Monday, 27 January 2014

Murkomen's house to be destroyed in Embobut forest

BY Tagawah
Elgeyo Marakwet Senator Kipchumba Murkomen's house is among illegal structures that will be demolished in the ongoing evictions of more tan 15,000 squatters from Embobut Forest. Murkomen confirmed that
already one of his own houses has
been burnt down. Kenya Forest Service zonal manager Alfred Nyaswabu said the four bedroomed house near Sitaat trading centre is in the forest but it is yet to be demolished.
Murkomen has hit out at the
government over the manner in which it had carried out the evictions in the forest. His family is part of the Sengwer community that claims the right to live in the forest. The senator attended a leaders meeting in Iten town yesterday where he commended the government for using Sh1.2 billion to compensate families being removed from the
forest. However, he said they are opposed to burning of homes in the water tower. "We think burning of houses is primitive and should not happen. There are more creative and modern
ways of demolishing structures other than burning," Murkomen said. He said they will work with all leaders and institutions to ensure those being removed from the forest are not
frustrated and subjected to suffering. Murkomen said the loca leaders have asked those in the forests to move out but the government should also help
them ressettle in new locations. He said children who are among those evicted should also be supported to resume learning in schools in the region.

Kenyan players fled from Juju¡¡

By Tagawah
The Tanzanian league must have
presented a rich opportunity for many Kenyan professional soccer players.
Or they thought. There is little doubt that Tanzanian league is more lucrative compared to the Kenyan Premier League (KPL).
Money is good
For instance, Donald Mosoti who
recently signed for Azam FC takes
home Sh180, 000,while he pocketed a paltry Sh60,000 while at Gor Mahia. While the money is good, the last two years has witnessed a massive exodus
of Kenyan players from Tanzanian
league under unclear circumstances. Pascal Ochieng signed with Simba FC
in 2013, while Humphrey Mieno and Jockins Atudo played for Azam. All that glitters
Before long however, the three were back to their roots even before the end of the season.
The question is, what were the young talented lads running away from? The answer, The Nairobian can now exclusively reveal, is juju – black magic.When the 2010 KPL Player of the Year George Odhiambo ‘Blackberry’
returned from Randers FC in
Denmark, he was offered a lucrative deal by Tanzanian Mainland Premier League club Azam FC. But in an interview with The Nairobian, the magnificent ball-dribbling ace says not all that glitters is gold.“I signed a one year deal with Azam but the blatant use of African magic
was too much for me to handle.
I could train well but on the match
day, at times I could experience
strange physical complications like
body pains and swollen feet,” says
Odhiambo.The former K’Ogalo talisman says that on many occasions he witnessed strange practices at the club, especially
amongst some Tanzania players.
“They have the money but playing
conditions are unbearable. It is
almost impossible to play in the
league because I wasn’t used to such things.To their players, (Tanzanians) it is all normal and business as usual but hey, I’m a Christian,” he adds.In fact when I signed the contract, I was told that it was necessary that I go
see Babu. So, during the season
whenever I got injured, my colleagues kept laughing at me,” narrates the former harambee Stars goalkeeper who has since quit active football but
works as a goalkeeping coach.
Urinating on pitch But claims of rampant use of witchcraft in the Tanzanian league did not start today.
In 2003, the BBC carried a story about how the then interim committee of the Football Association of Tanzania
(Fat) reprimanded the country’s top two teams, Simba and Yanga, for allegedly using witchcraft, stating that the arch rivals performed various juju
rituals before and during a derby that ended in a 2-2 draw.
“These are our biggest clubs and their strong beliefs in witchcraft can set a bad example for upcoming teams,”Mwina Kaduguda, the secretary-
general of Fat’s interim committee told BBC Sport.
According to Fat, the rituals included two Yanga players urinating on the pitch in an attempt to neutralise a
substance placed on the field by
Simba FC during half time.
Yanga captain Paul John Masanja also refused to shake hands with his Simba counterpart Seleman Matola saying that he was under instructions not to offer his hand.
Then came 2004 when Kenya beat
Tanzania 3:0 during the preliminary round of the 2006 World Cup qualifiers. Mwina Kaduguda, Tanzania’s head of the delegation to Nairobi, said the federation failed to pay the team’s match allowances in
order to bring a witchdoctor to
Nairobi.“Players were not paid their allowances before the game, which cost us the chance of reaching the group stage.
I was in Kenya with the team, where I ordered my colleagues to go back home and get money to pay the players.But instead of coming with the money, they came with a witchdoctor,” Kaduguda told BBC Sport.
Will this claims stop the leg-drain of local talent from KPL to the highly lucrative Tanzania league? Only time will tell.

