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Archive for July 14th, 2009

Nobel laureate Soyinka attains 75 today

Posted by African Press International on July 14, 2009

Saturday, July 11, 2009

Playwright, Nobel Laureate and Chess player Soyinka attains 75: Happy birthday

Playwright and Nobel Laureate, Professor Wole Soyinka, would on Monday (7/13/2009) attain the ripe age of 75. He was born on July 13, 1934.

He was educated at St. Peter’s School, Ake, Abeokuta; Abeokuta Grammar School, Abeokuta between 1944 and 1945 before he went to Government College, Ibadan from 1946 to 1950 where he rounded off his post primary education. He attended the University College, Ibadan from 1952 to 1954 and the University of Leeds, UK (1954 to 1957) obtaining a degree in English literature thereafter.

He worked briefly at the Royal Court Theatre in London as a play reader and later as a dramaturgic receiving Rockfeller Bursary before returning home to study African drama. In 1960 he founded the theatre group, The 1960 Masks and in 1964 the Orisun Theatre Company from which he produced his own plays and took part in acting. While home he taught at the Universities of Lagos, Ibadan and Ife.
Soyinka, through his plays, projects traditional Nigerian themes and stories. He has being recognised as a dramatic poet and skilled dramatic craftsman. His plays deal with a great diversity of themes – from the farce of The Trials of Brother Jero, to the romanticism of The Lion and the Jewel, to the tragedy of The Strong Breed. He is also concerned with universal problems, as his plays examine town life, a retrograde countryside, and the ambitions of the “new” Nigerians.

His ability to juxtapose the past and the present was reflected in his play A Dance in the Forest in which selfishness, dishonesty and lust was personified as elements in all societies past and present. Through drama, poetry, essays, and autobiographies, Soyinka has documented not only the struggles of his homeland of Nigeria but of the African continent as a whole.

His works earned him the prestigious Nobel Prize in Literature in 1986.Besides obtaining a doctoral degree from the University of Leeds, UK in 1973, he can boast of numerous honorary doctoral degrees, which include: honorary doctoral degree from the University of Yale in 1980; Morehouse College in 1988; doctor of letters from the University of Toronto in 1992; Addis Ababa University in 2003 and doctor of humane letters from Princeton in 2005 to mention a few.

Culled from the Saturday Independent,a Nigerian national newspaper of 11 July 2009.

Thanks to Mr. Bola Dada – a former Secretary of the Nigeria Chess Federation, for sending this article to us.

By the way, Prof Soyinka stoped playing chess several years ago. He used to play chess very well in his younger days, at least when he wasn’t following the progress of the “match of the century” – the World Chess Championship Match between the late American Bobby Fisher and Russia’s Boris Spassky whom he met in Italy in 2007.

source.nigerianchessplayers

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Taylor’s trial in The Hague: Sudanese leader Bashir already indicted awaiting arrest – Kenyan leaders could soon follow.

Posted by African Press International on July 14, 2009

PARIS Charles Taylor, the former president of Liberia, took the stand in his own defense at The Hague on Tuesday and immediately denied a catalog of horrifying charges based on testimony by prosecution witnesses telling stories of violence, rape, amputation and even cannibalism.

This whole case against me is a case of deceit, deception and lies, he told the Special Court for Sierra Leone sitting at The Hague.

It was his first time in the stand. Mr. Taylor the first African leader to be tried for war crimes said he had fought all my life to do what I thought was right, news reports said.

He called the prosecutions depiction of him malicious.

Wearing a dark suit and dark glasses, he introduced himself to the three judges as the 21st president of the Republic of Liberia.

Mr. Taylor was beginning testimony that, his lawyers say, may go on for weeks, given the wide range of the charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity.

The prosecution, which has rested its case, has charged that he armed and commanded rebel groups to bolster his influence in West Africa and to seize a swath of neighboring Sierra Leone, in particular its diamond-mining areas.

His indictment holds him accountable for the rebels barbaric methods as they pillaged, killed, raped, used drug-crazed children as soldiers and hacked off limbs, ears or noses to subdue civilians.

In opening the defense case Monday, Courtenay Griffiths, the lead lawyer, said that Mr. Taylor was not an African Napoleon bent on taking over a region, but a broker of peace who would exonerate himself when he gave his account.

As many as 200,000 people died in the decade of fighting, and Mr. Taylors war strategies are said to have affected many more in Liberia, his home country, but only crimes in Sierra Leone between 1996 and 2002 are within the mandate of the court.

Stephen J. Rapp, the courts chief prosecutor, said that about a dozen insiders witnesses once close to Mr. Taylor, whose testimony had been crucial had been moved to other countries and given new identities. Several important witnesses had declined to testify because they had been threatened, he said.

