Tag: Kenya

  • Odinga rejects poll results showing Kenyatta in lead

    Odinga rejects poll results showing Kenyatta in lead

    Kenyan opposition leader Raila Odinga rejected early results of a presidential election on Wednesday that showed he was losing to incumbent and long-time rival Uhuru Kenyatta.

    As of 0300 GMT, the election commission website put Kenyatta ahead by 55.1 per cent of votes counted to 44 per cent for Odinga, a margin of nearly 1.4 million ballots with more than 80 per cent of polling stations reported.

    Kenyatta, a 55-year-old businessman seeking a second five-year term, had held such a lead since the start of counting after Tuesday’s peaceful vote, the culmination of a hard-fought contest between the heads of Kenya’s two political dynasties.

    Odinga, a 72-year-old former political prisoner and self-described leftist, rejected the results as “fictitious”

    and “fake”, lashing out in a late night news conference at which he said his party’s own tally put him ahead.

    “We have our projections from our agents which show we are ahead by far,” Odinga said, questioning why published

    results were not accompanied by scanned copies of forms signed by all party agents in polling stations.

    Kenyan law states that where there is a discrepancy between a result on the website and the form, the result on

    the form will be considered final.

    Alleging vote-rigging, he also brought up the unsolved torture and murder of a top election official just over a

    week before the vote.

    “We fear this was exactly the reason Chris Msando was assassinated,” he said.

    Odinga’s comments carry ominous echoes of 2007 when he cried foul in an election marred by major irregularities.

    Around 1,200 people were killed in a campaign of ethnic violence that followed.

    Crimes against humanity charges brought by the International Criminal Court against Kenyatta and William Ruto, now his deputy, were withdrawn after witnesses died or disappeared.

    Odinga also ran and lost in 2013, but quelled potential clashes by taking his complaints about the widespread failure of electronic voting equipment to court.

    Many Odinga supporters said they believed their leader had been robbed of victory during the last two polls and vowed not to allow a third election to be stolen.

    “I will accept the outcome only if it’s credible,” said Odinga supporter Joseph Okuoch as he carefully watched vote tallying at his polling station in Kisumu, an Odinga stronghold in western Kenya.

    There were no signs of trouble in Kisumu as dawn started to break.

    The son of Kenya’s first vice-president, Odinga is an ethnic Luo in the west, an area that has long felt neglected by the central government and resentful of their perceived exclusion from power.

    Kenyatta, the son of the first president Jomo Kenyatta, is a Kikuyu, the ethnic group that has supplied three of the four presidents since independence from Britain in 1963.

    On Tuesday, Kenyatta called on whoever lost to concede the race.

    “In the event that they lose, let us accept the will of the people.

    “I am willing myself to accept the will of the people, so let them too,” Kenyatta said as he voted at the Mutomo Primary School in Gatundu, some 30 km north of the capital.

    Later, Odinga also told German broadcaster Deutsche Welle that he would also accept loss “in the unlikely  event that I lost fairly”.

    The winner needs one vote more than 50 per cent, and at least a quarter of the vote in 24 of Kenya’s 47 counties.

    In addition to a new president, Kenyans are electing lawmakers and local representatives, the result of a 2010 constitution that devolved power and money to the counties.

  • Kenyans in Rwanda voting for president smoothly

    Kenyans in Rwanda voting for president smoothly

    Kenyan nationals residing in Rwanda on Tuesday participated in general elections by casting their votes at the diplomatic mission in the capital city Kigali.

    The elections in Kenya are for the President, county governor, senator, Member of Parliament, woman representative and member of county assembly.

    The voters began arriving at the Kenyan High Commission in Kacyiru sector, Gasabo district as early as 6 a.m. where a polling station had been established.

    By 11 a.m., at least 100 people had cast their votes.

    Speaking to Xinhua, Catherine Koskey, the presiding officer for the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) at the embassy said that there have been no incidents and voters woke up as early as 6 a.m. to exercise their rights.

    “We started at 6 a.m. and are hoping to close at 5 p.m. We are encouraging Kenyans living in Rwanda who are registered voters to hurry and vote before deadline,” she said.

    According to Koskey, about 850 Kenyans in Rwanda registered to vote at the Kenya High Commission in Kigali.

    The main presidential contest is between incumbent president Uhuru Kenyatta, the flag bearer of Jubilee coalition and former Prime Minister Raila Odinga, leader of the National Super Alliance (NASA).

