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Sunday, April 26, 2026
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Vandals Destroy SGR Fence In Kajiado East

Residents of Tuala in Kajiado East are concerned over the continued vandalism of the Standard Gauge Railway (SGR) in the area.

According to the residents, scrap metal business operators are destroying the railway and selling the material as scrap metal.

The area senior chief, Wilson Kaloi, revealed that scrap metal business has become a threat in the area, because scrap metal traders not only destroy the SGR but also destroy residents’ fences.

“Since last week, reports of stolen fencing wires have been recorded, the latest case was the vandalism of SGR in Tuala. The robbers vandalised close to 200 metres of wire along the SGR, and the matter is under investigation,” revealed Kaloi.

Kaloi further noted that the lifting of scrap metal businesses has increased metal theft.

“When scrap metal business was banned, there were no metal theft cases. However, with the lift of the ban and the business running all over, metal theft cases have increased,’’ said Kaloi.

John Lawrence, a resident, said that the thieves target anything that is metallic, including metallic basins, sufurias, as long as they can sell it. He pleaded with the government to ban the business, as it was the only solution to the problem.

“I reside next to the railway; it has been vandalised and its metals stolen. We have reported the cases to the police; some suspects have been arrested and others set free, but the only solution is for the business to be banned, if possible,” said Lawrence.

State Suspends All Mining Operations In Migori

The government has stopped all mining operations in Migori County and urged machine operators and artisanal miners to obtain proper legal licences.

Migori County Commissioner David Gitonga and Regional Mining Director Joseph Boiwo collaborated in a joint operation across Nyatike and Kuria Sub Counties.

Their focus was on ensuring compliance with mining regulations. Those miners whose licenses had expired or who lacked proper licenses were instructed to obtain new ones. Additionally, immediate suspension of leaching processes was mandated.

The County Commissioner emphasized the necessity of adhering to constitutional regulations for the oversight of mining activities. He lamented the fact that a significant number of miners continued to operate without legal authorization.

Gitonga expressed that the government’s revenue generation and the miners’ protection from exploitative cartels depended on the establishment of a regulatory framework. He underlined the importance of maintaining compliance through proper regulation.

“Despite being informed about the need to obtain legal mining licenses, there are still miners and artisans operating unlawfully. To ensure adherence, we deemed it necessary to conduct a raid on illegal mining activities,” Gitonga explained.

Recent events led to the suspension of gold extraction at the Komire barrow site, which coincided with the ongoing construction of the Kisii-Isebania highway.

This discovery had prompted residents of Rongo to rush for valuable gold stones along the highway, resulting in the interruption of road construction.

Kenya, USAID Forge Partnership to Improve Health Care

A strategic relationship has been established between the Kenyan government and USAID to improve healthcare.

Primary Care Networks (PCNs) for publicly funded healthcare were the topic of discussions between Principal Secretary Mary Muthoni Muriuki and a group from USAID led by John Kuehnle.

This is consistent with Kenya’s Bottom-Up Economic Transformation Agenda and USAID’s Primary Impact Initiative.

The partnership intends to advance the Universal Health Coverage (UHC) agenda by placing an emphasis on readily available, high-quality healthcare.

The USAID team, including Ms. Heidi O’bra and Dr. Wangui Muthigani, expressed dedication to impactful healthcare solutions.

Ministry of Environment to Partner With Israeli Company to Improve Meteorological Forecasts

The Ministry is committed to strengthening the Kenya Meteorological Department’s capabilities in order to improve its early warning systems and deliver timely and accurate meteorological predictions.

A Kenyan delegation led by Eng Festus K. Ng’eno, principal secretary for environment and climate change, had talks with representatives of the Israeli climate technology business Tomorrow.io under the direction of co-founder Mr. Rei Goffer.

Space technology plays a significant role in addressing the climate crisis by providing valuable data, enhancing monitoring capabilities, and providing solutions to better understand and mitigate environmental challenges

Tomorrow.io offers sophisticated weather forecasting services that deliver vital weather information, such as real-time and extremely local weather data.

The technology behind Tomorrow.io is ready to offer minute-by-minute forecasts, severe weather alerts, and details on things like thunderstorms, hurricanes, and other potentially dangerous scenarios.

These services are especially beneficial for sectors like transportation, agriculture, energy, and disaster management where quick and accurate meteorological information is essential for making wise decisions and guaranteeing safety.

‘I Miss The Sun,’ Says Journalist Detained In China

Jailed Australian journalist Cheng Lei yearns for her children and the country’s “psychedelic sunsets”, she said in a rare public letter marking three years since her mysterious arrest in China.

Cheng describes her bleak prison conditions in a candid note dictated to Australian officials from her cell, casting new light on a long-running point of friction between Canberra and Beijing.

