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Kenya
Monday, October 20, 2025
Home Blog Page 20

Govt Suspends NYOTA Verification Exercise After Raila’s Death

The government has postponed the national verification exercise for the Nyota project that was scheduled to take place on Friday, October 17, 2025, following the death of former Prime Minister Raila Odinga.

In a statement on Wednesday, MSME Principal Secretary Susan Mang’eni said the decision to postpone the exercise follows the untimely passing of the former Prime Minister and a Presidential Proclamation by President William Ruto declaring a national mourning period.

“The State Department for Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprises Development wishes to inform the public, all Principal Secretaries, elected leaders, all applicants of the Nyota project and other stakeholders, that the national verification exercise scheduled for Friday, 17th October 2025, across the 290 constituencies, has been postponed,” the statement read in part.

The PS added that the exercise, which was expected to draw the participation of Principal Secretaries, elected leaders, and National Government Administration Officers under the Whole-of-Government Approach, will resume on dates to be announced later.

“We join the Nation in mourning the loss of a great statesman and patriot who dedicated his life to the service, peace, unity, and progress of our beloved country,” she added.

Odinga had been receiving medical treatment abroad and suffered a cardiac arrest on Wednesday, according to the hospital in Kochi, India, where he passed away. He died at the age of 80.

He was for decades at the heart of Kenyan politics, striking alliances with former foes, serving a full term as Prime Minister, and inspiring lifelong loyalty from his base, particularly among fellow Luos in western Kenya and in the capital Nairobi.

The Nyota project, formally known as the National Youth Opportunities Towards Advancement programme, is a Sh5 billion joint initiative between the Government of Kenya and the World Bank. It aims to empower young people to start and grow their enterprises across all 1,450 wards in the country.

Each successful applicant is set to receive a Sh50,000 grant to kick-start their entrepreneurial ventures, targeting about 100,000 beneficiaries nationwide, with 70 drawn from every ward.

The programme is also expected to train 90,000 youth to gain job experience, certify 20,000 under recognition of prior learning, and equip another 600,000 with skills on Access to Government Procurement Opportunities (AGPO).

President Ruto earlier said the initiative is part of a broader agenda to create meaningful opportunities for the youth alongside other flagship projects such as affordable housing, digital jobs, and labour mobility.

“Nyota will empower the next generation of innovation drivers and expand enterprise,” the President said during the project’s rollout.

PS Mang’eni emphasised that the initiative is gender-inclusive, focusing on equitable participation and empowerment of both young men and women.

“We target to benefit young people in all wards. It is gender-inclusive, with emphasis on 50-50 gender parity,” she said, adding that the project will improve youth employability, support savings culture, and enhance access to markets.

Meanwhile, President Ruto has also suspended all public engagements to allow the nation to reflect on Odinga’s life and legacy.

Linus Kaikai Reveals Details of His Last Call with Raila Before His Death

Royal Media Services (RMS) Group Editorial Director Linus Kaikai has revealed details of his final phone conversation with the late ODM leader Raila Odinga just days before his passing.

Speaking on Wednesday, October 15, Kaikai disclosed that he had spoken with Raila on Sunday, October 13, describing the former Prime Minister as being in high spirits during their seven-minute exchange.

“Let me just say that this past Sunday, at 6:32 p.m., I spoke with Raila Odinga for seven minutes. I called to ask how he was doing, and I heard someone who was cheerful and completely normal, he even started asking me about matters of the country,” he said.

Kaikai went on to express the magnitude of the loss, describing the day as one of immense grief for the nation.

“It is a day of great sorrow, as we can see from the videos being aired. It is a very heavy day because when you look at the life of Raila Odinga, I don’t think there has been any political leader with as much influence as Raila. It is a sad death,” he added.

Raila passed away on Wednesday morning at the age of 80.

He reportedly suffered a cardiac arrest during a morning walk at an Ayurvedic treatment facility in Kerala’s Ernakulam district, India.

Raila was rushed to a private hospital in Koothattukulam, where doctors pronounced him dead at 7:22 a.m.

Former President Uhuru Kenyatta mourned Raila as a towering statesman and a personal friend, reflecting on their shared history, marked by rivalry, reconciliation, and unity of purpose. 

He said the news of Raila’s passing had left a deep void in the country and in his own heart.

“My heart is heavy, and my spirit is burdened with a grief that is both profound and deeply personal. The news of Raila’s passing has left a silence that echoes across our nation, a silence where once there was a voice of thunder and conviction,” he said.