The horrors of the Sierra Leone war have frequently perturbed the solemn setting of The Hague courtroom, with its officers in black robes with neatly starched white bibs and its crimson-robed judges high on the dais. At times, witnesses on the stand gesticulated with amputated limbs, swaddled in bandages. Or take the small but awkward incident on the day when Mustapha Mansary, a villager, came to testify. Rebel gangs had hacked off both of his hands.

The defense lawyer began: Mr. Witness, can I ask you, can you read and write English? Mr. Mansary listened to the translation, and then he held up his two stumps. I have no hands to write anything, he said.

I appreciate that; my apologies, the lawyer said.

At other times, witnesses described scenes of incomprehensible cruelty.

A rape victim who testified under the name 064 described the day a gang of rebels mutilated and killed many adults and children in the village of Foendor, among them members of her family, including her two children. After nine children and the adults had been decapitated, Tamba Joe, the gang leader, ordered her to look for her people. Their severed heads were put in a sack.

They gave me the heads to carry, the woman said. But at first I couldnt.

A man was told to help her carry the sack, dripping with blood. When they got to Tombudu, the next village, the rebels ordered all the heads thrown into a pond. The heads of her two children were among them, she said.

No one knows exactly how many people were killed or maimed in the civil war of the 1990s. Human rights groups have said that close to 4,000 amputees have not survived. Up to 3,500 amputees are believed to be still alive. Numerous former child soldiers are still in rehabilitation homes.

During the trial, the magnitude of the atrocities has not been in dispute. But the prosecution and the defense have described the case as legally complicated. The defense lawyer, Mr. Griffiths, said that the prosecution must prove Mr. Taylors effective control over the rebel groups and that demonstrating influence or assistance was insufficient. The case is all about linking the crimes to Mr. Taylor, but the evidence has been riddled with inconsistencies, Mr. Griffiths said.

Mr. Rapp, the chief prosecutor, insists that Mr. Taylors criminal responsibility has been more than demonstrated with the insider witnesses. These included radio operators, describing orders given from the secret communications center in Mr. Taylors mansion, and members of the presidents security force who said they witnessed the movement of arms and ammunition to the rebels and attended high-level strategy sessions.

One of the most dramatic accounts came from Joseph Marzah, a longtime associate of Mr. Taylors. He described himself as Mr. Taylors onetime chief of operations and head of a death squad, now an affluent businessman. He said that African peacekeepers were killed and eaten by Mr. Taylors militiamen and that weapons were easily smuggled. Four other witnesses also referred to the ritualistic eating of enemy flesh by Liberian combatants.

Mr. Marzah, known as Zigzag, spoke of the ease with which weapons were moved to Sierra Leone from Liberia during the Taylor government, despite an arms embargo. He said that Nigerian peacekeepers at the airport in Monrovia, the Liberian capital, were bribed and the weapons were transported in the peacekeepers vehicles.

He became angry as the defense lawyer repeatedly insisted that he had no close contact with Mr. Taylor. Stung, Mr. Marzah blurted out that he and Mr. Taylor belonged to the same secret society and had together eaten human hearts. With that he nervously crossed himself.

When the lawyer asked if he crossed himself because he had just lied under oath, Mr. Marzah said he had just broken the secrecy laws of his society.

source.nytimes

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Naming a new Judge to the Supreme Court – Obama

Posted by African Press International on July 14, 2009

The White House, Washington
Good Morning,

Yesterday, Judge Sonia Sotomayor made her opening statement to the Senate Judiciary Committee and moved another step closer to taking a seat on the United States Supreme Court. In case you missed it, watch the video of her opening statement here:

Judge Sotomayors Opening Statement

As President, there are few responsibilities more serious or consequential than the naming of a Supreme Court Justice, so I want to take this opportunity to tell you about the qualifications and character that informed my decision to nominate Judge Sotomayor.

Judge Sotomayor’s brilliant legal mind is complemented by the practical lessons that can only be learned by applying the law to real world situations.

In the coming days, the hearings will cover an incredible body of work from a judge who has more experience on the federal bench than any incoming Supreme Court Justice in the last 100 years. Judge Sotomayor’s professional background spans our judicial system from her time as a big-city prosecutor and a corporate litigator, to her work as a federal trial judge on the U.S. District Court, and an appellate judge on the Second Circuit Court of Appeals.

And then there is Judge Sotomayor’s incredible personal story. She grew up in a housing project in the South Bronx her parents coming to New York from Puerto Rico during the Second World War. At the age of nine, she lost her father, and her mother worked six days a week just to put food on the table. It takes a certain resilience and determination to rise up out of such circumstances, focus, work hard and achieve the American dream.

This character shined through in yesterday’s opening statement: Watch the video.

In Judge Sotomayor, our nation will have a Justice who will never forget her humble beginnings, will always apply the rule of law, and will be a protector of the Constitution that made her American dream and the dreams of millions of others possible. As she said so clearly yesterday, Judge Sotomayor’s decisions on the bench “have been made not to serve the interests of any one litigant, but always to serve the larger interest of impartial justice.”