“I miss the sun,” reads the message, described as a “love letter” to Australia.

“In my cell, the sunlight shines through the window but I can stand in it for only 10 hours a year.”

The former anchor for Chinese state broadcaster CGTN was arrested in 2020, and has been formally charged with “supplying state secrets overseas” — though no further details have been supplied.

Her message was shared with Australian news outlets and on the social media platform X by Cheng’s partner, Nick Coyle, on Thursday evening.

Cheng was detained at a time of rising tensions between China and Australia, with some questioning whether political manoeuvring played a part in her arrest.

Her case is often compared with that of Chinese-born Australian writer Yang Jun, who has been detained in China since 2019 on vaguely defined espionage charges.

Although the relationship between Canberra and Beijing has warmed in recent months — with China dismantling a series of hefty trade tariffs — Cheng’s imprisonment remains a point of stress in the relationship.

Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong said the entire country wanted to see Cheng “reunited with her children”.

“Australia has consistently advocated for Ms Cheng, and asked that basic standards of justice, procedural fairness and humane treatment to be met in accordance with international norms,” she said Friday in a statement.

“We will continue to support Ms Cheng and her family and to advocate for Ms Cheng’s interests and wellbeing.”

Last year, Coyle said he had serious concerns about a “range of health issues” Cheng faced behind bars.

– ‘Miss my children’ –

In the poignant message, the mother of two said she had not seen a tree in three years and spoke of her longing for Australia’s bushwalks, beaches and “psychedelic sunsets”.

She said her bedding in jail was only taken out to air once a year.

“It is the Chinese in me that has probably gone beyond the legal limits of sentimentality,” writes Cheng, who describes herself as Chinese-Australian.

“Most of all I miss my children,” she ends the letter.

Cheng has been detained since August 2020, but was only formally arrested in February 2021.

She was tried last March behind closed doors, with even Australia’s ambassador to China blocked from entering the court to observe proceedings.

The court deferred the verdict and Cheng’s sentence, which could extend to life in prison.

“She has missed her daughter going to high school. Her parents aren’t getting any younger and Lei is their only child. So time is getting more and more precious,” the Sydney Morning Herald quoted Coyle as saying on Thursday.

Wong raised Cheng’s case when she met China’s top diplomat Wang Yi on the sidelines of an ASEAN summit in Jakarta last month.

Three Cult Suspects Arrested For Refusing To Take Sick Children To Hospital

Three people in Rarieda, Siaya County, suspected of being in connection with religious cults, have been arrested after refusing to take their sick children to the hospital.

The trio, Morris Aloo Oyusu, Elizabeth Awino Ochieng and Josephine Atieno Omollo, allege that taking their children to the hospital is against the teachings of the Christo Church.

According to Citizen Digital, the arrests were made on August 8 after an area chief, who public members had tipped off, contacted police after confirming the children’s predicaments.

“After receiving a tip off from members of public, the Chief of East Asembo location visited the family of one David Owego who had been reported to have refused to take his extremely sick children to hospital as it was allegedly against his church (Christo Church) doctrines,” a police report read.

“Police officers visited the home and established that four of his family members were extremely sick and did not seek medical attention.”

Elizabeth Owego, the wife of Owego, and three of her female children—ages 2, 4, and 6—were discovered in a weak condition.

Police next went to the residence of Joseph Omollo and discovered his wife Josephine and two sons, ages 2 and 6, in a comparable circumstance.

“Maurice Aloo Oyusu was arrested for offering basic education in an unregistered institution contrary to section 76 [1] [2] and section 92 [a] of basic education act while Elizabeth Awino and Josephine Atieno were arrested for willfully neglecting to take a sick child to a health facility contrary to section 16 (7) of the children act no. 29 of 2022,” reads the police report.

Josephine’s 2-year-old son was rushed to Madiany Hospital for treatment while her other child and of Elizabeth were placed in a nearby children’s home.

“Josephine will be be charged once the child is discharged from hospital. More charges may be preferred once investigations are complete,” said the police report.

Shock As Kirinyaga Man Buried In Less Than 10 Minutes

Residents of Mwangathia village in Mukure Ward, Ndia Constituency, gathered to witness a 60-year-old man get buried in less than ten minutes.

According to the deceased’s family, led by James Ngaire, the late Stanley Mugo had told them he wished to be buried without ceremony.

“We took the body from the mortuary and took it directly to the grave as he wished,” Ngaire said.

Mesmerized residents watched as men from the village buried him in an unusual send-off.

“Last respect for the departed is expressed in so many ways, mostly the religion or traditional practices but we wonder why Mugo decided to be buried this way,” Chairman of the burial committee John Mugo Nyamu wondered.

