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Saturday, October 18, 2025
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Huddah Monroe set to open own church in Kenya as she relocates from Dubai

Social media influencer, content creator, and owner of Rich Beauty, Huddah Monroe, announced that she will open her church when she comes back to Kenya.

The Dubai-based Kenyan socialite posted on her Instagram story that she is set to come back to Kenya in 2 years.

She said that upon her arrival she would open a church since the Holy Spirit summoned her.

Huddah had said, “The thought of moving back to Kenya permanently for 2 years is really eating me up because I sold my car thinking I will never live there again. But there is a God project that needs me to be still.

For those wondering I’m moving back in 2026 to open a church, the Holy Spirit called me to it,” part of her Instagram stories read as she announced the news to her over 2.4 million followers.

She went on to announces the desired name of her church as she announced that she’d be hiring upcoming preachers as opposed to the mainstream or trending ones.

“Huddah Ministries Prosperity Church. If you are an upcoming pastor or prophetess I will be hiring. Hold onto your Bible and study it,” added the former reality TV star.

The socialite who currently resides in Dubai she sent an invitation to Muslims as well, weird as it may be, letting them know that they were also welcomed in her ministries as she promised her Church would be a sanctuary that transforms lives and give all those in attendance peace.

“Muslims are also welcome to Huddah Prosperity Church, a place that gives you peace of mind and changes your life from 0-100

Huddah Prosperity Church slogan will be, ‘Transforming Lives,’ or it can be, ‘Bringing The Youths Back to God and His Teachings… we shall brainstorm,”

Finishing up her posts, she shared a motivational quote highlighting that she had found her purpose in life while urging others to soul search as well.

“The greatest tragedy in life is not death but life without a purpose,” the last of her Insta stories, in relation to her ministries read.

Djokovic undergoes successful knee surgery after withdrawing from French Open

Novak Djokovic underwent surgery on his knee, the world No 1 said on Thursday, after he was forced to pull out of the French Open with an injury that could threaten his Wimbledon and Olympic chances.

The injury, sustained in his fourth-round win over Francisco Cerundolo, ended the Serb’s quest to win a record-extending 25th Grand Slam trophy and will result in him losing his top ranking to Italian Jannik Sinner on Monday.

The French Open said MRI results revealed that Djokovic, who played on with pain-killers, had suffered a torn medial meniscus that prompted him to take the decision.

“In the past day, I had to make some tough decisions after sustaining a meniscus tear during my last match. I’m still processing it all but I am happy to update you that the surgery went well,” Djokovic said in a post on Instagram.

“I am so appreciative of the team of doctors who have been by my side, as well as the overwhelming support I have received from my fans.

“I’m going to do my best to be healthy and fit to return to the court as soon as possible. My love for this sport is strong and the desire to compete at the highest level is what keeps me going.”

Wimbledon, which Djokovic has won seven times, will take place from July 1-14, while the men’s singles tennis tournament at the Paris Olympics is scheduled for July 27-August 4.

Djokovic’s injury was the latest in a series of unfortunate events for the 37-year-old, who won three out of the four majors last year but has looked off the pace this season.

He has not won a title in 2024 and suffered a semifinal defeat by eventual winner Jannik Sinner at the Australian Open in January.

Tudor quits Lazio after just three months in charge

Croatian coach Igor Tudor has ended his contract with Lazio after just three months in the job, the Serie A club announced on Thursday.

Under Tudor, who took over from Maurizio Sarri in mid-March, Lazio have suffered just one league defeat, winning five and drawing three.

They finished seventh in Serie A and secured the last qualifying place for Europe.

“Igor Tudor has resigned as first-team coach,” the club said in a statement released on Wednesday night.

“The club thanks him for the work he has done and wishes him all the best in his personal and professional life.”

According to the Italian press, which had forecast Tudor’s departure earlier on Wednesday, the former Juventus player was at odds with his bosses over the composition of the current squad and his transfer targets.

In particular, the 46-year-old Croat, who left Marseille after just one season in June 2023, no longer wanted Frenchman Matteo Guendouzi in his squad.

