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Sonko debuts on Trevor Noah’s ‘The Daily Show’

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Nairobi Governor Mike Sonko has made it to US late-night television The Daily Show by Popular South African comedian Trevor Noah.

Sonko was featured over his controversial move to provide the needy with Covid-19 care packages containing small bottles of Hennessy.

“I think from the research which has been conducted by the World Health Organization (WHO) and various health organizations, it has been revealed that alcohol plays a preeminent role in killing the Coronavirus or any sort of virus. If you take any sanitizer and check the alcoholic content, you’ll find out each sanitizer has above 70% of alcohol content,” Sonko claimed.

Trevor joked about the governor’s behaviour but also went on to compliment his sense of fashion.

“While this governor’s health advice is not great, I have got to admit his Corona fashion game is a pretty strong man. He looks like a transformer who got stuck,” said Noah.

The Daily Show included a report from CNN on the governor’s inclusion of alcohol as ‘throat sanitizer’ as well as part of Sonko’s speech.

Noah questioned the governor’s false claim that Hennessy had coronavirus-killing properties.

“Drinking Hennessy might help you with many things; it can help you dance better, it can help you relax, and it can probably help you try a Busta Rhymes song at Karaoke. But the one thing it will not do is help you cure Coronavirus. First of all, it’s not 70% alcohol; it’s only 40%, which is too low to kill the virus, and no matter how strong it is, drinking alcohol does not kill viruses,” Trevor said.

Hennessy has since clarified that the alcoholic drink does not in any way cure the novel COVID-19.

“Hennessy would like to stress that the consumption of our brand or any other alcoholic beverage does not protect against the virus,” the alcohol manufacturer said.


Kenyan family in US warms hearts after donating Sh150K masks to cops

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A Kenyan family living in the United States has touched the hearts of many after they donated Covid-19 protective equipment to Paxton Police Department in Paxton, Massachusetts.

Wilson Kiriungi and his daughter Alayna residents of Worcester, Massachusetts, delivered a package of 3M particulate respirators worth Sh150,000 to the local police department on Wednesday.

Kiriungi’s daughter, who accompanied him to the department, also delivered a letter of appreciation to the officers for their work.

“Thank you for being heroes in our community all the time, but especially now during the coronavirus pandemic. My dad and I want you guys to stay safe and healthy. We hope these masks come in handy and keep you safe through the pandemic,” read her handwritten letter to the officers.

In a statement posted on their official Facebook page, the Paxton Police Department said: “A big thank you to Paxton resident Wilson Kiriungi and his daughter Alayna who generously donated one hundred 3M particulate respirators (and a pretty terrific note from Alayna too) this afternoon. We appreciate your generosity and support.”

The post impressed many people across the world who came out to laud the girl and her dad for their selfless act.

Neymar’s mum dumps boy toy over gay links

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Neymar’s mum has reportedly broken up with her boy toy after finding out he dated a string of men.

A report from Brazil states that Nadine sent the 23-year-old Tiago Ramos after finding out he had dated several men before they met.

Nadine, 52, declared her love for 23-year-old on Instagram less than two weeks ago.

According to the Daily Mail, Tiago, who is six years younger than Neymar, allegedly dated the PSG and Brazil star’s personal chef Mauro before becoming romantically involved with the forward’s mother.

Nadine Goncalves and her young lover.

“It has also claimed that he was dating a famous Brazilian actor and stand-up comedian called Carlinhos Maia,” the publication further wrote.

The Paris Saint-Germain star only gave his seal of approval to the relationship 10 days ago.

Neymar had shown his support for the new couple after his mother posted a picture of them together to her social media pages.

Nadine posted a picture of herself cuddling up to Tiago alongside the caption: “The inexplicable cannot be explained, you live it…❤

The Paris Saint-Germain commented: “Be happy mom ❤ Love you”.

Tiago is now reportedly back with his family in Brazil after being kicked out of Nadine’s mansion.

KQ starts production of face masks

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Kenya Airways (KQ) has rolled out mass production of protective face masks for their crew and family to aid in the fight against the Covid-19 pandemic.

The airline targets to make more than 1,000 face masks per day from unused materials from its stores, KQ Managing Director and CEO Allan Kilavuka said in a statement.

Kilavuka said this initiative is in support of the government’s efforts to contain the transmission of the infection in the country.

He added that the protective materials would be given to the airline’s employees, their families as well as different communities.

“Working with our different partners, we will identify the areas where the masks will be most needed to ensure we meet that gap,” said Kilavuka.

He said that their priority even during these challenging times remains the health and safety of the customers, staff, and the communities with which they operate in.

Under this initiative, workers will be deployed on a six-hour shift with each producing 80 masks a day.

“I applaud the Sustainability and Technical team for their efforts in making this possible. It is in unprecedented times like this when we need to think differently and our teams continue to demonstrate this even in the midst of adversity,” Kilavuka added.

The masks are being made by their technical department that also includes a workshop that produces all the upholstery aboard their planes.

This team is now producing certified face masks from repurposed and recycled materials from their stores, said the airline.

Last month, the national flag carrier announced sweeping flight cancellations as countries across the globe closed their borders in a bid to stop the spread of the coronavirus.

