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Kenya
Wednesday, October 15, 2025
Home Blog Page 1790

8-month pregnant woman among 2 from Kenya held at Mumbai airport with 32.79Kgs of gold

The Mumbai Airport Customs officials have seized 32.79 kilograms of gold valued at Rs 19.15 crore across two cases, officials informed on Monday.

The gold was found concealed in the inner-wear and baggage of two lady passengers of Kenyan nationality, who were later arrested by the agency.

According to the Customs sources, in the first case, one passenger who had arrived from Nairobi was intercepted and 28 pieces of gold melted bars valued at Rs 6.60 crores were found concealed in undergarments and baggage of the passenger. In the second case, one passenger who had arrived from Nairobi and 70 pieces of gold melted bars valued at Rs 12.54 crores were found concealed in her undergarments and baggage. Both the passengers were later placed under arrest. The Customs officials are now probing who had supplied gold to them and who was supposed to receive the said consignment.

During June 04 & 07, Airport Customs officials had seized over 7.80 kg gold & electronics valued at Rs. 5.54 crore & foreign currency valued at Rs 22 lakh across 18 cases.

The gold was found concealed in various forms like gold dust in wax, crude jewellery, gold concealed inside metallic rod, undergarments, in body and on the body of passengers.

The Mumbai Airport Customs, during May 31 & June 03 had seized over 15.30 Kg Gold valued at Rs. 9.72 crore & foreign currency valued at Rs 74 crore across 31 cases.

The gold was found concealed in various forms like gold dust in wax, crude jewellery, gold bars concealed in an ingenious way inside, in trolley, cardboard sheets, undergarments, in the rectum, and on the body of passengers.

M-PESA Foundation Medical Camp Impacts 3,000 Bungoma County Residents

More than 3,000 residents in Bungoma County benefited from a medical camp hosted by the M-PESA Foundation in partnership with Zuri Health and Lion SightFirst Eye Hospital at Posta Grounds.

The Foundation distributed 100 mama packs at Bungoma County Referral Hospital containing essentials for mothers and babies as part of its efforts to enhance maternal and child health.

In April this year, the Foundation began a fresh phase medical camps where it has invested KES 77 million targeting 12 counties. In the new phase, three medical camps have been organized in Nairobi, Siaya and Machakos counties where more than 10,000 people have benefitted from medical services.

“In the first phase of our medical camps, we realized the need to continue taking healthcare services closer to the people. In line with our purpose of transforming lives, we are investing in 12 more medical camps with a focus on non-communicable diseases, reproductive health advice and general health consultations” said Karen Basiye, Executive Director, M-PESA Foundation.

M-PESA Foundation launched its medical camp programme in Lamu County in May last year and held camps in Nairobi, Kakamega, Mombasa, Meru, Kisumu, Trans Nzoia, Narok, Nyandarua, Garissa, Kirinyaga and Machakos counties.

At the medical camps, Zuri Health provides technology solutions by offering patients free follow-up consultations with doctors via SMS and WhatsApp for up to six months.

CS Murkomen: Rebuilding of roads and bridges damaged by floods to cost Ksh.37.3B

Transport Cabinet Secretary Kipchumba Murkomen says that the country will need Sh37.3 billion to restore roads and bridges swept away by flash floods during the October to December El-Nino rains and the March-April-May long rains.

Murkomen made the announcement after a meeting with director generals of the four road agencies that is; Kungu Ndungu (Kenya National Highways Authority, KeNHA), George Kinoti (Kenya Urban Roads Authority, KURA), Philemon Kandie (Kenya Rural Roads Authority (KeRRA) and Rashid Mohamed (Kenya Roads Boards).

According to Murkomen, KeRRA will require Sh 18.5 billion to repair rural roads while KURA has requested Sh 9.1 billion for urban roads. A further Sh 9.7 billion has been put forward by KeNHA to restore damaged sections of major highways.

“The restoration of the damage to infrastructure has begun. Even in the absence of a budgetary allocation, the construction has begun using the meagre resources that were intended for the annual maintenance of the roads. We have started with the most critical roads where the road infrastructure was cut off and transport was hampered, especially of goods and people like the case of Gamba in Lamu and Madogo in Karisa,” said CS Murkomen.

He has also sounded an alarm over the biting cash shortage that may make it hard to keep contractors on site, adding that his ministry is involved in negotiations with parliament and the National Treasury for more resource allocation.

“We have been allocated in this financial year 43 billion shillings against an existing pending bill of 165 billion, meaning that we have a gap of over 120 billion shillings,” lamented the CS.