    Also on the list of candidates are six other independent candidates.

    “I’m glad that Kenyans have turned up to vote and no incidents and violence.

    “I believe things will get better after this election. I pray for peaceful elections,” said Eugene Anangwe, a Kenyan journalist living in Rwanda.

  • UN, Obama urge peaceful polls in Kenya

    UN, Obama urge peaceful polls in Kenya

    Ahead of Tuesday Kenya’s presidential election, the UN and former U.S. president Barack Obama on Monday called for peaceful polls, urging respect for the outcome of the polls.

    The UN urged whoever is dissatisfied with the outcome of the polls to use legal channels to address grievances, according to Mr Stephane Dujarric, Spokesman for the secretary-general.

    “We urge the leadership of the various political parties to respect the outcome of the elections and to use the existing legal channels to address grievances.

    “We also call for impartial and human-rights compliant conduct of the police and security forces as a cornerstone of peaceful elections,” he said.

    Obama, whose father was born in Kenya, said there has been “too much incitement and appeals based on fear from all sides”.

    The former president warned that the Kenyan people “will be the losers if there is a descent into violence.”

    “I urge Kenyan leaders to reject violence and incitement; respect the will of the people; urge security forces to act professionally and neutrally; and work together no matter the outcome.

    “The choices you make in the coming days can either set Kenya back or bring it together,” Obama said.

    “As a friend of the Kenyan people, I urge you to work for a future defined not by fear and division, but by unity and hope” Obama added in a statement.

    Tuesday’s election has been predicted as a battle between incumbent President Uhuru Kenyatta battling to secure a second five-year term and his opponent and long-time rival opposition leader Raila Odinga.

    Odinga alleged voting irregularities after losing to Kenyatta in the 2013 election and took his case to the Supreme Court, which ruled in Kenyatta’s favour by saying the election was valid.

    Odinga was also a candidate in the 2007 election, which was followed by deadly violence fueled by ethnic rivalries.

    Former U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry is among international observers who will be monitoring the election.

  • UBA Foundation takes Read Africa Initiative to Kenya

    The UBA Foundation has donated over 500 copies of the book, The Fishermen by Chigozie Obioma, to Our Lady of Mercy Girls Secondary School in Nairobi, Kenya.

    The foundation is part of the Corporate Social Responsibility arm of United Bank for Africa (UBA) Plc and the donation was made under its “Read Africa Initiative”.

    The initiative, which was launched in 2011 with the aim of encouraging students to improve their vocabulary and communication skills through reading, has been changing the lives of African students across the continent for six years.

    Through the initiative, the UBA Foundation is helping rekindle the dwindling reading culture among African youths as they pursue their education.

    Over a hundred thousand books and educational materials have been donated to various schools across Africa as UBA Foundation continues to traverse the continent, contributing positively to the development of African youths.

    The foundation last week visited Emma High School in Kampala, Uganda before going to Kenya to read to the students at Our Lady of our Mercy School.

    The high school for girls, which was founded in 2008 by Mrs. Angwenyi with just 32 girls, has grown into a student body of over 500 with donations from both private individuals and the Kenyan Ministry of Education.

    The school started off with girls, who were very under-privileged and living in conditions that were not conducive to education. Less than a decade later, some of these students have gone on to universities to pursue their dreams.

    Present at the drive were the CEO of the UBA Foundation, Bola Atta, UBA Kenya MD/CEO Isaac Mwige, the school principle Mrs. Angwenyi and the pupils, who got an opportunity to interact and read with the UBA Executives, sharing their future aspirations and ambitions as they engaged the executives in a Q&A session.

    Atta, told the students that the UBA Foundation was committed to uplifting the lives of the societies within which they operated by creating dynamic educational platforms for future generations on the continent. She also encouraged the students to read voraciously.

    “The pursuit of knowledge should be a lifelong activity that starts at a very young age. You should read all types of books so that you can explore and shape your own narrative,” she said.

    UBA Managing Director/CEO Isaac Mwige further encouraged the students to cultivate an interest in reading not just the academic text books but also material outside of their course work in order to acquire knowledge.

    “Everything you read fills your head with new bits of information, and you never know when it might come in handy. The more knowledge you have, the better-equipped you are to tackle any challenge you’ll ever face,” he added.