The CEO had earlier also said that he would be taking an 80 per cent pay cut to help offset the economic impact of the move with all other staff taking between 25 and 75 per cent pay cut during the suspension.

Sarova Stanley divides opinion with githeri and rice free meal to medics

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Sarova Stanley Hotel in Nairobi has become a topic of hot discussion among Kenyans after delivering free meals to health care workers at Kenyatta National Hospital (KNH).

The hotel has pledged to provide meals to frontline health workers and true their word, on Thursday they shipped off their first consignment of food for the more than 200 health workers at KNH.

“Kudos to the frontline healthcare workers as they help the Government manage the Covid19 pandemic. To appreciate their efforts,we’ll provide daily lunches to the more than 200 healthcare workers. Thank you, we recognize your bravery & commitment,” Sarova Stanley posted on social media.

But what has set tongues wagging on social media is what is contained in the lunch pack.

The hotel packed a meal of Githeri, white rice and some vegetables on the side.

The meal to a section of Kenyans did not fit the calibre of the five-star hotel and was an embarrassment.

However, others felt that this was entitlement.

Below is what they had to say.

Cyril Ramaphosa trolled after struggling to wear mask on live TV

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South Africa’s President Cyril Ramaphosa has become the butt of the online jokes after a toe-curling moment where he struggled to fit on a protective mask on live TV.

The South African President was addressing the nation to announce a five-level “risk-adjusted strategy” where the country will slowly ease lockdown restrictions starting May 1. He tried to put on a mask after the speech but it got the better of him.

Ramaphosa’s demonstration of wearing a cloth mask did not go as planned as he also touched the front of the outside of the mask, something that users are constantly warned against.

In a video clip that has since gone viral on social media, the president looked straight at the camera for a moment, nodded, took a step backwards and brought his cloth mask to his face.

His fingers fumbled with the straps, the elastic band sprung out of his right hand, he grabbed the band again, got it over his ear and the mask ended up over his eyes.

As he pulled it down, it popped off again, but he quickly put it back on, turned to his left and walked out of shot.

His efforts quickly turned a serious situation was instantly turned into a light moment.

South Africans compared their leader to the Mask and as Fifty Shades of Grey fans called it, Fifty Shades of Lockdown.

Netflix movie Bird Box was also mentioned.

A mask challenge started trending on social media as South Africans had fun at the president’s expense.

Alarm as Kenya exports 10 Covid-19 cases to her neighbours

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Kenya has exported 10 cases to her neighbours with seven of them going to Uganda and three to Rwanda.

Kenya leads her neighbours in the number of Covid-19 cases that have been reported in the region with 320 as of Thursday.

On Thursday, Uganda revealed that five of their 11 new cases came from Kenya and the remaining six came from Tanzania.

Last month, Rwanda’s Ministry of Health, while confirming 17 new coronavirus cases, said three were Kenyan nationals who had travelled to the country recently.

In Uganda, the majority of the cases have been linked to truck drivers who arrived in the country from Kenya through Malaba and Busia border post.

Spike witnessed across African countries

The spike in Uganda’s cases matches the spike witnessed across African countries on Thursday where an unprecedented high number of new cases were recorded on the continent.

South Africa registered 318 new cases, Egypt 232, Cameroon 171, Guinea 101, Morocco 91, Somalia 42, Senegal 37, Sudan 22, DR Congo 18, Kenya 17, Mali 16, and Cape Verde 9.

However, there was no significant rise in the number of deaths across the continent.

The issue of truck drivers importing coronavirus into the country puts Uganda in a classic catch-22 situation; focus on the health or the economy.

Ugandan Minister of Internal Affairs General Odongo Jeje on Thursday expressed concern over truck drivers entering Uganda.

“There is growing concern about the long-distance truck drivers entering the country. The concern is because quite a number of these truck drivers have tested positive,” he said during a press briefing.

He said the national taskforce was considering the deployment of rapid testing kits at the entry point so that a driver knows his status before he leaves the border.

The cross-border cargo checkpoints seem to be Uganda’s new battlefront after the country closed all its borders but allowed cargo movement.

The government on Thursday said it is considering several options to control the entry of cargo drivers.

“While we are sacrificing to keep the spread of COVID-19 minimal, our efforts are undermined by imported cases. (The) government has noted these concerns and the national task force is now studying possible remedial actions,” Odongo said.

While addressing the country last week, President Museveni said truck drivers who have been tested for coronavirus should be left to proceed with their journeys and only traced if they test positive.

Meanwhile, the Ugandans are increasingly getting agitated in light of the recent trend in Covid cases many of whom are cargo truck drivers.

Many have expressed their concern on social media, saying it is retrogressive for Ugandans to do their part by observing stay-home orders only for foreigners to import the disease and spread it into the country.

Some are proposing that these truck drivers be allowed into the country only after their test results have been established.

Toyota Kenya develops bridge mechanical ventilator

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Toyota Kenya has developed a bridge mechanical ventilator prototype to help support patients with Covid-19 respiratory failure.

According to Toyota Kenya managing director Arvinder Reel, the firm had taken up the call by President Uhuru Kenyatta for companies to come up with easy to deploy local solutions in the battle to contain the spread of the coronavirus.