In anticipation of today’s first round of questioning, I hope you’ll share this email widely, because Judge Sotomayor’s confirmation is something that affects every American. It’s important for these hearings to be about Judge Sotomayor’s own record and her capacity for the job not any political back and forth that some in Washington may use to distract you. What members of the Judiciary Committee, and the American people, will see today is a sharp and fearless jurist who does not let powerful interests bully her into breaking from the rule of law.

Thank you,
Barack Obama

There is no question that nominating a Supreme Court Justice is amongst a presidents most important responsibilities. In replacing Justice Souter, the President has vowed to seek someone with a sharp and independent mind, and a record of excellence and integrity. As a former constitutional law professor, he believes it paramount to select someone who rejects ideology and shares his deep respect for the Constitutional values on which this nation was founded.
And as the President has made clear, upholding those constitutional values requires more than just the intellectual ability to apply a legal rule to a set of facts. It requires a common sense understanding of how laws affect the daily realities of peoples lives.As the President noted in his remarks this morning, Judge Sonia Sotomayor fits that bill he began recounting her spectacular credentials, before describing the life story that made her who she is:
But as impressive and meaningful as Judge Sotomayor’s sterling credentials in the law is her own extraordinary journey. Born in the South Bronx, she was raised in a housing project not far from Yankee Stadium, making her a lifelong Yankee’s fan. I hope this will not disqualify her — (laughter) — in the eyes of the New Englanders in the Senate. (Laughter.)
Sonia’s parents came to New York from Puerto Rico during the second world war, her mother as part of the Women’s Army Corps. And, in fact, her mother is here today and I’d like us all to acknowledge Sonia’s mom. (Applause.) Sonia’s mom has been a little choked up. (Laughter.) But she, Sonia’s mother, began a family tradition of giving back to this country. Sonia’s father was a factory worker with a 3rd-grade education who didn’t speak English. But like Sonia’s mother, he had a willingness to work hard, a strong sense of family, and a belief in the American Dream.
When Sonia was nine, her father passed away. And her mother worked six days a week as a nurse to provide for Sonia and her brother — who is also here today, is a doctor and a terrific success in his own right. But Sonia’s mom bought the only set of encyclopedias in the neighborhood, sent her children to a Catholic school called Cardinal Spellman out of the belief that with a good education here in America all things are possible.
With the support of family, friends, and teachers, Sonia earned scholarships to Princeton, where she graduated at the top of her class, and Yale Law School, where she was an editor of the Yale Law Journal, stepping onto the path that led her here today.
Along the way she’s faced down barriers, overcome the odds, lived out the American Dream that brought her parents here so long ago. And even as she has accomplished so much in her life, she has never forgotten where she began, never lost touch with the community that supported her.
What Sonia will bring to the Court, then, is not only the knowledge and experience acquired over a course of a brilliant legal career, but the wisdom accumulated from an inspiring life’s journey.
It’s my understanding that Judge Sotomayor’s interest in the law was sparked as a young girl by reading the Nancy Drew series — (laughter) — and that when she was diagnosed with diabetes at the age of eight, she was informed that people with diabetes can’t grow up to be police officers or private investigators like Nancy Drew. And that’s when she was told she’d have to scale back her dreams.
Look through a slideshow of photos from her life (view full size):
<p>Your browser does not support iframes.<br />http://www.whitehouse.gov/InlineSlideshow/gallery134</p>
The Law School Admission Council has a video discussing her story as part of their “Believe and Achieve: Latinos and the Law” program that isalso well worth watching.Finally, the White House also sent out the following background, giving a thorough look at Judge Sotomayors life and career:
Judge Sonia Sotomayor
Sonia Sotomayor has served as a judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit since October 1998. She has been hailed as “one of the ablest federal judges currently sitting” for her thoughtful opinions,i and as “a role model of aspiration, discipline, commitment, intellectual prowess and integrity”ii for her ascent to the federal bench from an upbringing in a South Bronx housing project.
Her American story and three decade career in nearly every aspect of the law provide Judge Sotomayor with unique qualifications to be the next Supreme Court Justice. She is a distinguished graduate of two of America’s leading universities. She has been a big-city prosecutor and a corporate litigator. Before she was promoted to the Second Circuit by President Clinton, she was appointed to the District Court for the Southern District of New York by President George H.W. Bush. She replaces Justice Souter as the only Justice with experience as a trial judge.