At one point, there was confusion after a local clergyman attempted to conduct prayers but was stopped by the relatives of the deceased.

Residents watched in astonishment as the coffin containing the remains of Mugo was lowered into the grave.

Ecuador Says Six Suspects Arrested For Presidential Candidate Assassination Are Colombian

Six suspects arrested in connection with the assassination of Ecuadorian presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio are Colombian nationals and gang members, authorities have confirmed, as a former vice president demanded action over spiraling levels of violence in the South American country.

Villavicencio, an anti-corruption campaigner and lawmaker who was outspoken about the violence caused by drug trafficking in the country, was shot dead at a campaign rally in the capital Quito on Wednesday.

The killing of the 59-year-old came 10 days before the first round of the presidential election was set to take place.

Villavicencio’s campaign had promised a crackdown on crime and corruption amid a deadly escalation of violence that has gripped Ecuador in recent years.

The suspected shooter died in police custody following an exchange of fire with security personnel, Ecuador’s Attorney General’s Office said Wednesday.

Six others were arrested in connection with the killing. Ecuador’s Interior Minister Juan Zapata said in a news conference Thursday that the suspects are members of organized criminal groups, citing preliminary evidence.

He later confirmed to CNN the suspects are Colombian nationals. The nationality of the suspected gunman is not yet clear.

During overnight raids, authorities found a rifle, a machine gun, four pistols, three grenades, two rifle magazines, four boxes of ammunition, two motorcycles, and a stolen vehicle believed to have been used by the men, Zapata said.

The attack prompted Ecuador’s President Guillermo Lasso to request help from the US Federal Bureau of Investigation, and he tweeted that a delegation would soon be arriving in the country.

Lasso also announced a state of emergency for 60 days, an immediate mobilization of the armed forces across the country and three days of national mourning.

The assassination prompted an outpouring of condemnation from inside Ecuador and around the world, including from the UN Human Rights chief, the United States and European Union.

Level of violence ‘something we have never seen before’

The former vice president of Ecuador and current presidential candidate Otto Sonnenholzner said in an exclusive interview with CNN Thursday that the level of violence in Ecuador is “something we have never seen before.”

“It’s something new. It started maybe one and a half or two years ago. It’s a spiral of violence that is completely out of control and demands concrete government action that we are not seeing,” Sonnenholzner said.

The Andean country, a relatively peaceful nation until a few years ago, is now plagued by a deteriorating security crisis fueled by drug trafficking and a turf war between rival criminal organizations.

Violence has been most pronounced on Ecuador’s Pacific coast as criminal groups battle to control and distribute narcotics, primarily cocaine.

The country has also lost control of its overcrowded prisons, which are often ruled by criminal gangs. Hundreds of inmates have been killed in brutal prison riots between these rival gangs.

“The gangs are controlling crime in the streets from the jails,” Sonnenholzner said. “There is a lot of influence of drug dealers and drug traffickers in different institutions in the country,” including corruption affecting the judiciary, some police, and even local governments across Ecuador, he said.

Sonnenholzner told CNN that Villavicencio had received threats two weeks ago from organized crime groups in Ecuador, but he had not been protected.

Villavicencio did have a security detail at the time of the shooting, comprised of five police officers, multiple patrol cars, and his own armored vehicle, according to interior minister Zapata, though he noted that the armored vehicle was not used in Quito.

Seven of Ecuador’s eight presidential candidates were under police protection, Zapata said earlier in the week, according to local media.

“Gun control is completely failing every day. The guns that the criminals are carrying are relatively new… The six people who were detained yesterday, that were part of the attack – they had machine guns and grenades and Ecuador has been historically a very peaceful country,” Sonnenholzner said.

Sonnenholzner said he had suspended public campaign events “for the next few days” and had taken on his own private security.

Ecuador’s presidential election, scheduled for August 20, will go ahead as planned, the Electoral Council President Diana Atamaint said Thursday.

Sonnenholzner said he has requested the televised presidential debate planned for Sunday be postponed so Villavicencio’s political party, Movimiento Construye, has time to find a new candidate.

He noted that Villavicencio had first entered public life as an investigative journalist who fought against corruption and abuses of power.

His “fight against corruption should be his legacy,” Sonnenholzner said.

Raila To Lead Azimio Prayers For Victims Of Police Brutality in Bondo

The Azimio la Umoja – One Kenya coalition says it will on Friday hold an interdenominational prayer service in Bondo, Siaya County, for supporters who died at the hands of the police during the opposition’s anti-government protests last month.

In a statement, the coalition said the prayers will be held at the Jaramogi Oginga Odinga Park from 9:00 am. The event will be led by Azimio leader Raila Odinga.