“It is recognised that the surge in Covid-19 is requiring extraordinary measures that include the provision of mechanical ventilator support to keep pace with clinical need at our healthcare facilities. Once given the necessary approvals, Toyota Kenya will be able to develop up to 20 Bridge Mechanical Ventilator per day,” said Mr Reel.

According to the New York Times, “bridge” ventilators, or automatic resuscitators in the US are currently priced at Sh330,000 ($3,300″.

“They are mainly meant to help less critically ill patients breathe. If patients become sicker, with lung function more compromised by the disease, they still need to be placed on standard ventilators, which typically cost more than Sh3,000,000 ($30,000),” reports the NYT.

The bridge mechanical ventilator by Toyota Kenya makes use of an Ambu bag, where a doctor or a medical practitioner squeezes the bag by hand to push air into the lungs of the patient.

Mr Reel says that the ventilator support needs of a Covid-19 patient can range from simple BIPAP (bi-level positive airway pressure) for patients that are breathing spontaneously to mandatory ventilation in either a pressure-support or volume control mode.

“Additionally, these patients are very likely to require inspired oxygen concentrations (FiO2) in excess of the 21% contained in room air. When in operation, the bridge mechanical ventilator indicates to the operator; the current settings that could include inspiratory pressure, tidal volume estimate, frequency; and the current delivery for instance inspiratory pressure or respiratory rate,” Mr Reel said.


Coronavirus: Kenya records 16 new cases – VIDEO

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The number of patients with Covid – 19 in the country has risen to 336 after 16 people tested positive in the last 24 hours.

Of the 16, 11 are in Nairobi and five in Mombasa.

Health CAS Rashid Aman said 946 samples were analysed.

Of the 11 in Nairobi, five are in Dandora, one in Eastleigh, two in Parklands and one in Pipeline Estates respectively and two from City Park.

Five more people have also been discharged over the same period.

“We are continuing to scale up our testing with the full awareness that it is only through testing that we can know the scope and extend of our problem. We have tested 946 samples in 12 counties this brings to 16, 738 – the total number of the tests conducted so far,” Dr Aman said.

The 16 were picked out from communities by surveillance teams.

In Mombasa, the cases are in Kiembeni estate, Stadium, Centi Kumi, Muskiti Nuru and Mulaloni.

The number of fatalities caused by Covid-19 remains 14.

Five more people have recovered from the disease raising the number of recoveries to 95.

“We are most grateful to Almighty God and to the medics and health workers taking care of our patients,” Dr Aman stated.

He said 887 contacts relating to the cases are being monitored “and we hope they will not produce many more cases”.

The CAS said the 946 samples tested in the last 24 hours include 532, 27 from Kilifi, one from Taita Taveta, 312 from Mombasa and 15 from Kwale.

The rest include five from Kisimu, 17 from Siaya, four from Bungoma, one from Bomet, 15 from Mandera, 15 from Vihinga and each in Kisii and Busia counties.

Govt rejects UK scientists’ bid to test Covid-19 vaccine in Kenya

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Kenya says it has not granted permission to Oxford University scientists in the United Kingdom to conduct human trials of a coronavirus vaccine on its citizens.

BBC reported that a British scientist had picked the country to start its tests of Covid-19 trials in Kenya if tests in UK don’t get the expected results.

On Thursday, two volunteers in UK were injected, the first of more than 800 people recruited for the study.

Half will receive the Covid-19 vaccine, and half a control vaccine, which protects against meningitis but not coronavirus.

On Friday while briefing the nation, Health CAS Rahid Aman said Kenya was not aware of any trials that were to be conducted in the country on its citizens.

“I’ve read this but as government we are not aware. There are proper procedures of ethical review and approval of clinical trials. As a government we are not aware at all about the interest of this team to come and work with the government of Kenya in testing this vaccine,” said Dr Aman.

According to the CAS, the country has a robust structure for regulating and reviewing and if such a request comes, they will do proper scrutiny before making a decision.

On Friday, Fergus Walsh, the BBC medical correspondent, said that in clinical trials, they’ve also developed vaccines against plague, malaria and that if they don’t get early quick results from the UK they are considering a trial in Kenya where the epidemic of the coronavirus will be on the rise.

He said the vaccine is known to produce a strong antibody response but that doesn’t necessarily equate to protection.

And we are going to need many vaccines with dozens in development.

“We could be careful not to over-promise because we are desperate for this vaccine to work but the team in Oxford have a really strong record going back 30 years. They have developed successful prototype vaccines against another type of coronavirus, MERS,” he said.

The Oxford Vaccine Group at the University of Oxford, which is conducting the ongoing trial in the UK has not commented on Welsh’s statement.

The latest development evokes a similar outrage that accompanied a suggestion by two French scientists that a vaccine trial should start from Africa given the lack of facilities and health support system.

The WHO chief in responding to the topic slammed the scientists for what he said were racist remarks that smugged of a hangover from colonialism.

Most Africans demanded their governments to not accept any such trials.

The vaccine was developed in under three months by a team at Oxford University. Sarah Gilbert, professor of vaccinology at the Jenner Institute, led the pre-clinical research.