Judge Sotomayor served 11 years on the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, one of the most demanding circuits in the country, and has handed down decisions on a range of complex legal and constitutional issues. If confirmed, Sotomayor would bring more federal judicial experience to the Supreme Court than any justice in 100 years, and more overall judicial experience than anyone confirmed for the Court in the past 70 years. Judge Richard C. Wesley, a George W. Bush appointee to the Second Circuit, said “Sonia is an outstanding colleague with a keen legal mind. She brings a wealth of knowledge and hard work to all her endeavors on our court. It is both a pleasure and an honor to serve with her.”
In addition to her distinguished judicial service, Judge Sotomayor is a Lecturer at Columbia University Law School and was also an adjunct professor at New York University Law School until 2007.
An American Story
Judge Sonia Sotomayor has lived the American dream. Born to a Puerto Rican family, she grew up in a public housing project in the South Bronx. Her parents moved to New York during World War II her mother served in the Womens Auxiliary Corps during the war. Her father, a factory worker with a third-grade education, died when Sotomayor was nine years old. Her mother, a nurse, then raised Sotomayor and her younger brother, Juan, now a physician in Syracuse. After her fathers death, Sotomayor turned to books for solace, and it was her new found love of Nancy Drew that inspired a love of reading and learning, a path that ultimately led her to the law.
Most importantly, at an early age, her mother instilled in Sotomayor and her brother a belief in the power of education. Driven by an indefatigable work ethic, and rising to the challenge of managing a diagnosis of juvenile diabetes, Sotomayor excelled in school. Sotomayor graduated as valedictorian of her class at Blessed Sacrament and at Cardinal Spellman High School in New York. She first heard about the Ivy League from her high school debate coach, Ken Moy, who attended Princeton University, and she soon followed in his footsteps after winning a scholarship.
At Princeton, she continued to excel, graduating summa cum laude, and Phi Beta Kappa. She was a co-recipient of the M. Taylor Pyne Prize, the highest honor Princeton awards to an undergraduate. At Yale Law School, Judge Sotomayor served as an editor of the Yale Law Journal and as managing editor of the Yale Studies in World Public Order. One of Sotomayors former Yale Law School classmates, Robert Klonoff (now Dean of Lewis & Clark Law School), remembers her intellectual toughness from law school: “She would stand up for herself and not be intimidated by anyone.” [Washington Post, 5/7/09]
A Champion of the Law
Over a distinguished career that spans three decades, Judge Sotomayor has worked at almost every level of our judicial system yielding a depth of experience and a breadth of perspectives that will be invaluable and is currently not represented — on our highest court. New York City District Attorney Morgenthau recently praised Sotomayor as an “able champion of the law” who would be “highly qualified for any position in which wisdom, intelligence, collegiality and good character could be assets.” [Wall Street Journal, 5/9/09]
A Fearless and Effective Prosecutor
Fresh out of Yale Law School, Judge Sotomayor became an Assistant District Attorney in Manhattan in 1979, where she tried dozens of criminal cases over five years. Spending nearly every day in the court room, her prosecutorial work typically involved “street crimes,” such as murders and robberies, as well as child abuse, police misconduct, and fraud cases. Robert Morgenthau, the person who hired Judge Sotomayor, has described her as a “fearless and effective prosecutor.” [Wall Street Journal, 5/9/09] She was cocounsel in the “Tarzan Murderer” case, which convicted a murderer to 67 and years to life in prison, and was sole counsel in a multiple-defendant case involving a Manhattan housing project shooting between rival family groups.
A Corporate Litigator
She entered private practice in 1984, becoming a partner in 1988 at the firm Pavia and Harcourt. She was a general civil litigator involved in all facets of commercial work including, real estate, employment, banking, contracts, and agency law. In addition, her practice had a significant concentration in intellectual property law, including trademark, copyright and unfair competition issues. Her typical clients were significant corporations doing international business. The managing partner who hired her, George Pavia, remembers being instantly impressed with the young Sonia Sotomayor when he hired her in 1984, noting that “she was just ideal for us in terms of her background and training.” [Washington Post, May 7, 2009]
A Sharp and Fearless Trial Judge
Her judicial service began in October 1992 with her appointment to the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York by President George H.W. Bush. Still in her 30s, she was the youngest member of the court. From 1992 to 1998, she presided over roughly 450 cases. As a trial judge, she earned a reputation as a sharp and fearless jurist who does not let powerful interests bully her into departing from the rule of law. In 1995, for example, she issued an injunction against Major League Baseball owners, effectively ending a baseball strike that had become the longest work stoppage in professional sports history and had caused the cancellation of the World Series the previous fall. She was widely lauded for saving baseball. Claude Lewis of the Philadelphia Inquirer wrote that by saving the season, Judge Sotomayor joined “the ranks of Joe DiMaggio, Willie Mays, Jackie Robinson and Ted Williams.”
A Tough, Fair and Thoughtful Jurist