Lazio, however, are keen to keep him after a successful first season since his departure from Marseille, where Tudor had relegated him to the substitutes’ bench.

According to Gazzetta dello Sport, Lazio are keen to replace Tudor with Marco Baroni, who is currently at Verona.

They are also interested in their former player Sergio Conceicao who has just left Porto and was previously tipped to join Marseille.

The off-season will see a major shake-up among Serie A coaches with as many as 11 of the 20 clubs expected to change.

Napoli recruited former Italy coach Antonio Conte on Wednesday, while Juventus and AC Milan are expected to appoint Thiago Motta, formerly of Bologna, and Paulo Fonseca, who left Lille on Wednesday, respectively in the coming days.

Argentina’s Martinez ready ‘to fight’ Villa to play in Olympics

Argentina goalkeeper Emiliano Martinez says he is ready to “fight” with his club Aston Villa over being able to feature at this year’s Olympic Games.

Clubs are not obliged to release players for the Olympic football tournament held in France between July 24-August 9 with the new Premier League campaign beginning on August 17.

Martinez, 31, hopes to be included as one of three players aged more than 23 to be selected in the Argentina squad.

“I always put Argentina first, and if I have to fight with my club then I will do so,” Martinez told TycSports on Wednesday.

“The most important thing for me is the Copa America then the Olympic Games. My dream is to win the gold medal.

“I want to play in the Olympic Games but it doesn’t depend on just me,” the 2022 World Cup winner added.

Inter Miami’s Lionel Messi is also a possible inclusion in the squad as he holds talks with Javier Mascherano who is the coach of Argentina’s Olympic side.

Maddison, Jones cut from England’s Euro 2024 squad

James Maddison and Curtis Jones will not be included in England manager Gareth Southgate’s final squad for Euro 2024.

Tottenham playmaker Maddison and Liverpool midfielder Jones were called up to the provisional 33-man selection.

Liverpool centre-back Jarell Quansah is also expected to be one of the seven players to be cut from the squad when the final 26 for the tournament in Germany is announced on Saturday.

Maddison played in England’s friendly against Bosnia-Herzegovina on Monday, coming off the bench in the 3-0 win at St James’ Park, while the uncapped Jones and Quansah did not feature.

Jones and Maddison have left the England camp prior to the team’s last warm-up friendly against Iceland at Wembley on Friday.

Former Leicester player Maddison has seven senior England caps and was part of Southgate’s squad for the 2022 World Cup, although he did not make an appearance in Qatar.

The 27-year-old joined Tottenham in a £40m move from the Foxes last summer but endured an inconsistent season after a strong start was disrupted by injury.

One person not ruled out is Manchester United left-back Luke Shaw, who returned to training on Wednesday after a long injury lay-off.

England start their Euro 2024 campaign with a Group C game against Serbia in Gelsenkirchen on 16 June, before games against Denmark on 20 June and Slovenia on 25 June.

Kenya 7s awarded Ksh 5.7M after World SVNs Series promotion

The Kenya National Rugby Sevens team, Shujaa, has been awarded Sh5.7 million by Sports Cabinet Secretary Ababu Namwamba.

On Wednesday evening, June 5, the CS presented Shujaa with a cheque during a dinner at the Weston Hotel, Nairobi, following their return to the HSBC World Rugby series.

While presenting the team with the cheque, Namwamba noted that Shujaa’s success was a result of a combined effort and incredible investment.

“This performance and milestone is not an accident but a result of true efforts, incredible investment, and difficult decisions made progressively.” Namwamba said.

He further acknowledged the individual sacrifices of the players, citing that they were made by a fairly young squad and that the success of the team was in line with the government’s Talanta Hela agenda of having a pipeline that will continuously feed national teams.

Shujaa made a great comeback to the World Series on Sunday, June 2, after being relegated last year. Before the relegation, the team had been in the series for a period of 19 years.