The vaccine is made from a weakened version of a common cold virus (known as an adenovirus) from chimpanzees that has been modified so it cannot grow in humans.

Health Ministry warns CJ Maraga against fully reopening courts

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The Health Ministry has raised concerns over the re-opening of courts saying that it is still not yet safe.

Health CAS Dr Rashid Aman on Friday said the health and safety of the court users came first, otherwise, there will be no one to dispense justice to.

“We have also seen a sustained push to re-open the courts. While we know that the courts serve a very important function in this country, we regret that this is not the time to do that,” Dr Aman said.

He added: “We want to thank the judiciary through the Chief Justice David Maraga for exercising restraint in handling this matter. The health and safety of our court users come first. Otherwise, there will be no one to dispense justice to.”

Chief Justice David Maraga on April 16, ordered for the courts to resume operations, a month after he suspended key operations.

The Health CAS also warned politicians who are flouting social distancing rules as they hold gatherings in the name of political meetings.

Although some of those meetings are crucial they should not violate the social distancing rules

“Where else we have noted significant gains due to the measures we have put in place we have equally noted a degree of complacency slowly creeping back. This particularly concerns us and more so the return of political meetings in different parts of the country,” explained Dr Aman.

He added: “While the intentions of these gatherings could be noble like what we saw in Meru and Elgeyo Marakwet, the execution violates our social distancing rules that we have been preaching. We would like to remind all Kenyans and politicians leaders to desist undermining the laid down rules.”

Kenya’s first PhD marine scientist has died

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Renowned Kenyan professor, Mohammed Hyder Matano has died.

According to Mombasa Governor Ali Hassan Joho, Prof Matano died at his home on Thursday night.

Joho, while condoling with the family, said the late was a great scholar.

Prof Matano was privileged to serve his community in Mombasa, and at the national level, in government boards, he added.

Hyder was also the first PhD marine scientist in the country.

Joho shared his tribute on social media.

“Mombasa mourns the loss of one of its great sons, Prof. Mohamed Hyder Matano. A great scholar and known to many across the world for his knowledge, wisdom, kindness and humility,” Joho said.

“To his family, I extend my profound and sincere condolences. May the Almighty assuage your grief and grant you patience to endure this great loss. We pray to Allah (SWT) to accept all his good deeds, forgive all his sins and may the Almighty grant him Jannatul Firdaus,” he condoled.

Tourism Cabinet Secretary Najib Balala said, “My condolences to the family of Prof. Mohammed Hyder. A renowned scholar and mentor who advised and guided me from my early days as mayor of Mombasa. He was a great leader. May Allah grant him the highest levels of Jannah. Ameen.”

Covid-19: Trump pledges support to Kenya in call with Uhuru

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US President Donald Trump on Friday spoke to President Uhuru Kenyatta and South African leader Cyril Ramaphosa and pledged his country’s support for their respective responses to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Media reports including the BBC said the US leader held telephone conversations with the two African leaders about their responses to the coronavirus pandemic

The South African president is also the current chairperson of the African Union (AU) and he is leading Africa’s most impacted country and the continent’s effort to get international support to fight the pandemic.

Kenya’s coronavirus statistics as of April 24 stood at 336 cases, 95 recoveries and 14 deaths, while on the other hand, South Africa’s coronavirus statistics stood at 3,953 confirmed cases, 1,473 recoveries and 75 deaths.

President Trump, according  to BBC, offered assistance to Kenya’s response to coronavirus and agreed to remain in close communication with President Kenyatta.

The US leader also offered assistance to South Africa to support its efforts to battle the pandemic and said that the US stands with the people of South Africa in the battle against the pandemic, according to a readout of their conversation.


State House, Nairobi was yet to publicise the conversation by press time.

On Friday, Health CS Mutahi Kagwe said the government was importing equipment from the US,  which was on the way to the country.

On Sunday, US Ambassador to Kenya Kyle McCarter claimed that Kenya would not be able to test for coronavirus without help from America.

His comments came during an exchange with Kenyans on social media after he renamed Covid-19 to Wuhan flu which did not sit well with citizens.

Gladys Shollei drops Uhuru, Ruto bombshell

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Uasin Gishu Women Representatives Gladys Boss Shollei has sensationally claimed that President Uhuru Kenyatta has shortchanged his deputy William Ruto on the political front and that the DP is well aware of it.

The vibrant lawmaker made the statements in a video recording that has been widely shared on social media.

“President Kenyatta entered an agreement with Jubilee supporters. We remember him saying kumi yangu na kumi ya Ruto, (I will serve for 10 years and then support Ruto to serve for a further 10 years),” said Shollei.

“(But Dr) Ruto is aware that he has been shortchanged. He is acutely aware and so are we (his supporters). Only that he is a gentleman.”

After a rather rosy five years, President Kenyatta and his Deputy’s relationship has appeared hostile, with the DP increasingly being isolated, leading to several public spats between leaders from the two camps.

Still, Dr Ruto has maintained his bid to vie for the presidency in 2022.