President Clinton appointed Judge Sotomayor to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in 1998. She is the first Latina to serve on that court, and has participated in over 3000 panel decisions, authoring roughly 400 published opinions. Sitting on the Second Circuit, Judge Sotomayor has tackled a range of questions: from difficult issues of constitutional law, to complex procedural matters, to lawsuits involving complicated business organizations. In this context, Sotomayor is widely admired as a judge with a sophisticated grasp of legal doctrine. “She appreciates the complexity of issues, said Stephen L. Carter, a Yale professor who teaches some of her opinions in his classes. Confronted with a tough case, Carter said, she doesnt leap at its throat but reasons to get to the bottom of issues.” For example, in United States v. Quattrone, Judge Sotomayor concluded that the trial judge had erred by forbidding the release of jurors names to the press, concluding after carefully weighing the competing concerns that the trial judges concerns for a speedy and orderly trial must give way to the constitutional freedoms of speech and the press.
Sotomayor also has keen awareness of the laws impact on everyday life. Active in oral arguments, she works tirelessly to probe both the factual details and the legal doctrines in the cases before her and to arrive at decisions that are faithful to both. She understands that upholding the rule of law means going beyond legal theory to ensure consistent, fair, common-sense application of the law to real-world facts. For example, In United States v. Reimer, Judge Sotomayor wrote an opinion revoking the US citizenship for a man charged with working for the Nazis in World War II Poland, guarding concentration camps and helping empty the Jewish ghettos. And in Lin v. Gonzales and a series of similar cases, she ordered renewed consideration of the asylum claims of Chinese women who experienced or were threatened with forced birth control, evincing in her opinions a keen awareness of those womens plights.
Judge Sotomayors appreciation of the real-world implications of judicial rulings is paralleled by her sensible practicality in evaluating the actions of law enforcement officers. For example, in United States v. Falso, the defendant was convicted of possessing child pornography after FBI agents searched his home with a warrant. The warrant should not have been issued, but the agents did not know that, and Judge Sotomayor wrote for the court that the officers good faith justified using the evidence they found. Similarly in United States v. Santa, Judge Sotomayor ruled that when police search a suspect based on a mistaken belief that there is a valid arrest warrant out on him, evidence found during the search should not be suppressed. Ten years later, in Herring v. United States, the Supreme Court reached the same conclusion. In her 1997 confirmation hearing, Sotomayor spoke of her judicial philosophy, saying” I dont believe we should bend the Constitution under any circumstance. It says what it says. We should do honor to it.” Her record on the Second Circuit holds true to that statement. For example, in Hankins v. Lyght, she argued in dissent that the federal government risks “an unconstitutional trespass” if it attempts to dictate to religious organizations who they can or cannot hire or dismiss as spiritual leaders. Since joining the Second Circuit, Sotomayor has honored the Constitution, the rule of law, and justice, often forging consensus and winning conservative colleagues to her point of view.
A Commitment to Community
Judge Sotomayor is deeply committed to her family, to her co-workers, and to her community. Judge Sotomayor is a doting aunt to her brother Juans three children and an attentive godmother to five more. She still speaks to her mother, who now lives in Florida, every day. At the courthouse, Judge Sotomayor helped found the collegiality committee to foster stronger personal relationships among members of the court. Seizing an opportunity to lead others on the path to success, she recruited judges to join her in inviting young women to the courthouse on Take Your Daughter to Work Day, and mentors young students from troubled neighborhoods Her favorite project, however, is the Development School for Youth program, which sponsors workshops for inner city high school students. Every semester, approximately 70 students attend 16 weekly workshops that are designed to teach them how to function in a work setting. The workshop leaders include investment bankers, corporate executives and Judge Sotomayor, who conducts a workshop on the law for 25 to 35 students. She uses as her vehicle the trial of Goldilocks and recruits six lawyers to help her. The students play various roles, including the parts of the prosecutor, the defense attorney, Goldilocks and the jurors, and in the process they get to experience openings, closings, direct and cross-examinations. In addition to the workshop experience, each student is offered a summer job by one of the corporate sponsors. The experience is rewarding for the lawyers and exciting for the students, commented Judge Sotomayor, as “it opens up possibilities that the students never dreamed of before.” [Federal Bar Council News, Sept./Oct./Nov. 2005, p.20] This is one of many ways that Judge Sotomayor gives back to her community and inspires young people to achieve their dreams.
She has served as a member of the Second Circuit Task Force on Gender, Racial and Ethnic Fairness in the Courts and was formerly on the Boards of Directors of the New York Mortgage Agency, the New York City Campaign Finance Board, and the Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund.

