political risks in South Africa led to doubts whether the balance between risks and opportunities in these markets was still favourable for businesses.

    The report added that despite recent recovery in Nigeria and South Africa, Kenya and Ethiopia might soon outshine these economic giants in the competition for investment.

    Giving more insights, the report put Nigeria’s reward score at 6.0 (out of 10), ahead of South Africa and Egypt. It stated that Nigeria’s charms, however, fade against a risk score of 7.3 (out of 10), as President Muhammadu Buhari’s government struggles through its first term.

  • Still on Kenya’s election debacle

    SIR: Recently the Kenya’s Supreme Court nullified the presidential election in which the Kenya Independent Electoral and Boundary Commission (IEBC) had declared the incumbent President Uhuru Kenyatta as winner. President Kenyatta had scored a total number of votes representing 54% against votes representing 45% scored by his rival Raila Odinga of the opposition party. The election which was monitored by both foreign and local observers including the former U.S Secretary of State John Kerry and former South African President Thabo Mbeki among other eminent personalities was adjudged as free, fair and transparent. Kenya’s Supreme Court saw things differently hence their verdict.

    It is heartwarming that wise counsel prevailed as leaders across the political divide passionately appealed for calm among their supporters.

    As the campaigns for the fresh Presidential election get underway, it is hoped that Kenyans would continue to maintain the peace and stability as they exercise their franchise once again to elect the President of their choice. The world is already watching and it is incumbent on the Kenyan people either to re-confirm their earlier decision to re-elect Uhuru Kenyatta or switch over their votes in favour of Raila Odinga this time around. The Kenyan electorate will definitely prove in the coming weeks whether Uhuru Kenyatta’s victory was a mere fluke or whether Raila Odinga was actually denied victory through the manipulation of the electoral process as he claimed. Whatever happens, the will of the Kenyan people must be respected whenever the outcome of the re-scheduled election is eventually announced by the electoral commission.

    Developing nations particularly Nigeria that is already looking forward to her next Presidential election in 2019 should borrow a leaf from the Kenyan experience and take adequate and effective measures that would guarantee free, fair, transparent and credible election in their various countries. As the countdown to the 2019 General Elections begins in earnest, it is expected that the electoral umpire, INEC should take necessary measures to plug all loopholes in order to checkmate or prevent desperate and unpatriotic politicians bent on wresting power by illegitimate means from carrying out their anti-democratic designs.

    The litmus test already awaits INEC as it prepares for the forthcoming Anambra State gubernatorial election of November 18.

     

    • Nze Nwabueze Akabogu (JP)

    Enugwu-Ukwu, Anambra State.

  • Kenya: Raila Odinga rejects new election date

    Kenya: Raila Odinga rejects new election date

    …Kenyatta rebuffs demand

    Kenyan opposition leader, Raila Odinga said on Tuesday his coalition would not participate in the re-run of a presidential election proposed for Oct. 17 unless it is given “legal and constitutional” guarantees.

    Incumbent President Uhuru Kenyatta responded by saying there was nowhere in law that required the electoral body to consult Odinga.

    Related: Supreme Court nullifies Kenya’s presidential poll

    Odinga’s conditions for participating in the repeat presidential election include the removal of six officials at the election board.

    He called for criminal investigations to be opened against them.

    “You cannot do a mistake twice and expect to get different results.

    “A number of the officials of the commission should be sent home, some of them should be investigated for the heinous crimes they committed.”

    Kenya’s Supreme Court ordered on Friday that the Aug. 8 vote be re-run within 60 days, saying Kenyatta’s victory by 1.4 million votes was undermined by irregularities in the process.

    Kenyatta was not accused of any wrongdoing.

    The ruling, the first time in Africa that a court had overturned the re-election of a sitting president, was hailed by Odinga supporters as “historic”.

    Trending: Buhari, Nigerien President meet in Daura

    Analysts have said it is likely to lead to some short-term volatility in East Africa’s biggest economy but could build confidence in institutions in the longer-term.

    On Monday, the election board said it would hold new elections on Oct. 17, but Odinga said he wanted elections held on October 24 or 31 instead.

    “There will be no elections on Oct. 17 until the conditions that we have spelt out in the statement are met,” he said.

    Kenyatta rebuffed Odinga’s demands to the commission on the setting of the election date.

    Also Read: Kenya holds fresh presidential poll October 17

    “There is no legal requirement that Odinga be consulted. I was neither consulted. Kenya doesn’t belong to one man,” he said in a statement sent by his office.