Uhuru went on to describe Raila as a major influence in his personal and political life, acknowledging their complicated yet meaningful relationship over the years.

“To me, Raila was more than a political colleague; he was a defining part of my own journey, in public service and in life. Raila and I were navigators on opposing currents, charting different courses for the nation we both loved.

“At some point along that journey, we became political opponents and often, the weight of that competition felt immense,” he added.

Ranalo Foods Director Charged with Forgery and False Statements

By Andrew Kariuki 

Milimani Law Court has charged businesswoman Stella Anne Mutheu Osewe, a director at Ranalo Foods Dala Limited, with multiple counts of forgery and making false statements with intent to deceive.

Osewe, who appeared before the Milimani Law Courts on Tuesday, 15, October, 2025, faced twelve counts, including forgery, uttering false documents and making false statements by a company official contrary to the Penal Code.

According to the charge sheet, Osewe allegedly forged and submitted to the Director of Business Registration Services various documents;  including an affidavit, resignation letter, share transfer forms and board minutes, purporting that William Osewe Guda had resigned as a director and transferred his shares in Ranalo Foods Dala Limited.

The prosecution told the court that the documents, all dated August 1, 2022, were falsely made and knowingly submitted to facilitate fraudulent changes in company ownership and directorship.

She denied all the charges. The court granted her Ksh 500,000 bond with an alternative of Ksh 200,000 cash bail with a sureity of one contact person.

The prosecution listed William Osewe Guda, Edward Guda Osewe, Joseph Mwananchi Osewe and Zakayo Kimani Maina among key witnesses in the case.

The matter will be mentioned on October 29, 2025, for further directions.

US Supreme Court hears case that takes aim at Voting Rights Act

(Reuters) – The U.S. Supreme Courtheard arguments on Wednesday in a dispute over the composition of Louisiana electoral districts in a case that could imperil a key section of the Voting Rights Act, the landmark 1965 federal law enacted by Congress to prevent racial discrimination in voting.

A group of Black voters has appealed a lower court’s finding that a voting map that added a second Black-majority congressional district in Louisiana was guided too much by racial considerations in violation of the constitutional promise of equal protection under the law.

Louisiana, where Black people make up roughly a third of the population, has six U.S. House of Representatives districts. Black voters tend to support Democratic candidates.

The arguments were ongoing.

The Supreme Court has a 6-3 conservative majority. The case gives the conservative justices a chance to undercut a central element of the Voting Rights Act. The law’s Section 2 prohibits electoral maps that would result in diluting the clout of minority voters, even without direct proof of racist intent.

This provision gained greater significance as a bulwark against racial discrimination in voting after the Supreme Court, in a 2013 ruling authored by conservative Chief Justice John Roberts, gutted a different part of the same law.

Questions posed by some of the conservative justices during the arguments expressed concern about the application of this Voting Rights Act provision in this case to create a second Black-majority district.

“This court’s cases, in a variety of contexts, have said that race-based remedies are permissible for a period of time, sometimes for a long period of time – decades, in some cases – but that they should not be indefinite and should have an end point,” Justice Brett Kavanaugh told Janai Nelson, president of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund who was arguing on behalf of a group of Black voters.

Nelson told the justices that it would reckless to determine that Section 2 somehow is no longer needed simply because it has been so successful in combating discrimination.

The electoral map initially drawn by Louisiana’s Republican-controlled legislature, Nelson told the justices, had diluted Black voting power in favor of a map that would give the state’s white electorate “entrenched control.”

Nelson said that the legislature’s subsequent creation, following a judge’s ruling that the map with just one Black-majority congressional district likely harmed Black voters in violation of Section 2, of a second such district to remedy that discrimination and to ensure that Black Louisianans have an equal opportunity to participate in the process is constitutional. Nelson said this view was supported by a long line of earlier voting rights decisions from the Supreme Court.

Republicans currently hold a slim majority in the U.S. House. A decision invalidating Section 2 could allow Republicans to reconfigure as many as 19 House districts, according to a report by Democratic-affiliated advocacy groups Fair Fight Action and Black Voters Matter Fund.

REDISTRICTING PROCESS

In a process called redistricting, the boundaries of legislative districts across the United States are reconfigured every decade to reflect population changes as measured by the national census. Redistricting typically is carried out by state legislatures.

Conservative Justice Samuel Alito questioned Nelson about the degree to which state lawmakers are allowed to draw maps to favor their own political parties and protect politicians already in office, known in the U.S. system as incumbents.