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Sh33m facelift for Kenya PM Raila Odinga’s homes: What happens in future when Kenya gets a new PM? – will public funds be used to renovate his private homes also or the new PM will take over Present PM’s renovated homes?

Posted by African Press International on July 14, 2009

ADVICE from a concerned Kenyan: Submitted byensoko

Kenya never ceases to amaze me.That is why we are a failed state.How can the taxpayer pay for so much to renovate a private residence.He is not a permanent holder of that office. Short term fixes will not do.What needs to be done is build a permanent residence maintained and owned by the state for all future PMs.With goodwill and less corruption ,that can be done in a year or even less.

———————————

Sh33m facelift for Kenya PM homes

ByJOHN NGIRACHU

In Summary

  • Money will go into staffing the PMs residences to enable him to host State functions and visitors.
  • Allocation will also go into providing for additional security and surveillance equipment at the residences as well as additional domestic staff.

The private residence of Kenya Prime Minister Raila Odinga will be renovated at a cost of Sh33.4 million.

The money has already been allocated towards the office of the Prime Minister and is Sh6 million more than was spent on the same expense in the 2008/2009 financial year, which ended last month.

According to officials from the PMs office who spoke before the departmental committee on administration and national security on Monday, the money will go into staffing the PMs residences to enable him to host State functions and visitors.

Commensurate

His current residence in Nairobi and another in Mombasa are being rehabilitated so that State guests going there can get treatment commensurate to the Prime Ministers status, said Mr Khangati, an Assistant minister in the PMs office.

He said the allocation would go into providing for additional security and surveillance equipment at the residences as well as additional domestic staff.

It does not include the cost for hospitality, that is, the cost of feeding and entertaining the visitors.

Printed estimates

Mr Khangati defended the allocation at the meeting after Makueni MP Peter Kiilu raised the query at the committees examination of the printed estimates for the PMs office.

He claimed it was ‘significantly less than that for the vice-president and State House.

Currently, the PM and the VP do not have official State residences and rarely host official government functions.

Mr Odinga currently resides at Karen in Nairobi.

According to the presentations at the meeting, the allocation is expected to increase to Sh55 million in the 2010/2011 financial year and to top Sh77 million in the last financial year of the coalition government.

By the end of the current term of Parliament, Sh192.8 million will have been spent in the rehabilitation of the PMs residence.

Mr Odinga is the second Prime Minister in post-colonial Kenya, the first having been President Jomo Kenyatta, who served as PM between 1963 and 1964, when Kenya became a republic.

Sh700 million

The government has already spent Sh700 million for the acquisition of Shell and BP House on Harambee Avenue to host the PMs office and departments that fall under him.

According to Mr Khangati, the refurbishment of the building is at the design and planning stage with the ministry of Public Works as tenants whose leases had not expired move out.

He said the PMs offices on the second floor are expected to be ready for occupation in three months time.

source.nation.ke

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From pharmaceuticals and insecticides to innovative waterproofing

Posted by African Press International on July 14, 2009

GLOBAL: Not all Kumbaya and campfires

Photo: Active Engineering
Active Engineering’s JakPak, an all-in-one waterproof jacket with the built in versatility of a personal sleeping environment, billed as a critical new resource for first responders and disaster victims.

NEW YORK, – “Despite popular opinion that non-profits are all sitting around the campfire singing Kumbaya together, they do have to manage their resources, and any way they can reduce their expenses by managing those well, I think is an opportunity for them,” said NGO representative Barbara Wallace of InterAction, one of 800 attendees at a trade fair involving more than 110 corporations, NGOs, UN agencies and government aid bodies in Washington DC last week.

From pharmaceuticals and insecticides to innovative waterproofing, security and insurance, for-profit businesses hawked their wares to non-profit organizations at Aid+Trade, one of the largest events of its kind.

Wallace, vice-president of membership for InterAction, the largest coalition of US-based international NGOs with 183 members, told IRIN: Non-profits have to buy services just like everybody else I mean it’s not like everything is donated, because it simply isn’t, and an opportunity for procurement people from non-profits, CEOs from non-profits to visit a place where they can meet competitors for what they’re going to buy, and negotiate deals that might reduce the price, I see as an advantage.

InterAction hosted workshops and panel discussions with over 800 participants, 100 speakers and 40 different sessions. The fair was hosted by International Aid & Trade, a London-based body.

Director Sula Bruce was enthusiastic: What it does is provide an opportunity for companies to really communicate on an open, visible platform with the aid agencies they are serving – UN, governmental or NGO. International Aid & Trade enables humanitarian agencies to meet a cross-section of companies, which assists them in securing the best prices for the goods and services they use.

For the UN such events are part of an essential partnership with the business world. It serves an important and legitimate function. The UN and wider UN humanitarian community must procure capital equipment, goods and services to effectively fulfil their missions, Will Kennedy, senior programme officer at the UN Fund for International Partnerships, told IRIN.

I personally don’t see a conflict of interest here. All goods and services procured by UN humanitarian agencies go through well established and fairly rigorous competitive bidding processes.

Sandless sandbags and other innovations

The wares on show include the familiar, such as water-purifying equipment; the novel, like an all-in-one raincoat and tent; as well as services, including satellite communications and insurance. Bruce highlighted Active Engineering’s JakPak, an all-in-one waterproof jacket with the built-in versatility of a personal sleeping environment billed as a critical new resource for first responders and disaster victims.