Fifa releases Sh52 million coronavirus relief for FKF

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Fifa will disburse Sh52 million to Football Kenya Federation (FKF) ‘in the next few days’ with the amount aimed at mitigating the financial impact of the coronavirus.

A statement by football’s world governing body also confirmed that all of its 211 football association members will benefit from this fund, to a tune of Sh1.5 billion.

“The pandemic has caused unprecedented challenges for the entire football community and, as the world governing body, it is FIFA’s duty to be there and support the ones that are facing acute needs,” said FIFA President Gianni Infantino.

“This is the first step of a far-reaching financial relief plan we are developing to respond to the emergency across the whole football community. Together with our stakeholders, we are we assessing the losses and we are working on the most appropriate and effective tools to implement the other stages of this relief plan.”

Football activities in Kenya have been halted as a result of the virus and a majority of footballers gave gone without pay.

Consequently, FKF president Nick Mwendwa recently said he was in talks with Fifa over possibilities to cushion local footballers affected by the pandemic.

“We are in talks with government, Fifa and sponsors to try and get something for the players. Sh10,000 means much to a player who hasn’t earned a salary for months. I hope to soon announce a positive development.”

President Uhuru Kenyatta also indicated in a recent interview that his government is exploring ways to bail out the sportsmen.


800 more City Hall staff dump Sonko for NMS

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An additional 800 City Hall staff have been seconded to the Nairobi Metropolitan Service (NMS) even as stalemate continues over Sh15 billion appropriated to the new administration for transferred functions.

Last week, NMS, which is under the Presidency, received a big shot in the arm after being allocated Sh2.2 billion for the transferred functions in the second supplementary budget by Treasury Cabinet Secretary Ukur Yatani.

The staff, drawn from the inspectorate, administration and investigation departments as well as sub-County administrators, now join 6, 052 other Nairobi County government employees who had already been deployed to NMS earlier this month.

In a public notice issued on Friday by NMS Director General Mohammed Badi, the staff comprising 759 inspectorate officers, 21 investigative officers, 14 sub-County administrators and six staff from the administration department are required to report to their respective work or duty stations between Monday and Tuesday next week for documentation and collection of letters of secondment without fail.

“The staff underlisted have been seconded to Nairobi Metropolitan Service with effect from April 22, 2020 and are hereby notified to report to their respective sub-Counties or duty station on Monday, April 27, 2020 and Tuesday between 8am and 4pm for documentation and collection of letters of secondment,” read in part the notice.

Public Service Commission (PSC) chairman Stephen Kirogo confirmed that the additional staff are from the security and enforcement department, which is part of the ancillary services transferred to the NMS.

“Yes these are new staff in addition to the 6, 052 employees that had been seconded to NMS early this month. This brings the total number to 6, 852 City Hall employees now under the NMS. The additional ones are mostly for enforcement,”  Mr Kirogo said.

The notice warned the county workers that any staff who will fail to report on the stated days shall be deemed to have absconded duty and as a result, action will be taken in line with the relevant laws.

In the first phase of secondment of staff, Governor Mike Sonko had ordered the City Hall staff to ignore the secondment.

However, the staff defied the Governor going ahead to present themselves for deployment to the new administration.

Curfew defaulters jailed for two months

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A Makadara law court fined 17 curfew defaulters Sh3000 each after they pleaded guilty to charges of violating government regulations to prevent the spread of coronavirus.

In default, they will be jailed for two months.

They were all arrested within Sunton, Mwiki and Kahawa West areas in Kasarani Sub County for failure to observe the 7pm-5am curfew.

A number of them were arrested in bars and others found loitering on streets past 7pm.

They all pleaded guilty before senior principal magistrate Merisa Opondo.

The convicts pleaded for leniency but Opondo refused to review the penalty.

“We must all comply with the government directive [to remain indoors at night] for prevention of Covid-19. It is for safety of all of us,”Opondo told them.

Westgate attack hero faces murder charge

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Before the September 21, 2013 terrorist attack on Westgate Mall in Nairobi, Chief Inspector Stephen Lelei was a low-profile police officer, only well known around Kabete, where he was the police station commander.

But he shot to fame after the attack as he was one of the nine police officers feted for their bravery in confronting the gunmen, who killed 67 people in the raid.

For his valour, Mr Lelei, nicknamed Ocampo — after the former no-nonsense International Criminal Court prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo — was among police officers decorated with a Silver Star (SS) recognition by President Uhuru Kenyatta.

As one of the first armed responders, he had taken up the role of commander as he was the senior-most officer on site at the time.

During the attack, he was shot in the right leg as he led a hastily assembled team of officers in the battle against the heavily armed terrorists.

Still, he soldiered on until reinforcements arrived from the General Service Unit, Regular and Administration Police and the Kenya Defence Forces.

PROMOTION

During the award ceremony, he said: “Luckily, the bullet had not hit my bones, just my flesh.” He was lucky, indeed, as some officers were shot and killed while others were badly injured.

And so his bravery was rewarded with bigger responsibility. Mr Lelei was transferred to Busia as the officer in charge of the weighbridge before returning to Nairobi’s Industrial Area Police Station to replace Chief Inspector Amos Shamalla.