Further, Murkomen says that the government will enter an agreement with private players to toll some roads in a bid to raise revenue to bridge the deficit. Roads already marked for tolling include Mombasa-Nairobi road within the Northern Corridor and Nairobi-Nakuru Highway extending into Malaba.

The Cabinet Secretary has also urged counties to desist from issuing licences to traders operating along road reserves, and asked regional managers of the four roads agencies to ensure tha contractors deliver as per the terms of their tender awards to minimise damage on the roads.

Several JSS Teachers Sacked Just 2 Days After Calling off Strike

Several Junior secondary school JSS teachers who reported to work just two days after calling off their strike has been sacked by the Teachers service commission (TSC).

Based on the copies of letters of contract termination to these teachers, the commission indicated professional misconduct that led to the termination of the contract these new and young teachers.

The exact number of the teachers whose contract has been terminated has not however been established.

TSC released over 7000 show cause letters on the controversial current internship contract.

According to details, the TSC termination letters, were dated 6th June but the heads of primary schools received them on 10th, June 2024.

The letters indicated that TSC had taken a move to terminate the contract following the fact that the teachers engaged in professional misconduct.

“Reference is made to the show cause letter in which you were accorded an opportunity to explain the reasons why your engagement as an intern should not be terminated on account of professional misconduct. The commission has carefully considered your response and found the same to be unsatisfactory,” reads one of the letters.

Another one says: “The commission has noted that you failed and/or ignored to provide any reason for your absence from duty as required vide the afore-mentioned letter. In view of the above, the commission has decided to terminate your internship with effect from June 6, 2024.”

Among those who have received the letters is Omari Omari who since then has been serving as the spokesperson for JSS teachers in the fight for TSC to confirm all the JSS teachers.

According to Omari, after receiving the letter, he said that he went to the regional director to seek clarification, but he was told that the termination letter was final.

The teachers who are serving under internship in Junior secondary schools that are currently in primary schools have been crying out following a number of challenges they encounter in their daily routine.

Poor pay has been a major challenge, with these teachers saying that the Sh 17K they receive monthly is not enough to cater for their daily expenditures.

Most junior school interns have also been declining the current sorry state, in which they are compelled to handle subjects that they did not train while in college.

Lack of facilities including library and laboratories has been another challenges more especially for teachers handling science subjects.

South Africa’s new parliament to meet on Friday to elect President

South Africa’s newly elected parliament is to convene for the first time on Friday, authorities said, as political parties scramble to form a coalition after general elections produced no outright winner.

Lawmakers in the 400-seat National Assembly in Cape Town will be called to appoint a speaker and start the process of electing the country’s president — a task that could prove trickier than usual this year.

For the first time since the advent of democracy in 1994, President Cyril Ramaphosa’s African National Congress (ANC) lost its absolute parliamentary majority in the May 29 vote.

The party of late anti-apartheid leader Nelson Mandela won 40 percent of the vote — its lowest ever score — and now needs the backing of other parties to govern.

“The first sitting of the National Assembly shall be on Friday, 14 June 2024,” Chief Justice Raymond Zondo wrote in an order released on Monday to the media by the justice ministry.

The ANC has already indicated it wants to form a government of national unity with a broad group of opposition parties, ranging from the far right to the hard left.

The proposal met a cool reception from some last week, with the radical leftist Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) initially dismissing the idea of joining hands with rivals holding radically different political views, such as the centre-right Democratic Alliance (DA).

But talks continued over the weekend and the top leaders of some parties, including the DA, were holding internal discussions on Monday to decide a way forward.

In his weekly newsletter, Ramaphosa, who went into the election hoping to secure a second term, urged all groups to work together.

“As the country prepares for a new democratic administration, all parties need to work together to sustain the momentum of reform, growth and transformation,” he said.

“A stable and effective government committed to economic reform will enable us to build an inclusive and growing economy that benefits all South Africans.”

Zuma party alleges ‘Betrayal of electoral trust’
Not everyone was heeding the call.

Former president Jacob Zuma’s uMkhonto weSizwe (MK) party — which came third in the election, winning 14.6 percent of the vote and 58 seats — said it was to file a court appeal to prevent the new parliament from convening, pending a separate complaint over alleged election irregularities.

“Allowing the National Assembly to sit amidst such significant doubts on the legal validity of the election process would be a betrayal of the electorate’s trust,” said MK spokesman Nhlamulo Ndhlela.