    Mrs. Angwenyi thanked the UBA Foundation for its contribution and said it was very timely as the school is placing emphasis on the value of reading not just to prepare for exams but reading to prepare for life.

  • Authorities say six police shot dead in central Kenya

    Authorities say six police shot dead in central Kenya

    Authorities say six Kenyan police officers were killed and two wounded when their convoy was attacked by gunmen in central Kenya where drought and scarce grazing land is fuelling violence.

    A police statement said members of the police’s Anti-Stock Theft Unit, travelling in two vehicles, were attacked by members of the Pokot ethnic group while on a “familiarisation tour” in Laikipia county,

    The police said they “were attacked while negotiating (a) sharp corner and as a result the officers … were fatally injured.”

    Laikipia has been hit by a wave of violence in recent months as armed cattle-herders searching for dwindling grazing land have driven tens of thousands of cattle onto private farms and ranches.

    Over a dozen Kenyans have been killed in the violence.

    In April, gunmen wounded an Italian-born conservationist at her conservation park in the area.

    Kuki Gallmann was shot in the stomach after the vehicle she was driving in was ambushed.

    The previous month, Tristan Voorspuy, a British military veteran who ran a safari company, was shot dead at a private ranch in Laikipia after he went to inspect the remains of a friend’s home that had been burnt down.

    Many residents in the area accuse local politicians of inciting the violence ahead of general elections in August.

    According to the police report, the raiders in the latest attack first attacked a village elder as he was repairing an electric fence at a nature conservancy, before ambushing the police vehicles.

    The wounded officers were airlifted to the capital Nairobi for treatment, police said, adding that the attackers fled with six rifles and a pistol.

  • Al-Shabab beheads nine civilians in Kenya

    Al-Shabab extremists from Somalia beheaded nine civilians in an early-morning attack on a village in southeast Kenya yesterday, according to officials.

    The attack occurred in Jima village in Lamu County, said James Ole Serian, who leads a task force of security agencies combating al-Shabab.

    Beheadings by al-Shabab have been rare in Kenya, where the extremist group has carried out dozens of deadly attacks over the years. The East African country has seen an increase in attacks claimed by al-Shabab in recent weeks, posing a security threat ahead of next month’s presidential election.

    The al-Qaida-linked al-Shabab has vowed retribution on Kenya for sending troops in 2011 to Somalia to fight the group, which last year became the deadliest Islamic extremist group in Africa.

    Yesterday’s attack occurred in the Pandaguo area, where al-Shabab fighters engaged security agencies in a day-long battle three days ago.

    A police report said  about 15 al-Shabab fighters  attacked Jima village and seized men yesterday, killing them with knives

  • Mall for Africa.com expands to Kenya

    The online market leader Mall for Africa.com takes the bull by the horns as it expands its business frontiers to Kenya as part of its plan to move into 20 African countries in the next two years.

    When the premier e-commerce platform that facilitates satisfaction for its customers started six years ago, the major aim was to help family and friends who shop from the US to move their items back home but now Mall for Africa.com not only commands international encomiums from business aficionados and economic gladiators, it is now expanding the frontiers of its business horizon to the Eastern part of Africa as part of broader plans to move into 20 African countries in the next two years.

    Speaking at a press briefing recently, Tope Folayan, co-founder of the company, said: “We see Kenya as the biggest e-commerce opportunity in East Africa and the numbers and data show it.”

    He stated that more than half of the world’s global population growth predicted between now and 2050 will be on the continent with a rise from 1.1 billion people to 2.4 billion.

    Kenya, he noted, currently has 48 million people and saw a 33% increase in purchase-based queries in 2015. “In addition to this, the nation’s smartphone penetration is also a very impressive one coming third with 15% after South Africa (34%) and Nigeria (30%). A Partech 2016 report also noted that of the top three destinations for start-up funding in Africa, Kenya features alongside Nigeria and South Africa.”

    This means that Kenya’s dynamic demographic longs for platforms to reach the world’s best retailers so as to buy the best products for the best available price.

    Country Manager of Mall for Africa in Kenya, Naomi Konditi-Kivuvani, stated that “it is actually mind-boggling how our rates are growing in all parts of this country,” an apparent reference to Kenyans’ admiration of the company.

    With Mall for Africa, the African customer pays locally for any orders or items he wants to purchase through the Mall for Africa on line store. The store gives direct access to over 180 leading UK and US retailers. Best of all, he gets to pick up the orders in his local vicinity.