Under the Supreme Court’s precedents, Alito asked, “isn’t seeking partisan advantage also an objective that a legislature may legitimately seek?” Nelson said that is not true if the partisan line-drawing “comes at the cost of the equal protection principle.”

After Louisiana’s Republican-controlled legislature adopted a map that included just one Black-majority district following the 2020 census, a group of Black Louisiana voters sued. A federal judge ruled in favor of the plaintiffs, deciding that the map likely harmed Black voters in violation of Section 2.

The state legislature responded by drawing a new map that added a second Black-majority district. This map prompted a separate lawsuit by 12 Louisiana voters who described themselves in court papers as “non-African American.” They argued that the second Black-majority district unlawfully reduced the influence of non-Black voters like them. White people make up a majority of Louisiana’s population.

The redrawn map relied too heavily on race in violation of the equal protection principle, a three-judge panel found in a 2-1 ruling, prompting the appeal to the Supreme Court.

Liberal Justice Elena Kagan tried to focus the arguments on the real-world impact of a decision gutting Section 2. Kagan asked Nelson: “Were Section 2 to cease to operate, in the way that you just described, to prevent vote dilution in districting, what could happen? What would the results on the ground be?”

“I think the results would be pretty catastrophic,” Nelson said.

The United States has racial diversity in political leadership “because of litigation that forced the creation” of Black-majority districts, Nelson said.

The Supreme Court hears arguments for the second time this year in the case. It also did so in March but then in June sidestepped a decision and ordered another round of arguments.

The state initially had appealed the three-judge panel’s ruling and argued in March on the same side as the Black voters. But it has now changed its stance and is urging the justices to forbid race-conscious map-drawing altogether.

Republican President Donald Trump‘s administration supports the challenge to the Voting Rights Act on separate legal grounds.

The Supreme Court has rolled back protections under the Voting Rights Act. Its 2013 ruling in a case involving Alabama’s Shelby County gutted a Voting Rights Act provision that had required states and locales with a history of racial discrimination to get federal approval to change voting laws.

The court, however, ruled 5-4 in 2023 that a Republican-drawn electoral map in Alabama violated Section 2, siding with Black voters who had challenged the map and had sought an additional Black-majority congressional district. Roberts and Kavanaugh joined the court’s three liberals to form a majority.

The Supreme Court is expected to rule by the end of June.

EU, Spain brush off Trump tariff threats over Madrid’s defence spending

(Reuters) – The European Commission and Spain’s government on Monday dismissed U.S. President Donald Trump’s latest threat to impose higher tariffs on Madrid over its refusal to meet his proposed NATO target for defence spending.

Trump said he was “very unhappy” with Spain for being the only country to reject the new spending objective of 5% of economic output, adding that he was mulling punishing the Mediterranean country. He had previously suggested making Spain “pay twice as much” in trade talks.

Trade policy falls under Brussels’ remit and the Commission would “respond appropriately, as we always do, to any measures taken against one or more of our member states,” Commission spokesperson Olof Gill said in a press briefing.

The trade deal between the European Union and the United States signed in July was the right platform to address any issues, Gill added.

WHAT DO SPAIN AND NATO SAY?

“The defence spending debate is not about increasing spending for the sake of increasing it, but about responding to real threats,” Spain’s Economy and Trade Ministry said in a statement. “We’re doing our part to develop the necessary capabilities and contribute to the collective defence of our allies.”

Spain has more than doubled nominal defence spending from 0.98% of gross domestic product in 2017 to 2% this year, equivalent to about 32.7 billion euros ($38 billion).

Defence Minister Margarita Robles said allies weren’t discussing the 5% target for 2035 in Wednesday’s meeting because they were prioritising the present situation in Ukraine, but wouldn’t completely rule out a shift in Spain’s position.

WHAT COULD WASHINGTON DO?

Targeted tariffs by the U.S. against individual EU member states are rare but there are precedents, Ignacio Garcia Bercero, a senior fellow at the Brussels-based economic think tank Bruegel, said.

In 1999, the U.S. hit the EU with 100% punitive tariffs on products such as chocolate, pork, onions and truffles in retaliation for an EU import ban on hormone-treated beef but excluded Britain, which at the time was still a member of the trade bloc.

The U.S. could impose anti-dumping penalties on European products that are mostly produced in Spain, said Juan Carlos Martinez Lazaro, professor at Madrid’s IE business school.

In 2018, Washington imposed a combination of duties of more than 30% on Spanish black table olives at the request of Californian olive growers. Spain’s share of the U.S. market plummeted from 49% in 2017 to 19% in 2024.