Later, he was promoted and deployed to Mlolongo as the area police commander, where he cracked down on highway robbers targeting transit-goods vehicles, as well as commercial sex workers, illicit brewers and murderers.

Those who know Mr Lelei describe him as a soft-spoken but no-nonsense officer when it comes to dealing with crime.

“He is a nightmare to criminals,” said an officer who worked under him at the Soweto Police Station in Kayole Police Division.

So reliable has Mr Lelei been, the officer said, that the then Nairobi Provincial Police Officer King’ori Mwangi once sought his intervention when Kawangware taxi drivers and boda-boda riders blocked the busy Naivasha Road to protest the killing of seven taxi drivers by Administration Police officers.

“In less than 15 minutes, Lelei had restored traffic flow, a feat that hundreds of riot police officers had not managed for hours,” the officer said.

WILLIE’S DEATH

A year after the Westgate Mall attack, the policeman was in the news after his wife Matrida Muroso died of severe burns when their car caught fire at 3am on Thika Road near Safari Park Hotel.

According to reports, the couple was driving on the highway when the car suddenly caught fire and Mr Lelei jumped out. His wife did not escape.

“I heard a loud explosion, pulled over and jumped out but my wife did not,” Mr Lelei said. He later told investigators that he was being trailed by a car that had four occupants.

Later, in 2015, Mr Lelei was arraigned after the mother of a child who was defiled years earlier told a court that a bedsheet that was part of the evidence was being used as a curtain in an office at the Soweto Police Station, where Mr Lelei was the station commander (OCS).

Makadara Senior Resident Magistrate Evelyn Nyongesa had summoned Mr Lelei, alongside an investigating officer only named as Nthenya, to explain why the case had been delayed.

But these issues did not stop the National Police Service from celebrating Mr Lelei as one of the bravest police officers in Nairobi.

It was during his leadership at Syokimau Police Station that lawyer Willie Kimani, his client Josephat Mwenda and taxi driver Joseph Muiruri were killed and their bodies dumped in the River Athi near Ol-Donyo Sabuk in Matungulu, Machakos County.

Mr Lelei’s juniors, Fredrick Leliman, Leonard Mwangi, Sylvia Wanjiku and Stephen Cheburet were charged with the murder of the three.

MURDER CHARGE

The court has on several occasions summoned Mr Lelei to give his account in the ongoing trial.

A police informer, Peter Ngugi, who confessed to helping the suspected killers, gave a minute-by-minute narration of how the plan was hatched, all the way through to its execution, and told the court that he met Fredrick Leliman through Mr Lelei.

And now, to make matters worse for the decorated officer, the Independent Policing Oversight Authority (Ipoa) on Thursday this week recommended that Mr Lelei and Mr Leliman be charged with the murder of another couple — Jacob Mwenda Mbai and Elizabeth Nduku — in Mlolongo on May 27, 2016, just a month before the murder of Mr Kimani, his client and the taxi driver.

Ipoa, which has been investigating the deaths of the two, said they were shot by police officers, who later reported that they were responding to a suspected robbery.

“Upon independent review of Ipoa’s findings, the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions wrote to the authority and gave the green light to charge the officers with murder,” Ipoa chairperson Anne Makori said.

The families of the two victims had sought Ipoa’s help, claiming Mr Leliman (whom they identified as Maasai) shot them after an altercation, and that the shooting had nothing to do with a robbery.

BOTCHED CONSPIRACY

Jacob’s father, Cosmas Mbai, told NTV at their home in Mlolongo that they had reported the shooting to the police, entered under OB number 34/28/5/2016, but had not received redress.

Jacob’s uncle said the 23-year-old was shot by two police officers attached to the Mlolongo Police Station, whom he identified as an OCS and one Fredrick Leliman.

Witnesses told Ipoa that after Jacob closed his car-wash business in Athi River at 5pm that day, he visited his elder brother in Mlolongo, but first went to have tea near Way Bridge Gardens, where he heard gunshots later and he and other customers went to check what was happening.

“They saw two police officers running after a young man towards Mombasa Road. The police turned on the onlookers and started firing indiscriminately,” one witness said.

“As the crowd ran in different directions, Jacob was shot while scampering to safety at the hotel. The bullet injured his lower diaphragm and the spine.”

The police officers then said that they had killed a suspected robber, and that the crowd realised that a woman had also been shot.

The crowd became agitated, prompting other police officers to fire teargas at them.

EVIDENCE ENOUGH

Jacob’s brother said the police claimed there had been a robbery at Tango Club, but the bar owner dismissed this and recorded a statement to that effect.

Jacob and the woman were taken to Shalom Hospital by a Good Samaritan and later to Machakos Level Five Hospital. They died later at Kenyatta National Hospital.

The two officers reportedly followed the victims to Shalom, requested X-ray reports and left after establishing that there were no bullets lodged in their bodies.

The next day, Jacob’s brother filed a complaint at the Mlolongo Police Station under OB number 34/28/05/2016, where an officer he identified only as Baraza told him the two officers in the shooting had recorded statements on an exchange of fire that had resulted in the deaths of two people.

Ipoa says it has also forwarded files to the Director of Public Prosecutions recommending the prosecution of Mr Lelei and Mr Leliman, and that the DPP is satisfied with the evidence.