Photo: Titan Energy
The Sentry 5000 Mobile Utility System, a multifunctional enclosed trailer unit capable of providing quickly deployable electrical power, heating and cooling, purified water, communication and lighting as a single, self-contained towable unit

Sentry Group, a Michigan-based company, introduced a multifunctional enclosed trailer unit the Sentry 5000 – capable of providing quickly deployable electrical power, heating and cooling, communication and lighting as a single, towable unit. It claims to be able to purify about 13,000 litres of water a day.

Flood Inhibiting and Defense Organization (FIDO) displayed lightweight, portable sandless sandbags that can stop intrusive water, activating instantly on contact, billed as non-toxic and 100 percent biodegradable.

Security is never far from the minds of NGOs and several exhibitors dealt with issues ranging from mine clearance to protection from hostile elements, such as L-3 CyTerra mine-detectors or and Clements International insurance services, including for political risk and kidnap for ransom.

Building ties

At the 2007 fair in Geneva, the London-based Mines Advisory Group (MAG), and UNOSAT, the UN’s Operational Satellite Applications Programme, realised that their respective maps- MAGs showing unexploded ordnance and UNOSAT’s showing the location of water – could be used to establish settlements for displaced people with sufficient water but away from dangerous areas.

For Africare, an American-led NGO: We actually have an opportunity to see what new products are out there, said J. Margaret Burke, director of management services, [and] it gives an opportunity for NGOs to see each other as well as the vendors.

Summing up the position of many in the NGO world to possible ethical wariness over the linkage between businesses and NGOs, Catholic Relief Services said its presence did not represent an endorsement of the event, other presenters, the exhibitors, or any of the suppliers.

That having been said, humanitarian organizations need supplies, spokesman John Rivera told IRIN. We buy lots of supplies locally, i.e. in the countries where we operate, but we need other materials and seek the most efficient and cost-effective way of getting what we need to where we need it. We are thankful to have a vibrant market in the sort of basic materials we need.

ma/bp/mw source.www.irinnews.org

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Orphaned and vulnerable children are suffering the most in the ongoing conflict in Somalia

Posted by African Press International on July 14, 2009

SOMALIA: Vulnerable children hardest-hit in Mogadishu fighting

Photo: Abdullahi Salahi Salat/IRIN
Orphaned and vulnerable children are suffering the most in the ongoing conflict in Somalia (file photo)

MOGADISHU, – At only 14, Ali Hussein Sid is already the sole breadwinner of his family, his father having been killed in Somalia’s ongoing civil war and his mother seriously injured when a mortar landed on their home in the capital, Mogadishu.

As a shoe-shiner, Sid sometimes goes home empty-handed as customers are hard to come by in war-torn Mogadishu, where fighting between government troops and Islamist insurgents has been most intense in recent months.

“My family depends on what I make shining shoes in the city but sometimes I go back home without making a cent,” he told IRIN on 13 July. “I feel very alone when I am faced with a problem.”

The situation for orphaned and vulnerable children such as Sid is especially critical in Somalia as there is no government support and assistance for them.

The absence of a central government since the ousting of President Siad Barre in 1992 resulted in the collapse of the government’s support system for the vulnerable across the country.

Ahmed Dini, a civil society activist and member of Peace Line Group, a local NGO, said orphaned and vulnerable children had borne the brunt of Somalia’s 18-year civil war.

“A lot of the orphans and vulnerable children lost their parents in the ongoing violence,” Dini said. “They are among the people facing the hardest times in the whole country; in fact the most vulnerable people in the country now are the orphans as they were forced to flee from their homes yet they do not have fathers to be responsible for them.”

He said the numbers of children on the streets was continuing to rise as the conflict worsens.

Dini said the children just wanted a childhood. “When we talk to them, they want to go to school and play football. They basically want to be children.”

There is a new phenomenon of children taking care of other children “because both parents have died and there are no relatives to help”, Dini said.

He said the long civil war had eroded the social support network that sustained Somalis.

“The absence of [a] government structure is the greatest factor causing daily problems [for these children],” Dini said. “It would be good to get a strengthened institution that would care for young Somali orphans.”

Meanwhile, Sid continues to struggle to make ends meet in his home in Howl-Wadag district of Mogadishu.

“My father died last year and my mother was seriously injured when a heavy mortar landed on our old home,” Sid told IRIN. “No one cares about us. We need to go to school and we deserve to get our rights [just] as those children whose parents are alive.”

Sid appealed to the international community and Somalis in the diaspora to help orphaned and vulnerable children.