Another option would be moving the naval and air bases the U.S. has in southern Spain to Morocco – an idea floated, opens new tab by former Trump official Robert Greenway – which would damage the local economies through the loss of thousands of indirect jobs.

($1 = 0.8605 euros)

IMF says UK should not scrap twice-yearly economic forecasts

(Reuters) – Britain should not reduce the frequency of its twice-yearly economic forecasts, but a related assessment of the government’s compliance against budget rules should only take place once a year, the International Monetary Fund said on Wednesday.

The British government’s Office for Budget Responsibility currently produces twice-yearly economic and budget forecasts, but there had been some speculation that finance minister Rachel Reeves wanted to reduce them to once a year, to line up with her annual budget.

“The evaluation of compliance with fiscal rules should be annual. … Forecasting should take place twice a year in accordance with international best practice,” IMF fiscal affairs chief Vitor Gaspar said at a press conference.

Reeves has said before that she wants to have just one main budget event a year, but the narrow leeway she left to hit her fiscal goals after her first budget in October 2024 meant she was forced into corrective action in March.

Gaspar’s advice follows similar suggestions made by the IMF in a regular report on Britain’s economy in May.

Reeves is due to present her next annual budget to parliament on November 29, and earlier on Wednesday she acknowledged that she was looking at tax and spending measures.

Some economists expect her to have to raise taxes or make savings of up to 30 billion pounds ($40.1 billion), or 0.9% of national income, a year after a tax hike of 40 billion pounds – the biggest in more than 30 years – that Reeves hoped would wipe the slate clean.

Britain has the highest cost for new government borrowing among the world’s seven largest advanced economies.

Gaspar, who spoke during the IMF and World Bank annual meetings in Washington, said the IMF broadly backed Britain’s budget policy.

“Our view is that the plans that have been put forward by the UK Treasury strike a good balance between providing favourable conditions for growth … and safeguarding fiscal sustainability,” he said.

However, another IMF official, Athanasios Vamvakidis, said on Tuesday that UK-specific worries had played a role in pushing up British bond yields more than those of other countries.

“This is driven by a number of factors. Low productivity, sticky inflation. The market is asking for more details on the fiscal plans in the UK, so yields, as a result, are higher in the UK compared to other advanced economies,” he said.

($1 = 0.7484 pounds)

Singer Sia’s ex-husband demands $250,000 (Ksh32M) per month in spousal support

The estranged husband of Australian singer Sia has asked for more than $250,000 (£187,000; A$384,000) per month in spousal support, according to US court documents.

Best known for her hits including Chandelier and Titanium, the pop star – whose full name is Sia Furler – cited “irreconcilable differences” when she filed for divorce from Daniel Bernard in March.

In court documents, Bernard – a former doctor – said he needed the monthly allowance to maintain the “luxurious and upper-class lifestyle” he had enjoyed during the marriage.

He claimed he was “financially dependent on Sia” after he quit his job to run a short-lived medical business with her, the documents said.

In the court filings, Bernard said the couple, who married in December 2022 and have an 18-month-old son, had more than $400,000 in monthly expenses for private jets, holidays, high-end dining and several full-time staff members.

“We never needed to monitor our living expenses,” he wrote.

The 47-year-old said the temporary support order he is seeking was “necessary” because Sia, 49, was “the breadwinner in our marriage”.

A former radiation oncologist, Bernard also said he would need to complete several years of training and pass several rigorous exams before he could renew his certification and practice again.

He also requested additional payments to help cover legal costs and forensic accounting.

Sia’s agents have been contacted for comment.

At least 16 killed after fire breaks out in garment factory in Bangladesh

At least 16 people have died after a huge fire broke out at a garment factory in Bangladesh, with officials warning that the toll could rise.

Sixteen bodies have been recovered and would be handed to families after DNA testing, as they have been burnt beyond recognition, the fire service said.

Distraught relatives gathered outside the four-storey factory in Dhaka’s Mirpur area on Tuesday in search of their loved ones still missing.

The blaze, which broke out at the factory around midday, was extinguished after three hours. But an adjacent chemical warehouse continued to burn, authorities said.

Large fires are relatively common in densely populated Bangladesh, often due to lax safety standards and poor infrastructure. Hundreds of people have been killed in fires in recent years.

Up until 21:00 local time (15:00 GMT) on Tuesday, the fire at the chemical warehouse in Mirpurhad not been completely doused, media reports said.

Fire service officials have not ascertained which of the two buildings caught fire first.

According to eyewitnesses, the chemical warehouse stored bleaching powder, plastic and hydrogen peroxide, all of which can intensify fires. Plastic also releases toxic fumes when burned.