Letter to Life, the Sixth Conversation: Lessons

By Lone Felix _KUSA president .

Now, I am on this bed, a
culmination of that fatigue. It’s
when I just realize, that as you
succeed, anytime you forget those
who believed in you, you lose a
part that makes you, and the
closer you reach to failing, and
the faster you loosen the grip that
once made you, and the faster
your success looses meaning.
I have been in the seclusion of a bed
for the eighth day running now. In my
past 14 years of living, this has
become a tradition, Pangs of pain that
rob me of any comfort. Just that this
year, as I gaze at the hollowness of
this room, and feel the stench of its
medicine, I feel the nearing of end,
the end of pain. I must admit I am
scared of whatever face will start.
Good health? This pain, that I was
unable to get accustomed to, has
been my greatest motivation. Some
sort of a reminder, that I am moving,
and that with each step taken, I
should evaluate myself. That however,
is not what I will discuss. For anyone
who has been around my life, these
times draw tears, but imagine,
imagine I forgot that pain for the two
days. An inexplicable numbness
descended on me as I reviewed the
year, the year 2013.
It has been the year, which I have
perhaps received great applauses,
respect and admiration, but it is also
the year, which has left me with the
deepest sense of emptiness.
What a paradox life can be
sometimes. At almost the same time
last year, I wrote my fifth letter to life.
Then, I had attempted so much, with
the world totally failing to respect my
efforts. I wondered then, what the
world owed me. I felt that the sincerity
of my ambitions and dreams
necessarily meant that I should have
been listened to.
Deep down my heart, I held a sharp
rebuke at how naïve the world could
get. I could not understand why in the
world, truth, value, honesty and a
genuine pursuit of collective greatness
could not be appreciated. I attempted
to reread that letter; of course as I am
here, I cannot access it, I can only
imagine it.
But if I am to recall, in that letter, I
ranted at life. I rebuked how the world
wanted to force me into the streams
of existence, how, my desire to
disobey tradition could be seen as
deviance. Well, I still uphold the bulk
of my beliefs then, but I realize with
the advantage of experience, two
lessons that perhaps will redefine
what I am to become in life: The most
important person, is the one who
believes in you and you can never do
everything.
There have been two questions that
bothered my conscience this year. The
first was what is disobedience? You
see when one fails to obey; it could be
bad, or good. Bad, if what you were to
obey is good, and good, if what you
were to obey is bad. Sadly, life’s
challenges are not as clear cut as that.
In fact, what is good it-self is a
controversy. We can never say with
certainty what good. In fact,
everything could be good at some
point, and bad at some point.
Funny, how this confusion always
creeps in my thoughts. I remember,
as that day I sat before my lecturer of
Jurisprudence. She looked at me, with
a deep gaze and told me, Felix, this is
a good decision, but this is not the
best time. You should be focusing on
something else now. The second
lesson started here.
I need to give you a little bit of a
background. When I was in standard
eight, my sister Connie came home in
December. She had just finished her
first year in college. I recall, she had
quite a number of tales, and a sense
of admirable progression. I mean, she
had a Sony Erickson phone.
Rectangular and curved in shape,
cream in color and phony in feel. It
was the first cell phone I operated. I
had held a couple before, but largely
those ones belonged to my primary
school teachers who send me to the
market centre to have them charged.
Of course, I would try to operate
them. But in the village, a phone has
to be dead, so that it can get charged.
You cannot pay Ksh. 30 if there is a
little charge in it. Yes, I had actually
forgotten that sense of value for
money that runs deep in my village.
Funny.
Now, among the escapades that
Connie told me, is that she had met
the Chairperson of the Student Union
in Kenyatta University. That she made
sure she talked to him that his name
was Charles Wafula, by the way, my
dad’s name was Charles Wafula. Then,
for a standard eight, Charles Wafula
was the all mighty University Chair,
respected by all. And I told her, told
Connie, that I will be the chairperson
of my University Association.
Of course, my sister belong to the