Shujaa returned to the series after thumping Germany 33-15 in a relegation-promotion playoff match held in Madrid, Spain.

Kenya Sevens has previously been a heavyweight in the challenger series, and its focus now will turn to the Olympic Games in Paris, which will kick off on July 26.

Shujaa trounced South Africa last year in September to lift the Africa Rugby Sevens title and earn their Olympics ticket.

Toyota Apologises For Cheating In Safety Tests, Halts Shipment Of Fielder, Axio Models

A safety test scandal at Japanese automakers widened on Monday, with Toyota Motor and Mazda both halting shipments of some vehicles after Japan’s transport ministry found irregularities in applications to certify certain models.

The irregularities were also found in applications from Honda, Suzuki and Yamaha Motor, the ministry said. The automakers were found to have submitted incorrect or manipulated test data when they applied for certification of the vehicles.

The ministry ordered Toyota, Mazda and Yamaha to suspend shipments of some vehicles. It said it will conduct an on-site inspection at Toyota’s central Aichi prefecture headquarters on Tuesday.

The latest revelations came after the ministry requested automakers in late January to investigate certification applications following a safety test scandal at Toyota’s Daihatsu compact car unit that emerged last year.

Monday’s developments are also likely to heighten focus on Toyota’s annual general meeting later this month. Influential proxy advisory firms Institutional Shareholder Services and Glass Lewis have recommended shareholders vote against re-electing Akio Toyoda as chairman at the meeting.

In a report to shareholders, ISS singled out the “spate of certification irregularities” at the Toyota Group.

“As the person in charge of the Toyota Group, I would like to sincerely apologise to our customers, to car fans, and all stakeholders for this,” Toyoda, the grandson of the automaker’s founder and its former chief executive, told a press conference.

He said the cars did not go through the correct certification process before being sold. The world’s biggest automaker by volume said it temporarily halted shipments and sales of three car models made in Japan.

The scandals at the automakers are proving to be a sore point for the government, which has otherwise earned praise from investors and executives for its corporate reforms. Yoshimasa Hayashi, Japan’s top government spokesperson, called the misconduct “regrettable”.

SHARES FALL

Toyota said its wrongdoing occurred during six different tests conducted in 2014, 2015, and 2020. Affected vehicles were three production models – the Corolla Fielder, Corolla Axio and Yaris Cross – and discontinued versions of four popular models, including one sold under the Lexus luxury brand.

In one example, it had measured collision damage on one side of a model’s bonnet while it was required to do so on both sides.

In other instances, it said it conducted certain tests through development testing under more strict conditions than those set out by the ministry that did not meet the government’s requirements.

Toyota said it is still investigating issues related to vehicle fuel efficiency and emissions, and aimed to complete that inquiry by the end of June.

It added there were no performance issues that violated regulations and customers did not need to stop using their cars.

Toyota shares closed down 1.8%, underperforming a 0.9% gain in the broad Topix (.TOPX), opens new tab index.

Mazda suspended shipments of its Roadster RF sports car and the Mazda2 hatchback from Thursday last week after finding workers had modified engine control software test results, it said in a statement.

It also found crash tests of the Atenza and Axela models, which are no longer in production, had been tampered with by using a timer to set off airbags during some frontal collision tests, instead of relying on an on-board sensor to detect a hit.

Mazda shares fell 3.3%.

Yamaha said it had halted shipments of a sports motorcycle.

Honda said it had found wrongdoing in noise and output tests over a period of more than eight years to October 2017 on some two dozen models that are no longer being produced.

Uber and Bolt threaten to leave Kenya over new taxes

Digital taxi companies Uber and Bolt have warned that they could be forced to exit the Kenyan market due to rising operational costs.

Appearing before the National Assembly Finance and Planning Committee on Wednesday, June 5, 2024, the two companies argued that the Finance Bill 2024, if adopted as is, would push them out of the market.

Uber and Bolt challenged the 6 per cent Significant Economic Presence (SEP) tax proposed by the National Treasury targeting non-resident firms.