Mr Lelei is based in the personnel office at the National Police Service headquarters at Vigilance House.

Revealed: The painful death of Prof Ken Walibora

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Suffering a cracked jaw, a broken hand, two missing teeth, and with blood draining into his brain, Ken Walibora, one of the most celebrated authors and scholars in the country, lay waiting for help that never came for 14 hours at Kenyatta National Hospital on April 10.

He had been knocked down by a bus on Landhies Road in Nairobi hours earlier, even though an autopsy would later reveal that he had also been stabbed, throwing investigations into his death into a spin.

This story exposes the string of mistakes and lack of concern by those who were tasked with the responsibility of taking care of him.

The story starts at 7:18am on April 10, when Walibora left his house at Lavington Heights, Nairobi, for Kijabe Street, where he arrived from the direction of Harry Thuku Road shortly before 8am, parked his dark blue Mercedes-Benz, registration number KBJ 802Y, and stepped out.

He was dressed in a striped T-shirt and open shoes, and held the keys to his car in his right hand as he made his way towards the Globe Roundabout, a few hundred metres away.

There are contradictory reports on whether he left on foot or in another car. While some security guards who saw him say he disappeared from their view on foot, others say he was picked up by another car that drove in the direction of the roundabout.

CRY FOR HELP

A few minutes later, as he dashed across the outbound stretch of Landhies Road, next to the entrance to Machakos bus station, he was hit by a bus.

A string of accidents on this dusty and busy stretch of road two years ago forced the government to erect barriers separating the two lanes. Part of the barrier was, however, uprooted, creating an opening for those daring enough to make the 20-metre dash across.

It is believed this was the opening Walibora used to cross as he ran from the Muthurwa side of the road. He never made it.

On being hit, Walibora lay bleeding on the road until a Good Samaritan drove him to hospital. There have been reports that onlookers alerted an ambulance crew to the accident but their calls were ignored.

The Saturday Nation could not establish whether this was true, as detectives told us security surveillance cameras could not capture the exact spot where the accident happened and what transpired soon afterwards.

A police post inside the bus station is roughly 20 metres from the exact spot of the accident, but the incident was not entered into police records until four hours later, at 2pm, and at the Kamukunji Police Station, which is almost a kilometre away.

NO ICU BED

Walibora was wheeled into the accident and emergency department of Kenyatta National Hospital at a particularly bad time when, even though there weren’t many patients to attend to, the few who were coming in required intensive care.

Ever since the government invoked the Public Health Act that introduced a dusk-to-dawn curfew and closed bars and other entertainment joints, the number of people who are rushed into the emergency department with injuries from knife stabs, bar brawls, and drink-driving has dropped.

So the nurse we spoke to had a photographic memory of the 14 hours during which Walibora was swinging between life and death.

He did not have any form of identification, so they recorded him as ‘Unknown African Male’. Or, simply, a John Doe.

Doctors ordered two tests on him, an X-ray examination and a CT scan. The latter showed extensive damage to his head, so doctors resolved that he needed to be put in intensive care.

Unfortunately, all the 22 beds in KNH’s main intensive care unit were occupied, and the five in the emergency section were also unavailable.

Had he been with his identification documents, medics would at this point have reached out to his next of kin for guidance on other available options outside the hospital.

But because he didn’t have any, and couldn’t himself ask to be transferred elsewhere, the staff at KNH decided to let him stay there with them.

SENATE INQUIRY

And so, still unconscious, he was moved into one of the wards, where he was to wait for an ICU bed to become available. He died waiting for that bed.

Last evening the Senate Health Committee, chaired by Senator Michael Mbito, said it had summoned the hospital’s chief executive officer, Dr Evans Kamuri, to answer to claims of negligence.

“We want to meet the CEO on Monday over what happened at the hospital’s emergency unit, as the inquiry into the death sets off,” the Senate said.

The Saturday Nation has established that the case has since been transferred to the Homicide Unit at the Directorate of Criminal Investigations (DCI) headquarters on Kiambu Road, Nairobi.

It was initially handled by the traffic department of Kamukunji Police Station before being transferred to the criminal investigations unit at Central Police Station four days later.

Meanwhile, street boys who found Walibora’s press card and car keys took them to Kamukunji Police Station, where officers logged them as lost-and-found items. They never followed up on the matter until it emerged that the author had died.

Consequently, several crucial hours were lost in saving the author’s life, and thereafter at least five days in following leads that could have nailed his killers.

To date, the driver of the Double M bus, Mr George Mburu, has not been arrested despite police saying they were going to charge him for causing death by dangerous driving.

DRIVER AT LARGE

Detectives said Mr Mburu claimed he never saw Walibora running across the road, and that he may have hit the bus from the side.

However, people who witnessed the accident said Walibora was being chased by street boys and was hit as he tried to run across the road.

Nairobi police boss Philip Ndolo said the driver was chased, arrested and made to record a statement after the accident.

But if that is true, why did it take four hours for the accident to be entered in the Occurrence Book at Kamukunji Police Station?

Additionally, why has the driver not been charged in court for causing death by dangerous driving?