As MK lawmakers vowed to boycott the session if it were to go ahead, parliament’s spokesman Moloto Mothapo said the body had “cancelled all arrangements for accommodation and flights” in Cape Town for them “to avoid incurring fruitless and wasteful expenditure”.

Last week, the ANC said it had “repeatedly” reached out to MK for coalition talks but received no response.

MK had earlier said it would not back an ANC-led government if Ramaphosa remained at the helm. But the ANC plans to keep him.

Zuma and Ramaphosa have been divided by a bitter rivalry ever since the former was ousted by his own party under a cloud of corruption allegations in 2018 and replaced by the latter.

The ANC will have 159 members in the National Assembly, down from 230 in 2019.

Together with the DA, which won 87 seats with a liberal, free-market agenda, it would hold a comfortable majority in parliament.

But the prospect has caused divisions within the ANC, as some see such a deal as being at odds with the party’s left-leaning traditions.

Any agreement with the EFF, which won 39 seats and supports land redistribution and the nationalisation of key economic sectors, would require the support of at least another party.

The ANC retains the respect of many South Africans for its leading role in overthrowing white-minority rule.

Its progressive social welfare and black economic empowerment policies are credited by supporters with helping millions of black families out of poverty.

But many voters deserted it at last month’s election amid widespread discontent at high unemployment, rampant crime, graft scandals and power shortages.

Kilifi North MP Owen Baya’s driver in ICU after grisly road accident

Kilifi North MP Owen Baya’s driver is fighting for his life after being involved in an accident on the Kilifi-Malindi Road near Roka.

Omar Keah, 38, was heading to Malindi airport to pick up the MP when the accident occurred at 7:30 p.m. He was driving the MP’s Mercedes S-Class. Kenneth Maina, police commander for Kilifi North Sub- County, confirmed the incident.

Maina stated that the MP’s driver rammed into a lorry that was heading in the same direction.

“The driver was driving towards Malindi. On reaching the scene of the accident, he bumped into a lorry while overtaking. The vehicle rolled several times and burst into flames. It was completely burnt,” he said.

According to Baya, he called the driver at 6 PM when he was boarding a plane in Nairobi.

“I was coming from Kisumu, so when I reached Nairobi, I called my driver to pick me up at Malindi airport. When I arrived in Malindi, I was informed that my driver was involved in an accident on his way to Malindi. He was rescued by good Samaritans who took him to Kilifi County Referral Hospital,” he said.

According to Baya, the car went up in flames after the driver was removed.

“He suffered a fracture on the right arm and is currently in the ICU. He is responding well to treatment,” he added.

Directline Insurance Shuts Down Operations

Directline Assurance, which commands the largest share of the Kenyan PSV insurance market, has abruptly ceased operations in a shocking development that has left the industry stunned.

In a statement aired on Monday night, Royal Credit Limited Chairman SK Macharia said the company had stopped offering services and terminated its staff contracts.

He added that all assets owned by Directline will be taken over by Royal Credit Limited.

Macharia attributed this move to the closure of all Directline Assurance bank accounts by the Insurance Regulatory Authority (IRA).

He also blamed the IRA for failing to take action against previous directors of Directline, whom he alleges caused the embezzlement of more than Sh7 billion belonging to the company.

As of June 30, 2023, Directline held Sh1.66 billion in gross premiums from commercial PSV covers, giving it a 60.79 per cent market share in this class of business, according to IRA data.

As a result of the closure, Directline has suspended all insurance services, leaving the transport industry in dismay given its status as the leading motor vehicle insurance provider in the country.

Directline entered the Kenyan market in November 2005 as a motor vehicle insurance company.

Gov’t to replace motorcycles for chiefs and their assistants with electric ones

The Government is phasing out more than 13,000 fuel-injected motorcycles being used by chiefs and their assistants with electric ones.

Internal Security and National Administration Principal Secretary Dr. Raymond Omollo said the move is aimed at improving mobility and efficient service delivery at locations and sub-location level.

Speaking at his Harambee House office today while launching the pilot project’s distribution of the first batch of 22 motorcycles, the PS said the initiative placed chiefs and their assistants at the centre of the fight against climate change in the grassroots.

“Besides mobilising wananchi at the location and sub-location levels to grow trees, the use of electric motorcycles by the administrators boosts our climate action efforts at the grassroots,” he said.

Dr. Omollo said the 22 motorcycles would benefit the administrators in Kajiado, Kiambu, Machakos and Nairobi.

More motorcycles will be distributed in the pilot project expected to take one month before a phased roll-out targeting all parts of the country.