honest type, who tell you stuff like,
you can, but it’s very hard.
Now, when I joined college, in 2010, I
sat in the masses as the then
President, Antony Maina spoke, the
guy was very intelligent. The next day,
I bumped into him, and just like my
sister, had to make sure I talk to him.
My reasons were different, I was not
creating tales for my younger brother,
I was gauging my resolves. I told
Antony, I would one day be like you.
He wished me well, and said you can,
and a bunch of other wise words.
In my first year in college, I contested
for Congress in my school, and lost. I
had set in my mind, some trajectory,
First year Congress, Second year
President and final year, of course not
a vice chancellor, but to run my own
organization.
When second year came forth, I gave
the presidency a stab. My internship
Manager Diana would say, believing in
the strength of my naivety. Sometimes
I muse, where the motivation came
from. I have always wondered where
that motivation comes from.
Some people see many things in
dreams. Many think those who vie for
such offices, perhaps come from rich
backgrounds, or are endowed by
extensive unique qualities. Well, I can
only speak for myself. I am neither. I
am a man of many flaws, and from
the humblest of backgrounds.
Perhaps, only endowed, in the words
of my Manager with the strength of
my naivety.
So, I tried to establish why I vied.
When I was in second year, I credit my
vying to two people, a friend, Henry
Paul, and a facebook friend, Anne,
from Nakuru. Funny, I actually now
realize that I never vied because I
thought I could make it, I vied
because Anne and Henry believed I
could be their President.
And with each passing noise, and
shouts of discouragement, any time I
felt I would be giving up or giving in.
In politics the two are different, I
always remembered their voices, they
always believed I could be their
president.
So, somehow, in the extensive
commitment to this pursuit, while I
was a vessel to try and realize the
dream, the creators of the dream
were remotely aware of it. Now, I also
wish I knew this then. I think, as I sat
down in long meetings, strategizing
and counter-strategizing the only
failure, which I now believe made me
loose the election then, was forgetting
who actually bore the dream I was
trying to realize.
And the resentment and
disappointment I felt after that loss,
was again because I never knew
whose dream I was trying to realize.
You see, dear friend, my sixth letter
has a lot of naïve conclusions. That
when a man dreams and aspires, and
that when his dream is as honest and
true, then the world should somehow
respect it. What I forgot, is that
whenever a man becomes as
constricted to believe that he can
dream, then he has lost it. I now
realize, I hope it’s not too late, that
true dreams are born in us because
another eye revealed it to us.
Now, I just reached a conclusion that
seems to contradict what I seem to
have believed. Sometimes, it happens
that all eyes that glare at us only see
failure. Does that mean that we are
failures? Of course no, the eyes I
speak of are not of approval and
consent. The eyes I speak of are those
that look at us, with a hope that needs
to be brought out. Sometimes, those
eyes may not even be looking at us,
perhaps, our physique is too frail to
warrant their seeing us, but whenever
a dream is born out of our hearts.
Whenever we conceive a dream not
for our sake, but through the eyes of
another, we have realized the purity of
intend.
When we do that, we do not need to
scream that the world should listen,
or should have listened. The world
listens. It listens to anything that is
pure and true, and purity starts, when
we take us, from the dream.
So, why did it take this long for me to
realize this? I thank God I did.
The reason is what numbed my pain.
In the making of this presidency, I just
never realized how important the
email I got from my friend Nicholus
Kamau or the Ksh. 200 my friend
Maina wa Ngoingo used to buy me
lunch was important. I never just
realized how much the waking up of
Richie to get my posters done, or the
taking of an hour by my manager
Isaac to listen to me meant.
And so, when I realized the
presidency, I was drained emotionally,
physically and materially. And in a way,
I forgot where my strength came
from. I started taking a day without
calling a friend, or failing to tell them
why I was unable to meet an
obligation. And the more I did it, the
more drained I became.
Now, I am on this bed, a culmination
of that fatigue.