    The Mall for Africa has more than 8.5 billion items for sale at more than 200 US and UK stores such as Amazon, eBay, BestBuy, Topshop UK, Barneys, Bloomingdale’s and  J. Crew. It also has sister websites – Grocery Direct and Fashion Direct – to cater to the unique tastes of Africans.

  • Unitaid to roll out generic of latest AIDS drug in Nigeria

    Unitaid to roll out generic of latest AIDS drug in Nigeria

    Unitaid is to roll out a generic version of the latest AIDS drug that can improve and prolong the lives of tens of thousands of people who suffer severe side effects and resistance to other treatments in Nigeria.

    Unitaid, a global health initiative said a generic of Dolutegravir (DTG), first approved in the U.S. in 2013, is being given to 20,000 patients in Kenya before being rolled out in Nigeria and Uganda later in the year.

    DTG is the drug of choice for people with HIV in high-income countries who have never taken antiretroviral therapy before and for those who have developed resistance to other treatment.

    Unitaid, Kenya is the first African country to start using the DTG.

    “I had constant nightmares and no appetite,” said Nairobi resident Doughtiest Ogutu, who started taking the drug this year because of her resistance to other treatments.

    “My appetite has come back… My body is working well with it.”

    Ogutu, who has been living with HIV for 15 years, said her viral load, the amount of HIV in her blood, has fallen tenfold from 450,000 to 40,000 since she started on DTG.

    Sub-Saharan Africa has been at the epicenter of the HIV epidemic for decades and home to nearly three quarters of all people with HIV and AIDS.

    UNAIDS aims for 90 per cent of people diagnosed with HIV to receive antiretroviral treatment by 2020.

    The brand name version of DTG is Tivicay, produced by ViiV Healthcare, which is majority-owned by GlaxoSmithKline.

    About 15 per cent of HIV patients are resistant, which means the medicines do not work on them, said Sylvia Ojoo, Kenya country director for the University of Maryland School of Medicine, who is monitoring the introduction of DTG.

    UNITAID works to bring medicines to market quickly and to reduce manufacturing costs by allowing generic companies to access patents for a small royalty and produce them cheaply for the developing world.

    Kenya, with one of the world’s largest HIV positive populations, has made great strides in addressing HIV in its public medical facilities.

    “The health systems we have in place allow for rapid deployment,” said Ojoo.

    “It makes it relatively easy to introduce new interventions.”

    About 1.5 million Kenyans are HIV positive, with more than two-thirds on treatment, said Martin Sirengo, head of Kenya’s National AIDS and STI Control Program.

    The number of new infections in Kenya has almost halved over the last decade to 80,000 a year, he said, thanks to increased testing, treatment and awareness.

  • Kenya: Three killed in northeast bank attack

    Kenya: Three killed in northeast bank attack

    Police said attackers shot and killed three people in a raid on a commercial bank in northeast Kenya’s on Friday.

    Police commander Charles Chacha said that the civilians and a police officer died in the attack in Mandera County.

    “There were five armed gangsters. When they arrived at the bank, they shot the officer at the door, and the police managed to shoot one of the criminals, but …they escaped,” Chacha told Reuters by phone.

    In another development, the Kenya Red Cross also said an improvised explosive device had also been detonated on a road in the same town but no injuries had been reported.

  • ’15 people remain missing after building collapses in Kenya’

    ’15 people remain missing after building collapses in Kenya’

    Rescue workers said that 15 people had been reported missing after a seven-storey building collapsed in a residential area of the Kenyan capital Nairobi on Tuesday.

    Reuters photographers on the scene, in the eastern Nairobi suburb known as Pipeline, saw a pile of broken concrete blocks and bent metal.

    An excavator was moving rubble.

    Officials said the building’s occupants had been asked to leave once it developed cracks.

    “Basically this was a disaster to come. An evacuation was sounded. People evacuated but we might have some people who might have been left behind,” Pius Masai, deputy director of the National Disaster Management Unit, told Reuters at the site of the collapse.

    Japheth Koome, Nairobi County police commander, said a specialised team from the Kenya Defence Forces had been called in to help with the rescue operations.

    Kenya has seen similar tragedies in the past.

    A total of 49 people died in the middle of 2016 when another building collapsed during a heavy, nighttime downpour in a poor neighbourhood.