    Odinga has lost the last three presidential elections. Each time, he said the vote was rigged against him.

    The opposition also plans to lodge 62 court cases contesting governorship, lawmaker, and local seats, spokeswoman Kathleen Openda said.

    At least 33 court cases were filed contesting election results before the presidential election was annulled, said Andrew Limo, spokesman for the election board.

    Others had been filed since but he did not have the updated figure.

    Limo said that the numbers had not yet reached the same level as during the 2013 elections, when the board received challenges to 189 results.

  • Corruption, inefficiency killing judiciary – Presidential aide

    Corruption, inefficiency killing judiciary – Presidential aide

    Special Assistant to the President on Prosecutions, Chief Okoi Obono-Obla, on Monday said a case he filed at the Supreme Court 10 years ago is yet to be assigned a date for hearing due to corruption and inefficiency.

    He said lawyers and litigants “pay through their noses” to have cases assigned or court papers served.
    The judiciary, he said, was averse to reform and should learn from the Kenyan example where every stakeholder worked towards an efficient justice system.
    Obono-Obla, in a statement, said: “Why is the judicial system in Nigeria adverse to change? Look at Kenya and how it has reformed its own system!
    “See how effective and efficient the judiciary in Kenya! See how audacious, bold, courageous and fearless Judges in Kenya are!
    “See how an election petition was heard within dispatch just three weeks after it was filed!  See how lawyers work together with the bench to deliver a landmark judgment.
    “In Nigeria lawyers would devise all manners of legal manoeuvrings steeped in crass legal technicalities to frustrate justice! The judgment would be leaked several weeks before delivery,” he said!
    According to him, the appellate courts are chaotic and have refused to adopt technology despite increased funding.
    “Before I was given an appointment while in law practice, I have appeals I have filed in the Court of Appeal for the past six years but till now have not been heard! I also have several appeals I filed in the Supreme Court since 2007 till now no date have been given for hearing of these appeals!
     “To obtain a court ruling you must pay through your nose; to obtain a certified true copy of judgment you must pay through nose; to cause a court bailiff to serve a court process you must pay through your nose!
    “To get a case to be assigned after filing you must pay through your nose! Even in the Supreme Court to get an appeal to be assigned for hearing you must pay through your nose!
     “The registries in the Court of Appeal and Supreme Court respectively are a study in chaos, disorderliness and confusion! They have refused to embrace Information and Communication Technology (ICT) to organize their registry in line with international best practices,” he said.
    Obono-Obla said judges hate progressive and forwarding lawyers who do not parley with them to institutionalise corruption.
    He said Kenyan Judiciary was notorious for corruption and underhand dealings but was reformed with the cooperation of all stakeholders.
    He said efforts to reform Nigerian judiciary have been frustrated by judges and lawyers.
    “The judicial system is just not working! Looking at how judges are frustrating trial of corrupt politicians despite the provisions of Administrations of Criminal Justice Act, 2015 (ACJA.) Section 396 (3) says matters must be heard day to day but Judges are not enforcing it.
    “This government increased the budgetary allocation of the judiciary for the first time in 50 years, yet no reciprocation on the part of judges to reform the system! They are not interested! Otherwise why would the judiciary allow it registry system to still remain the way it was one hundred years ago?
    “Why is it not possible to get a ruling or judgment as soon is delivered? Why can’t we use ICT in filing of court processes? Why are appeals delaying in the Court of Appeal? The Court of Appeal is just a court of review; no evidence is adduced at that stage, so what is responsible for the delay?” Obono-Obla said.
    He also faulted the process of judges’ appointment, saying it was not based on merit.
    “The appointment of judges is a lesson or study in corruption and nepotism! To be eligible to be appointed a judge you must be well connected; you must be a crony or lackey of a senior judicial officer or a relative or son or daughter of a senior judicial officer!
    “You must be seen to be a plaint or conformist or Yes man! You must be ready to hobnob or kowtow to influential senior lawyers!
    “No wonder the recent survey carried out by the UNODC and National Bureau on Statistics named the judiciary and the Police as the most corrupt public institutions in Nigeria,” he said.
  • Supreme Court annuls Kenya’s presidential election

    Supreme Court annuls Kenya’s presidential election

    Kenya’s Supreme Court yesterday cancelled the result of last month’s presidential election on grounds of  irregularities committed by the election board.

    It ordered a new vote in 60 days.

    The decision to cancel the result, the first of its kind in Kenya’s history, sets up a new race for the presidency between Kenyatta and veteran opposition leader Raila Odinga.