“This Initiative, covering twenty-two locations within the four counties, aims to enhance the efficiency of NGAOs in the service delivery, solving the challenges of transport and supporting our commitment to eco-friendly and sustainable solutions,” said Dr. Omollo.

The PS said priority will be given to vast counties and remote areas facing security challenges for easy e-mobility of the officers.

There are 3,972 locations and 9,055 sub-locations in the country.

Dr. Omollo said police officers and other National Government Administration Officers (NGAOs) will in future be issued with electric vehicles for official use.

He noted that NGAOs did not have enough vehicles for field officers and motorcycles for chiefs and assistant chiefs and the acquisition would go a long way in enhancing their operations.

The PS said the officers will be trained on the use and maintenance of the electric motorcycles before being issued with them.

Refresher training will also be conducted from time to time on a need basis, he added.

Dr. omollo explained that the transition from fueled motorcycles will go a long way in the fight against air pollution, primarily due to the reduction in greenhouse gas emissions.

The PS encouraged the private sector to purchase the e-motors.

Homa Bay: Two suspects arrested for allegedly killing their employer

Police have arrested two men in relation to the murder of their boss in Kanyanjwa village, within Gem West Location, Rangwe constituency, Homa Bay County.

This was after the 45-year-old widow, identified as Sarah Achieng’ was on Thursday June 6, 2024 found lying lifeless in her house.

The two men are suspected of being involved in the murder of their boss, Sarah, who had employed them as shopkeepers and operators of a posho mill.

Confirming the incident, Kanyanjwa Sub Location Assistant Chief Kennedy Onyango said Achieng seemed to have suffered fatal injuries from blunt object. Her body had a visible deep cut on the head.

“There were blood stains on different surfaces of her house. The woman was attacked before being killed,” Onyango said.

Police apprehended the suspects on Sunday evening after doing thorough investigations.

According to the assistant chief, the two suspects had disappeared immediately after the incident.

Her body was discovered on Friday when residents visited her house to purchase household items. They suspected something was wrong when they found no one there to serve them.

Neighbors became suspicious upon noticing blood stains near the door.

In addition, Onyango mentioned that some neighbors reported hearing a commotion from the woman’s house before her death.

“The people who went to the house to buy items came and alerted others over the death. More residents went to the house and found the body lying in a pool of blood,” he added.

According to Rangwe Police Commander Magdalene Chebet, the woman died due to strangulation and assault.

“There are signs that the woman strangulated. Her head also had some cuts to show that she was slashed,” Chebet said.

Chebet added that the two suspects are being held at Rangwe police station as police continue with investigations.

“We want to know where the two men were when their employer was being killed. The suspects will as well tell us why they ran away after the incident yet they were supposed to report to their work,” Chebet stated.

The deceased’s body was moved to Homa Bay County Teaching and Referral Hospital mortuary.

Nigeria gunmen kill at least 25 in village raid, officials say

At least 25 people have been killed and others abducted by gunmen in Nigeria’s northwestern Katsina state, authorities say.

Dozens of gunmen on motorbikes stormed Yargoje in Kankara late on Sunday, the state commissioner for security affairs, Nasiru Babangida Mu’azu, told BBC Hausa.

Attacks by armed gangs – referred to locally as bandits – in north-west and central Nigeria have become almost routine, with authorities seemingly powerless to stop them, despite claims by the government and security forces that they are working to end the widespread insecurity.

Residents told the BBC that dozens of gunmen on motorbikes rode into the community, shooting indiscriminately and looting shops before abducting an unspecified number of villagers.

“The people killed by bandits are more than 50, because some dead bodies are still being recovered from the bush,” said a resident, who did not want to be named.

“They killed children, women and men, and kidnapped a huge amount of people. They injured more than 30 residents who are currently receiving treatment at the general hospital.”

Another resident, Abdullahi Yunusa Kankara, told Reuters that he narrowly escaped the onslaught, which he said continued into the early hours of Monday.

“Our town has turned into a death zone. Almost every house in the village has fallen victim to this attack. More dead bodies were recovered this [Monday] morning,” he said.

Surviving residents are trying to ascertain how many people have been abducted.

In December 2020, more than 300 pupils were kidnapped from a boys’ secondary boarding school on the outskirts of Kankara by a gang of gunmen on motorcycles. They were later freed, a week after the Katsina state government confirmed they were in talks with the kidnappers.

In March this year, dozens of passengers were kidnapped in a broad daylight attack also in the same area of Katsina, the state where former Nigerian president Muhammadu Buhari hails from.

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