The tax hopes to rope in multinational companies trading in Kenya whether or not they have a physical presence in the country.

The law requires all foreign companies with digital operations in Kenya to pay the tax.

“Non-resident companies currently pay a 16 per cent Value Added Tax (VAT) with no opportunity to deduct input VAT. They also pay 1.5 a per cent Digital Service Tax (DST), giving an effective tax rate of 17.5 per cent on gross turnover, not profit,” Bolt’s Public Policy Manager George Abasy said.

The official termed the tax as unfair to multinationals operating in the country. He argued that SEP is similar to the 3 per cent turnover tax paid by the companies.

Bolt and Uber told parliament to amend the clause that sought to introduce withholding tax on payments made on digital platforms. They also want SEP deleted and the rate retained at 1.5 per cent.

“The withholding should be by platform owners who make payments to platform users, not platform owners who facilitate payment,” Uber’s Tax Manager in Africa Chizoba Nnonyelu said.

SEP seeks to replace DST, where digital service providers pay 1.5 per cent of the gross transactional value and 16 per cent VAT.

Act of faith: Kenya enlists evangelical pastors to guide Haiti mission

In the months leading up to Kenya’s deployment of police officers to Haiti, President William Ruto consulted political advisers, security officials and foreign leaders on the high-profile anti-gang mission.

He also turned to less conventional counselors: a circle of Christian evangelical pastors close to him and his wife.

The pastors made recommendations to Ruto and served as a conduit between Haitian communities and the president, according to interviews with two of the pastors and three Haitian and American evangelical leaders.

Spokespeople for President Ruto and his wife Rachel did not respond to requests for comment for this story.

The pastors’ efforts ahead of the deployment, which will begin later this month, include meetings with Haitians in the United States, as well as evangelical colleagues, U.S. government officials and even Haiti’s most notorious gang leader, Jimmy “Barbecue” Cherizier.

“We believe that we are an instrument that God will use to help,” said Serge Musasilwa, an evangelical pastor in Kenya involved in the initiative. Musasilwa, a sociologist by training, said he has worked on conflict resolution in his native country, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and in several other African countries.

People involved in the initiative say the relationships built with Haitian communities will help the Kenyan-led multinational force avoid the mistakes of foreign interventions in Haiti in recent decades.

These missions not only failed to stabilize Haiti, but also left behind legacies of human rights abuses and disease, the most infamous of which would be a cholera outbreak allegedly introduced by Nepalese UN peacekeepers in 2010.

A UN-appointed panel concluded that a peacekeeping camp was the likely source of the cholera epidemic, which killed about 10,000 Haitians. The UN has not accepted legal responsibility.

“The more connected you are to the population, the better you can shape the kind of intervention you will lead,” said Daniel Jean-Louis, the president of the Baptist Mission in Haiti, who has worked with the Kenyan pastors.

“This is one of the reasons why all previous missions have failed.”

The UN has said it left the country relatively stable when a 13-year peacekeeping mission withdrew from Haiti in 2017. A UN peacekeeping spokesman said the mission had worked closely with civil society and community organizations to reduce violence and improve municipal governance. .

Not everyone is convinced of the strategy of the Kenyan preachers. Evangelicals themselves have a complex history in Haiti, where they have poured resources into humanitarian projects but also faced criticism for ethical scandals, including alleged child trafficking by some missionaries after a devastating earthquake in 2010, and for preaching intolerance toward of local spiritual practices.

Pierre Espérance, executive director of the National Human Rights Defense Network in Haiti, said Kenya must stick to its security mandate, calling the aid to gang leaders an insult to their victims.

“It is not a matter of the gospel (or) praying with gangs that will solve problems,” he told Reuters.

‘Faith diplomacy’

Ruto and his wife express their faith very publicly. They have involved evangelical leaders in state affairs, including through the First Lady’s “faith diplomacy” program, which enlists religious leaders to support social initiatives.

During a March meeting with evangelical pastors at Nairobi’s Weston Hotel, Rachel Ruto attended a separate event in the same building and explained that the group was working on a “spiritual solution” for Haiti.