Police say they are now focusing their energies on who may have stabbed the author in the minutes leading to his death, after Government Pathologist Johansen Oduor recommended further investigations into the death after he found injuries that he said he could not convincingly link to the accident.

“The wound on the right hand was caused by sharp trauma. When someone is hit by a vehicle, the wound is usually indicative of being hit by a blunt object. This one was sharp,” Dr Oduor said.

How Walibora ended up on the chaotic side of the city centre may provide answers to who exactly stabbed him, and why.

UNDERFUNDED SECTOR

It is not yet known where he was in the one hour between 8am and around 9am, when he was hit by the bus, or if he had any other engagements in town.

Some of his relatives have told the police that he was looking for building materials to send upcountry.

Additionally, an analysis of his mobile phone records shows that at the time of his death he was engaged in a dispute with one of his publishers, and that they were supposed to meet on the day he died.

As in any business, it is common for authors to have disputes with their publishers. The 56-year-old had dozens of books to his name, with the Kiswahili novel Siku Njema the most famous.

The circumstances under which Walibora lost his life are a cautionary tale to the government, which has continuously underfunded the public health system.

One of the questions the Senate will be seeking to answer is how a taxpayer and law-abiding citizen who could afford a private health facility had been let down at his greatest hour of need.

The negligence of the medical staff aside, KNH, like many public hospitals, is grossly underfunded and understaffed.

DEATHS ON ROADS

A 2019 study published by Elsevier showed that emergencies — mostly road accidents and falls — take up the majority of the facility’s traffic.

While most of the patients, at 61 per cent, who walk into KNH are treated in the emergency centre, observed and discharged, another 33 per cent require admissions.

Of those who remain in the hospital, only one in every three that are triaged and found to be in need of ICU admission actually gets it. Walibora was in this unfortunate group.

The World Health Organisation notes that road accidents claim 1.2 million people globally; nine of every 10 of them, or 90 per cent, are in sub-Saharan Africa.

This has baffled experts because Africa has only two per cent of the world’s vehicles, but the deaths on roads are 24 per 100,000 deaths, compared to 10 in Europe.

JOHN DOE

For the most part of his career, Walibora never needed to open his mouth to introduce himself — his poems, books and essays did that for him.

But on the Friday that he was knocked down, that sense of adopted anonymity, established over the years of his celebrated career as a writer, worked against him.

He couldn’t introduce himself, and none of the nurses who received the battered, middle-aged man recognised him.

And so one of the most famous names in Kenya and the region, a man who had valiantly taken up the ambassadorial role of a Kiswahili agent, lay alone on a stretcher; the bright lights in the casualty section of the region’s biggest referral hospital illuminating the rivulets of blood slowly but steadily soaking his clothes.

Walibora was dying, every drop of blood slowly sapping the life out of him, but no one seemed to care. Because no one knew who he was.

He was laid to rest on Wednesday this week at his rural home in Makutano, Cherangany, Trans Nzoia County.

Kanye West now a dollar billionaire – Forbes

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Rapper Kanye West has added another comma to his net worth and is now a dollar billionaire thanks largely to the basketball shoes bearing his name that he developed with Adidas.

On Friday, a report from Forbes magazine said Kanye has officially achieved billionaire status, making him the second rapper to do so after Jay Z.

However, although Kanye is confirmed as a billionaire by the brand, there is speculation across social media as to whether or not Dr. Dre and Diddy have achieved this feat as well. None of them has officially been deemed billionaires by Forbes.

The publication notes that it’s his Yeezy brand, which he owns in its’ entirety and falls under the Adidas umbrella, that helped push him over the $1 billion mark.

Forbes dissected the Chicago rapper’s success with Yeezy while also sharing how they tabulated Kanye’s net worth.

Forbes previously reported that West’s brand would closeout 2019 with a revenue of $1.5 billion.

The rough figure of the wealth of Kim Kardashian’s hubby is $1.3 billion, the magazine said in announcing the musician is now on its list of people worth at least $1 billion.

The 42-year-old, Chicago-born rapper’s Yeezy footwear often sells for more than $200 a pair in the United States and elsewhere.

West was associated with Nike for years but broke away in 2013, lending his name to Adidas as they launched their first shoe together in 2015.

Forbes said that for years West has been pressing the magazine to be listed as one of its mega-rich but that it declined, for lack of proof.

Nonetheless, a decent portion of Kanye’s net worth can be attributed to his royalty agreement with Adidas.

West receives a “royalty around 15 percent of Yeezy revenue from Adidas. Upon closer inspection, it appears some expenses are carved out of that slice, bringing his actual cut closer to 11 percent. At that rate, he would have received royalties of over $140 million from Yeezy sales last year,” the report says.

To get this official billionaire label, Kanye West’s team provided a statement of the rapper’s assets, which were listed as $17 million in cash, $35 million in stocks, $81 million in “buildings and improvements,” $21 million in land, as well as his G.O.O.D. label and publishing rights, which is said to be worth at least $90 million. There was also a sizable deduction of $100 million worth of debts, which included mortgages and advances.

Forbes also notes that they gave Kanye’s net worth a “50 percent haircut” due to the illiquidity of his assets and the “the lack of independent backup.”

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