    Kenya has a history of disputed elections. A row over the 2007 poll, which Odinga challenged after being declared loser, was followed by weeks of ethnic bloodshed in which more than 1,200 were killed.

    “The declaration (of Kenyatta’s win) is invalid, null and void,” said Judge David Maranga, announcing the verdict backed by four out of the six judges and drawing cheers outside the court from Odinga supporters.

    “The first respondent (the election board) failed, neglected or refused to conduct the presidential election in a manner consistent with the dictates of the constitution,” the judge said.

    International observers had said they saw no sign of manipulation of voting and tallying at polling stations. Several observers said the opposition did not conduct a parallel tally and had not challenged results with complete data of their own.

    Many voters in the west of Kenya, Odinga’s stronghold, and along the coast, where there is traditionally large support for the opposition, feel neglected by the central government and shut out of power.

    “This indeed is a very historic day for the people of Kenya,” Odinga said after the decision. For the first time in the history of African democratization, a ruling has been made by a court nullifying irregular elections for the president.”

    A lawyer for Kenyatta, Ahmednasir Abdullahi, said the decision was “very political” and the election board had “done nothing wrong.” But he said the decision had to be respected.

    Odinga had contested the last three elections and lost each time. After each one, he claimed the votes were marred by rigging. In 2013, the Supreme Court dismissed his petition.

    This time, his team focused on proving that the process for tallying and transmitting results was flawed, rather than proving how much of the vote was rigged.

    Residents in the western city of Kisumu, where Odinga has strong backing, celebrated in the streets. Motorcycle drivers hooted their horns.

    “Today is a special today and I will celebrate until I am worn out,” said 32-year-old Kevin Ouma.

  • Fascinating African Cultures To Know

    Fascinating African Cultures To Know

    Africa boasts of some of the world’s most fascinating cultures and traditions that dates back to hundred of years. There a couple of fascinating African cultures that you probably don’t know or might not even have heard of. Jumia Travel, the leading online travel agency, shares four fascinating African cultures to know.

    Living With Their Mothers

    In the Gio tribe int, Ivory Coast children never live with their fathers. The women of the tribe have their own houses (typically small huts), where they live with their children until the children are old enough to move out.

    Sons are Raised by Uncles

    In the Northern Angolan Songo tribe, when male children reach the age 5 or 6 years, they are sent to live with their uncles on the mother’s side. This is because, in their society, chiefs inherit their titles and positions through matrilineal lines.

    Preserving Wild Animals

    The Massai people of Kenya and Tanzania are averse to killing wild animals. They freely keep cattle and livestock, but wild animals are left untouched. This is largely because they consider these wild animals clan members, and each clan is associated with a specific species which they often keep close to them and treat as a clan member.

    Beating the Suitor

    In the Fulani tribe in West Africa, the custom of beating the suitor is followed as part of the Sharo tradition. The custom is followed when two men are vying for the same woman. To determine the eventual suitor of the woman, the men are asked to compete for the hand of the woman by beating themselves up. The man who is able to take the beating while showing the least or no sign of pain, can take the woman as a wife. The people of the tribe might not practice the tradition as strictly as they once did, but there are still some parts of the tribe that practice it to the letter.

  • Kenya: Govt to prosecute plastic bags owners from Aug. 28

    Kenya: Govt to prosecute plastic bags owners from Aug. 28

    Kenyan Government on Monday warned that from Aug. 28, anyone caught with plastic bags would be arrested, charged or fined between 19,417 dollars and 38,834 dollars.

    Kenya announced a ban on the use of plastic bags in March, giving manufacturers a six-month grace period as the order takes effect on Aug. 28.

    A notice from the Ministry of Environment also banned the use, manufacture and importation of all plastic bags used for commercial and household packaging.

    According to the ministry, the ban targeted carrier bags with handles, with or without gussets, or flat bags without handles and with or without gussets.

    Kenya Association of Manufacturers has objected the ban and asked the Ministry of Environment to reconsider it, citing job losses as tens of factories would close and fire their workers.

    The ban would not only affect industries that rely on plastics for packaging but the entire value chain.

    Millions of livelihoods are at stake.

    The ministry said the ban does not affect industrial packaging, but this has not been backed up legally, according to the association.

    Environmentalists and some consumers, however, are happy with the ban noting it was long overdue.

    Kenya uses up to 24 million plastic bags monthly, with half ending up in the environment due to poor disposal.

    “The environment including water bodies are chocked by the plastics killing marine life.