“We cannot allow our police to go to Haiti without a prayer,” she said, according to the video The star newspaper.

The pastors’ close involvement in Haiti policy provides some insight into President Ruto’s commitment to the mission, which has remained steadfast despite repeated delays and vocal opposition from many prominent Kenyans.

Evangelicals have long taken an interest in Haiti because of the scale of its humanitarian crisis and concerns about traditional Vodou beliefs that some consider satanic. Haiti is the least developed country in the Western Hemisphere, according to the UN, and is facing rising gang violence, with more than 1,500 people killed in the first three months of this year.

“I think it’s primarily an expression of their faith,” said Pete Inman, an American businessman and evangelical close to the Rutos. He added that there was also a strategic motivation for the mission as it strengthened ties with the US, the main funder of the mission.

In public remarks, the president has noted a moral responsibility to Haiti’s people of African descent.

Inman said he linked Musasilwa to Fred Eppright, who heads the US chapter of the Haiti Baptist Mission, after Ruto announced the mission.

Musasilwa visited Eppright in Austin, Texas, late last year and then invited him and several of his colleagues to Nairobi in March, the two men said.

There, for four days at the swanky Weston Hotel, Jean-Louis, Eppright and two other American evangelicals prayed and strategized with four Kenyan pastors before being joined on the final day by Rachel Ruto.

“It was a four-day deep dive into how they would approach engagement,” Eppright said.

The group drafted a white paper that Rachel Ruto presented to her husband a few days later, he said. Jean-Louis said the proposals covered four topics: law and order, the humanitarian situation, political leadership and a spiritual component.

The following month, Rachel Ruto and three of the pastors traveled to Austin and Miami, where they met with evangelicals, members of the Haitian diaspora and police leaders.

Members of the Haitian diaspora submitted proposals to be submitted to President Ruto, covering everything from the legal authority for the mission to its duration, Jean-Louis said. Reuters was unable to determine whether their recommendations had been delivered to the president.

Spiritual problems

While in the United States, the Kenyan pastors held a Zoom call with Haitian gang leaders, including Barbecue, a former police officer who says he heads an alliance of major gangs called Viv Ansanm.

Musasilwa led the conversation. He declined to go into details, but it did give him hope that the conflict could be resolved peacefully, he said.

“This man may be a devil, but there is something we can build on,” Musasilwa added.

Reuters could not reach Barbecue for comment.

Musasilwa said he also met with officials from the US State Department. The Foreign Ministry declined to comment.

For all their attention to the practical aspects of the deployment, Musasilwa and another pastor, Julius Suubi, said they were convinced that Haiti’s problems were primarily spiritual.

According to government figures, about 2% of Haitians identify as followers of Vodou, which combines belief in a single god and the worship of spirits.

Many more people practice Vodout traditions alongside other religions, says Kyrah Malika Daniels, assistant professor of African American studies at Emory University in Atlanta.

In March, Kenyan pastors launched a global prayer campaign for Haiti and created a 134-page, 40-day prayer guide. Several prayers of the day focus specifically on Vodou, which they referred to with an alternate spelling.

“We ask You, Father, to utterly destroy every Voodoo curse of death we have,” says one.

Hunter Biden used crack cocaine ‘every 20 minutes or so’, court hears

Hunter Biden’s ex-girlfriend has told a jury he was abusing crack cocaine “every 20 minutes or so” when they first met.

The US president’s son is on trial in Wilmington, Delaware, on charges related to his possession of a firearm while allegedly using narcotics.

Zoe Kestan, who met Mr Biden, 54, during a “private dance” at a “gentleman’s club” in New York, told the court he was often withdrawing cash for drug deals.

It is the first criminal trial for the son of a sitting US president.

He is accused of knowingly lying on federal paperwork when he said he was not a drug user in order to buy a revolver and ammunition from a Wilmington gun shop on 12 October 2018, as well as illegally having the gun for 11 days.

Mr Biden could face up to 25 years in prison if found guilty of all three federal counts in the case.