New STD Deadlier Than AIDS,Kills In A Matter Of Days

There is a new sexually transmitted superbug that experts say may be more deadly that AIDS.According to a CNBC report, an antibiotic-resistant strain of gonorrhea is more aggressive than the HIV virus,
which means the potential to infect the public will be greater.
Like most STDs, gonorrhea is usually transmitted through unprotected sexual contact and if left untreated, can cause severe medical complications, such as infertility in women, debilitating pain, sterility in men and life threatening heart infections.
Alan Christianson, a doctor of
naturopathic medicine, thinks this
new strain has the power to rack up more fatalities than AIDS. To date,more than the 30 million people have already died worldwide from AIDS-
related complications.“Getting gonorrhea from this strain
might put someone into septic shock and death in a matter of days,” said Christianson. “This is very dangerous.”
William Smith, executive director of the National Coalition of STD
Directors, echoed that sentiment. “It’s an emergency situation. As time moves on, it’s getting more
hazardous,” said Smith.
According to the Centers for Disease Control, though no cases of the superbug officially called H041 were found in the US, steps must be taken to deal with the potential risks. Gonorrhea can go undetected in some affected by the disease, showing
no outward symptoms in about half of women and in 5 percent of men,which adds another level of difficulty in getting ahead of it.
This strain of STD which is resistant to antibiotic, reportedly kills half of those exposed and infects one in 20 hospital
patients—which raises the threat of an outbreak to emergency levels. Then there is the high cost of combating sexually transmitted
diseases in general. The CDC’s tally to treat 20 million cases annually is approximately $16 billion. Of that 20 million STD cases, a reported 800,000 between the ages of 15 to 24, are
infected with gonorrhea. Even more alarming, some doctors believe the STD war is too costly to win.

Sunday, 26 January 2014

Hilarious notices by management

By Tagawah
> Signboard outside a Prayer Hall
"Please Do Not Leave Your Bags,
Wallets, Cell Phones Unattended..
Others Might Think Those Are The
Answers To Their Prayers."
> Signboard outside a prostitute's
house..
"Married MEN are not allowed. We
serve the needy, not the greedy.."
> Signboard outside A Bar:
"Those Of You Who Are Drinking To
Forget, Please do Pay In Advance"
> Signboard outside Driving School:
"If Your Wife Wants To Learn To Drive,
Don't Stand In Her Way..."
> Signboard outside Library:
"Statutory Warning... While reading
Kamasutra, please hold the book with
BOTH Hands!!!

Hahaha ! Crazy phone conversation !!

By Tagawah
Bint:: Hallo mpenzi, mambo!
Jamaa:: Poa baby!
Bint:: Uko wapi?
Jamaa: Mimi niko town napata lunch.
Bint:: Wow! Unarudi saa ngapi? Nina
njaa dear, nataka uniletee msosi.
Jamaa:: Narudi baada ya nusu saa,
Nikuletee nini?
Bint:: Niletee chipsi kuku, soseji, mayai
manne yakaangwe pembeni, baga,
piza ya samaki waweke mayonaize,
coka take away ya baridi, mkate wa
moto kwenye ile bekari ya Wapemba
na maji ya kunywa chupa kubwa ya
Kilimanjaro.
Jamaa: Umesahau viti, meza, leseni,
masufuria, sahani na vijiko.
Bint::Kwa nini dear?
Jamaa::Naona hutaki kula,unataka
kufungua hoteli!!

PRECAUTIONS TO TAKE WHEN DATING A KIKUYU LADY !

By Tagawah
Kikuyu ladies are largely known
for their precarious use of their
spouses to enrich themselves even
at the expense of their loved ones
lives.
Here are a few precautions you
can take to protect you from being
predated on or going to an early
grave.
a) Avoid revealing your true worth
to a Kikuyu woman you’re dating;
you might find your bank account
swept clean or, even worse, find
yourself being mauled down by
gangsters.
b) Unless you have absolute
confidence in your Kikuyu woman,
avoid- at all costs – taking her to
your residence. She might be
spying. Just use lodgings and
remain anonymous.
c) Don’t allow her to turn you into
a biological ATM; if not careful,
you’ll be funding an entire clan
before you are dumped.
d) If you are marrying a Kikuyu
woman, never
ever….repeat….never ever invest
where she
comes from. If she is from
Kiambu, her father can fool you by
giving you a plot and once you
develop it, that is when you’ll
realize you have been
duped.
e) If the woman is from Nyeri, you
better learn some self- defense
tactics. You never know when
she’ll strike. Always be armed
with a sword in the bedroom.
f) If you are rich and married to a
Kikuyu woman, make sure you get
home early otherwise as you wait
for the gate to be opened, you
might be shot by ‘gangsters’
who’ll not steal anything from
you.
g) Never ever
ever….repeat.. .never ever sleep
with a Kikuyu woman without
protection. Most likely she wants
to turn you into a cash bank
through alimonies and child
support.
h) Last and most important, Just
laugh it off!