    “This is the best thing to happen to our country and the ministry should not turn back. Rwanda did it, why not us?’’ posed Herman while contributing on a social media debate.

  • Election: Kenyan girl shot dead by police in protest over

    Election: Kenyan girl shot dead by police in protest over

    A young Kenyan girl was shot dead by police during operations to quell protests against the re-election of President Uhuru Kenyatta, a witness said on Saturday.

    “The girl was hit by a stray bullet while she was on a balcony as police were firing sporadic shots,” the witness, who only gave his first name, Eric, told Reuters.

    NAN reports that Kenyatta secured a second term in office, results showed on Friday, setting off wild street celebrations by his supporters and protests in opposition strongholds in the capital and the west of the country.

    Speaking after the result of Tuesday’s election was announced, Kenyatta offered an olive branch to the opposition, urging national unity and peace with rivals who have rejected the result and raised the prospect of street protests.

    Many Kenyans fear a repeat of the violence that followed the 2007 disputed election, when about 1,200 people were killed and hundreds of thousands displaced as protests over the result led to ethnic killings.

    Kenyatta got 54.3 per cent of the vote, ahead of rival Raila Odinga who secured 44.7 per cent, according to election commission figures.

    Nearly 80 per cent of the 19 million registered voters cast their ballots.

    “To my worthy competitor Raila Odinga, I reach out to you, I reach out to your supporters, let us work together,” Kenyatta, 55, said, shortly after being declared winner.

    “Let us be peaceful, let us share together,” he said.

    “Reach out to your neighbour, shake their hand. Say this election is over, let us move on.”

    In Nairobi and other towns in Kenya his supporters took to the streets to celebrate, honking car horns and blowing whistles.

    However, there were also protests.

    Police fired tear gas and gunshots were heard in the Nairobi slums of Mathare and Kawangware, where young men took to the streets as police helicopters buzzed overhead.

    In Kisumu, an Odinga stronghold in the west, youths banged drums and tyres burned in the streets in the Kondele district.

    As election officials prepared the final results, the NASA opposition coalition, led by 72-year-old Odinga, who has lost the last two elections amid complaints of fraud, said it rejected the process after its complaints had not been addressed.

    “We raised some very serious concerns. They have not responded to them. As NASA we shall not be party to the process they are about to make,” senior opposition official Musalia Mudavadi told reporters.

    James Orengo, one of Odinga’s top lieutenants, said the process had been a “charade”.

    He stopped short of calling for protests but praised the Kenyan people’s history of standing up to stolen elections and said there were “constitutional alternatives” to challenging any result.

    “Going to court, for us, is not an alternative. We have been there before,” he said.

    “The Kenyan people have never disappointed … every time an election has been stolen, the Kenyan people have stood up to make sure changes are made to make Kenya a better place.”

    Earlier, Orengo had called for the candidates and observers to be given access to the election commission’s computer servers so there could be a transparent audit of data from 41,000 polling stations across the country.

    Yakub Guliye, election commissioner in charge of information technology, said the opposition had not made a formal request and it would not act on a verbal request.

    Normal procedure calls for the commission to release final results after cross checking electronic tallies with paper forms.

    Odinga’s camp has said figures released by the commission since Tuesday’s vote were “fictitious” and that “confidential sources” within the commission had provided figures showing Odinga had a large lead in the race.

    The election commission rejected the claims, pointing out they contained basic mathematical errors.

    Police had beefed up security across much of Kenya, particularly in opposition strongholds in the west and parts of Nairobi, in anticipation of the announcement of the result.

    Kenya is the leading economy in East Africa and any instability would be likely to ripple through the region.

    Odinga is a member of the Luo, an ethnic group from the west of the country that has long said it is excluded from power.

    Kenyatta is from the Kikuyu group, which has supplied three of four presidents since Kenya gained independence from Britain in 1963.

    International observers have given the thumbs-up to the vote and U.S. Ambassador Robert Godec issued a statement on behalf of the diplomatic community calling for any complaints to be channelled through the courts, not street protests.

    “If there are disputes or disagreements, the Kenyan constitution is very clear on how they are to be addressed. Violence must never be an option,” he said on Friday.

    But the opposition criticised foreign observer missions, which included former South African president Thabo Mbeki and former U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, saying they should have been “vetted” ahead of the vote.

    “The observers largely served the interests of the government,” Orengo said.

    As well as a new president, Kenyans also elected new lawmakers and local representatives.

    Some of those races have also been disputed, leading to violence in Garissa and Tana River counties.(Reuters/NAN)