He has pleaded not guilty and his legal team says he was in recovery at the time he bought the weapon.

The prosecution is expected to rest its case on Thursday after calling on another six witnesses, including Hallie Biden, Mr Biden’s former partner and the widow of his brother, as well as Delaware state police officers, a DEA agent and a forensic expert.

Among the other prosecution witnesses was Gordon Cleveland, the former employee of the gun store who sold Mr Biden the gun in 2018.

In his testimony on Wednesday, Mr Cleveland said he told Mr Biden – and all other customers – to “truthfully” fill out the form.

The prosecution is trying to prove that Hunter Biden, who wrote a memoir about his drug addiction, was abusing crack cocaine at the time he bought the weapon.

During opening remarks earlier this week, Mr Biden’s attorney, Abbe Lowell, told jurors that the revolver was an impulse buy stemming from the tactics of a pushy salesman – Mr Cleveland.

In his testimony, Mr Cleveland acknowledged his reputation as a “whale hunter” known for being able to “sell whatever you had”, mostly expensive, high-quality guns.

He denied, however, ever trying to “upsell” Mr Biden, who he claimed had come into the store and “brought up” buying a gun, specifically a revolver.

On Wednesday, the defendant’s stepmother, US first lady Jill Biden, was again in court.

She sat in the first row behind Hunter Biden, along with his wife, Melissa Cohen Biden, and a Secret Service agent.

President Joe Biden is in France for events commemorating the 80th anniversary of the D-Day invasion.

FBI agent Erika Jensen, Ms Kestan, and the defendant’s ex-wife, Kathleen Buhle, also testified on the third day of the trial.

Ms Kestan detailed Hunter Biden’s drug use during their relationship.

On the first day they met at the gentleman’s club in December 2017, she said he started smoking crack “within 10 minutes”.

She said she saw this pattern repeated during their relationship in luxury hotel rooms in New York, New Jersey and California.

She said Mr Biden “would want to smoke as soon as he woke up”.

Ms Kestan also testified that she saw him smoking crack in Malibu, California, over several days in September 2018, a month before he bought the gun.

Prosecutors showed the jury images allegedly taken by Ms Kestan showing crack pipes in the rooms she stayed in with Hunter Biden.

Another apparently showed the defendant in a bath with a crack pipe in his hand.

Ms Buhle, who was married to Mr Biden between 1993 and 2017 and has three daughters with him, testified that she first learned of his drug use in 2015 after finding a crack pipe in an ashtray.

She also said he was “not himself” when he used drugs and would become “short tempered”. At the end of their marriage, she testified that “he didn’t want to go to rehab”.

But when asked by Mr Lowell whether she had seen the defendant use drugs in 2018, she said: “No.”

Earlier in the day, FBI agent Ms Jensen testified about text messages that were found on a laptop left by Mr Biden at a Delaware repair shop and never retrieved.

The day after the gun purchase he texted his then-girlfriend, Hallie Biden – the widow of his late brother, Beau Biden – that he was “sleeping on a car smoking crack on 4th street and Rodney”.

“There’s my truth,” he added in another text.

Mr Biden’s lawyers explained the texts by suggesting that their client had been lying to avoid seeing Hallie Biden.

On Thursday, the jury is expected to hear during the trial how Hallie Biden also became addicted to crack cocaine during her brief relationship with Mr Biden after her husband Beau’s death in 2015.

She took the gun from Hunter Biden and threw it in a grocery store bin 11 days after he bought it, concerned about what he might do with the weapon.

The laptop at the centre of the testimony became a political grenade during the 2020 election campaign as its explicit images of Hunter Biden and messages about his business activities were leaked.

Joe Biden claimed at the time that the data was Russian disinformation, but the laptop has since been confirmed as genuine by the FBI.

The Bidens have denied any wrongdoing in overseas business dealings, which are the focus of an ongoing Republican impeachment investigation.

Hunter Biden also faces a trial in California in September on charges of failing to pay $1.4m in taxes.

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