“Raila Amolo Odinga will tomorrow, August 11th, 2023 lead Azimio Kenya Coalition in an interdenominational prayer for those who lost their lives during demonstrations following disproportionate use of force by the Police,” Azimio said.

According to the political outfit, its leadership will use the occasion to condemn use of excess force by police during recent demonstrations in the country as well as demand individual accountability for the killings.

The opposition also wants the International Criminal Court (ICC) in the Hague, Netherlands, to take its complaints regarding the situation in Kenya seriously.

“Azimio will also be asking the ICC to take a keener interest in the Kenya situation which they describe as crimes against humanity,” the coalition added.

Friday’s event comes a week after revelations that 24 people were killed during protests in Kisumu and Kisii counties alone last month.

A report released by the Law Society of Kenya (LSK) and Amnesty International indicated that 41 people also suffered serious injuries during the demos.

“Most victims were between the ages of 17-38 and are overwhelmingly male. The cause of death has been attributed to the use of live and rubber bullets at close range. Some of the victims were picked from their homes by the police, especially in the Nyamasaria area in Kisumu,” LSK said.

However, Inspector General of Police Japhet Koome denied the allegations on Tuesday, saying some of the bodies shown to the media were hired by some “senior leaders”.

“We are going to discharge our mandate without losing focus. We are aware of the situation we are in, a lot of propaganda with the intention of demoralizing police officers and intimidating them. We have seen in the recent past senior members of the society going to mortuaries, hiring dead bodies, calling media and telling them that they were killed by police officers. How low can our leaders go?” Koome told the press at the National Police Training College in Kiganjo.

Later on the same day, Raila countered the claims, insisting that the bodies in question had gunshot wounds.

“It is very disappointing to hear IG Japhet Koome say that we hired dead bodies to accuse police of brutality. I don’t know which world he lives in because the bodies we buried have bullet wounds and death certificates confirming the cause of death,” Raila said.

Spain Beat Dutch To Reach First World Cup Semi

Teenager Salma Paralluelo hit an extra-time winner as Spain beat the Netherlands 2-1 at the Women’s World Cup on Friday to set up a semi-final clash with Japan or Sweden.

Over a tense 90 minutes in Wellington full of incident, Mariona Caldentey scored an 81st-minute penalty for Spain, only for Dutch defender Stefanie van der Gragt to equalise in added time 10 minutes later.

With the quarter-final seemingly headed for penalties, the 19-year-old substitute Paralluelo produced a brilliant solo finish in the 111th minute to put Spain into the last four for the first time.

They will now face Sweden or Japan in Auckland on Tuesday while the tournament is over for the Dutch, beaten finalists four years ago.

“It’s hard now,” said Van der Gragt, whose last game in football was an eventful one — conceding the penalty for handball, then equalising, before Paralluelo’s decisive, late intervention.

“We had the chance in extra time and we didn’t score, they had one chance and they scored. That’s football.”

It was reward for a display of controlled attacking football from the sixth-ranked La Roja, who have regained their swagger after crashing to a 4-0 group-stage loss to Japan.

The 90 minutes of normal time were largely dominated by Spain — and some VAR decisions — but it was actually the Netherlands who looked stronger in extra time, before second-half substitute Paralluelo struck on the counterattack.

VAR plays part

Jorge Vilda’s Spain dominated the first half, making 11 unanswered attempts on goal.

The Dutch were rescued by the woodwork twice in quick succession when Alba Redondo’s header was parried onto the post by goalkeeper Daphne van Domselaar and her follow-up nearly hit the same spot low down on the left post.

Spain captain Esther Gonzalez, who was a constant menace, lashed a shot into the net from a Redondo mis-hit but the striker was ruled offside by VAR.

The Netherlands regained a foothold in the second half.

They looked set to go in front when Lineth Beerensteyn tumbled over in the box following contact with Irene Paredes, who was shown a yellow card as French referee Stephanie Frappert pointed to the spot.

Frappert was advised by VAR to review and ruled there wasn’t sufficient contact from Paredes, who had her yellow card withdrawn, much to the animated displeasure of Beerensteyn.

Spain went ahead from the spot with nine minutes left of normal time through Caldentey after Paralluelo’s cross struck Van der Gragt’s flailing hand inside the penalty box.

Inter Milan defender Van der Gragt made amends in the first minute of stoppage time when her surging run was found by Victoria Pelova before blasting past Cata Coll inside the far post.

The Netherlands had the better chances in extra time, going close twice through Beerensteyn before conceding the decisive goal from Barcelona forward Paralluelo.

World player of the year Alexia Putellas, who is recovering from a knee injury, was introduced off the Spanish bench during extra time.

However, they will be without defender Oihane Hernandez for the semi-final after she was shown a yellow card for a foul.

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