Most of the deaths were caused by toxic gas and the building’s roof door being locked, the fire service said.

Fire service director Mohammad Tajul Islam Chowdhury told local media the victims probably died “instantly” after inhaling “highly toxic gas”.

Police and military officers are still trying to locate the owners of the factory and the warehouse, Mr Chowdhury told reporters.

An investigation into whether the warehouse was operating legally was also ongoing, he added.

The fire service said that the chemical warehouse had no fire safety clearance or licence from their department.

Meanwhile, officials in northern Dhaka had confirmed that the warehouse had no occupancy certificate or licence to operate, local media reported.

Tearful family members stood outside the charred buildings, many of them clutching photographs of their missing relatives.

Among them is a man searching desperately for his daughter, Farzana Akhter.

“When I heard about the fire, I came running. But I still haven’t found her… I just want my daughter back,” he told Reuters news agency.

Bangladesh has a long history of deadly industrial disasters.

In 2021, a fire at a food and drink factory left at least 52 people dead and another 20 injured. The factory was built illegally and had no emergency exit, an investigation later found.

In 2019, a fast-moving fire swept through a historic district in Dhaka, killing at least 78 people, including members of a bridal party.

The country’s deadliest industrial accident to date took place in 2013, when the eight-storey Rana Plaza building housing garment factories near Dhaka collapsed owing to a structural failure, killing more than 1,100 people.

Madagascar coup leader Randrianirina says he will be sworn in as president

(Reuters) – Madagascar’s new military ruler Michael Randrianirina said on Wednesday he would soon be sworn in as president of the African island nation after a coup he led to oust President Andry Rajoelina.

Rajoelina, who was impeached by lawmakers after fleeing abroad at the weekend, has condemned the takeover and refused to step down despite Gen Z demonstrations demanding his resignation and widespread defections in the security forces.

Randrianirina has told Malagasy citizens that the military has taken power and dissolved all institutions except the lower house of parliament or National Assembly.

“We will be sworn in soon,” the army colonel told a press briefing on Wednesday, a day after the High Constitutional Court invited him to serve as president of the former French colony.

“We took responsibility yesterday.”

Two sources close to him earlier told Reuters he would be sworn in as president in the next day or two.

Randrianirina said on Tuesday that a committee led by the military would rule for up to two years alongside a transitional government before organising new elections.

Randrianirina was a commander in the elite CAPSAT army unit that played a key role in the 2009 coup that brought Rajoelina to power but broke ranks with him last week, urging soldiers not to fire on protesters.

Rajoelina fled Madagascar on Sunday aboard a French military plane, security sources told Reuters. He has said his life was at risk and is now believed to be in Dubai, according to three diplomatic and opposition sources.

The 51-year-old former DJ himself rose to power in a coup in 2009 on the back of youth protests, becoming the world’s youngest head of state at 34. But promises to improve living standards and eradicate corruption were never fulfilled.

Madagascar, where the average age is less than 20, has a population of about 30 million, three-quarters of whom live in poverty. Between its independence in 1960 and 2020, GDP per capita plunged 45%, according to the World Bank.

As well as the CAPSAT unit, the paramilitary gendarmerie and the police have also broken ranks with Rajoelina.

We knew death would come one day but not so soon – Junet mourns Raila’s death

Suna East MP Junet Mohamed has now said that even though they knew death would one day come for ODM Party Leader Raila Amolo Odinga, just like for any other human being, no one expected it to happen this soon.

Speaking when he rose on the floor of the National Assembly to contribute to a point of order on Wednesday, October 15, 2025, Junet mourned the late former Prime Minister, admitting that he has not yet come to terms with the devastating loss.

He described Raila’s passing as a deep personal blow, saying the ODM fraternity had lost more than a leader; they had lost a father figure and a source of inspiration.

“I am still coming to terms with what has happened. Some of us had a very deep relationship with our leader. We knew death would come one day, but we didn’t expect it now,” Junet said.

Junet, who served as Minority Leader in the 12th Parliament and a close confidant of the late ODM boss, spoke with visible emotion as he reflected on the moments he shared with Raila Odinga.

He said Raila’s mentorship, humility, and unshaken belief in justice had shaped the lives of many leaders across the political divide.

He added that Raila’s passing was a reminder of the inevitability of death, a fate that no one can escape regardless of their power or position.

“We knew death would one day visit us all, but it came too soon for our father, mentor, and friend. We have lost a man whose heart beat for Kenya,” Junet said.

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