“I am requesting different relief organizations to assist us; my family and I are in a critical condition, we need help,” he said, adding that food and education were their most urgent needs.

yhh/js/ah/mw source.www.irinnews.org

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He ditched Kenya and now he is paying for it: No country wants him in competitions

Posted by African Press International on July 14, 2009

Konchella throws spanner in the works

By Mutwiri Mutuota

Yusuf Saad Kamel, the Kenyan-born Bahrain athlete who was keen to compete for his nation of birth after falling out with his adopted Gulf State, has erased all chances of ever running in Kenyan colours.

This follows his dramatic move to feature under Bahrain at last weeks Athletissima Meeting in Lausanne where Kamel ran 1:47.42 for ninth in the mens 800m despite protracted efforts of securing his release from the Middle East state almost drawing to conclusion.

Born Gregory Konchellah, the fifth finisher at Beijing Olympics had bitter fallout with Bahrain Athletics Association (BAA) at the end of last year over unpaid salaries and bonuses.

The 26-year-old then sought help from Athletics Kenya (AK) and Government as he launched the process of quitting Bahrain to regain his Kenyan citizenship.

Speaking to FeverPitch, AK announced they had formally abandoned efforts to secure Kamels release, effectively extinguishing any hopes the athlete harboured of competing under his country of birth.

“We have given up on him since we cant understand why he went ahead to compete before we concluded the process of bringing him back,” a disappointed AK chair, Isaiah Kiplagat said on Monday.

“We contacted IAAFs general secretary, Pierre Weiss who gave us the go ahead to write to Bahrain to release Gregory which we did and we were waiting for their response.

“Im not sure what arrangements Bahrain then made with him for Gregory to agree to compete for them,” he charged.

AK secretary, David Okeyo added: “We were surprised he ran in Lausanne meaning he was entered by Bahrain since clearance by a federation is needed for such events.”

When contacted, Kamels father and two-time world 800m champion, Billy Konchellah expressed astonishment at his sons apparent about turn on the affair.

Adopted country

“I dont know what is going on and I was very surprised he competed in Lausanne under Bahrain. There was no indication he would run for them again,” Konchellah said.

“I will try to establish with him why he competed for them. At the moment, he is not in the country,” he added.

Following his widely publicised denunciation of his adopted country, Bahrain withheld Kamels Kenyan passport early this year meaning he could not compete.

The dispute saw BAA and AK exchange harsh words as Kamel vied to compete for his country of birth alongside several other naturalised Kenyan runners who accused Bahrain of reneging on contracts and cheating them off their earnings.

Before he left the country a fortnight ago, Kamel intimated to FeverPitch his desire to compete for Kenya upon the release of his passport by Bahrain.

“Im training and aiming at securing a place in the World Championships squad,” Konchellah had said at the time.

source.standard.ke

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Former President of Kenya Daniel Arap Moi tells Kenyans not to dream that the US president Obama will put their problems on his number 1 list. He is Foreigner, Moi said

Posted by African Press International on July 14, 2009

Local solutions are the best, Moi tells Kenyans

By Karanja Njoroge

Former President Moi has told Kenyans not to rely on foreigners to solve their problems.

Moi criticised the obsession displayed by Kenyans during the recent tour of Ghana by US President Barrack Obama.

He said Kenyans should not deceive themselves that an outsider would be the cure for their troubles.

“You think an outsider will come and uplift your lives or save you from your problems? That is backward thinking,” he said.

Moi said some people were keenly following Obamas utterances thinking it would change their lives.

“Rais wa America akija Ghana watu wanauliza amesema nini? Unafikiri atakuja kuangalia vile mnavyokaa? (The US President goes to Ghana and everyone wants to know what he said. You think he will come here to check the way you live?)” the former President asked.

He was speaking in reference to Obamas first visit to sub-Saharan Africa as the US President.

Relying on foreigners

In his address in Ghana, Obama criticised Kenya, which is his fathers homeland.

Moi said solutions to most problems facing Africans could be found locally.

The former President said Kenyans should look up to God and use their knowledge to uplift their lives instead of relying on foreigners.

Moi said he was concerned that leaders were among those whining about problems facing the country.

“We go to school but we dont seem to understand the world instead we are all crying: from church leaders, MPs to the civil society,” Moi added.

He noted that people in other parts of the world know how to put the interests of their country first.

“Ghana which you are talking about has discovered oil or you heard not heard about it?” he asked.

The former Head of State was speaking on Sunday at African Inland Church in Morop Girls Secondary School in Rongai, Nakuru during the ordination service of Pastor Phillip Kipkemboi Rono.

Moi called on Christians to support pastors in their work by contributing generously towards their upkeep.

He said Christians should match their words by deeds.

“If our pastors children are in tatters the shame is on us as a congregation,” he said.

Obama in his speech in Ghana on Saturday, said with better governance, Africa holds the promise of a broader base for prosperity, since the continent is rich in natural resources.

He challenged Africans to take responsibility for their future and not blame colonialism for their woes.

source.standarad.ke

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