Former Wendy Waeni’s manager Joe Mwangi will be detained for 5 working days at Kilimani Police station to allow investigations.
Former Wendy Waeni’s manager Joe Mwangi detained for 5 days
Senator Mithika Linturi tells court he wishes to proceed with divorce case despite passing on of his father
BY PRUDENCE WANZA – Senator Mithika Linturi has told the court that he is ready to proceed with the divorce suit against him despite the passing on of his father in the wake of this morning.
Linturi who was seen smiling and conversing with his peers in court, through his lawyers Muthomi Theonkalou and Professor George Wajakoya said that he is ready to proceed with the matter.
This was after Marianne Kitany failed to show up in court but through her lawyer Danstan Omari, she indicated that she was not ready to proceed due to the passing on of her father in law. Omari told the court that his client is in the process of going to her Meru home to be part and parcel of the burial plans.
Omari further submitted that Kitany is not competent to proceed with the matter and that she passes sincere condolences to Mithika Linturi.
It is at this point that Linturi’s lawyer objected saying that it was unfortunate to use death to make conclusive statements on a matter in which the court is supposed to determine whether the two were married.
Muthomi further told the court that his client wants to proceed with the matter as the petitioner (Kitany) cannot be heard to cry louder than the bereaved. He said fundamental aspects of Linturi’s life have been withheld pending the determination of the case and his accounts were freezes too.
Professor Wajakoya went on to tell the court that Linturi’s father has been in a weak sound of mind since the thought of a girl crossing boundaries and building a house for his son was against the Ameru customs.
” Under the Meru customary law a girl crossed boundaries to build a house for his son yet he is a member of ‘Njuri Ncheke’ which is against the customs,”said Wajakoya.
However, Chief Magistrate,Peter Gesora, ruled that the divorce proceedings will continue tomorrow stating that the matter was fixed to be heard consecutively. Gesora said that the matter will continue tomorrow on September 3, for proper management of the hearing as the petitioner was not in court.
Sarah Wairimu missing tycoon’s wife to be detained for 12 days
BY PRUDENCE WANZA – A Kiambu court yesterday ordered the detention of missing Dutch tycoon’s wife Sarah Wairimu for 12 days to allow investigations.
The court stated that detaining Sarah Wairimu would prevent her from interfering with witnesses and evidence to be provided in the matter.
Wairimu will be detained at Muthaiga police station during which the police will be at liberty to secure the matrimonial home as a scene of crime and that the suspect will be allowed to access the home bid need be but only under the escort of the investigators.
Wairimu is alleged to have coached some witnesses to give false testimony on Cohen’s movement. The witnesses however recanted their statements and gave the true account of events.
Tob Cohen is former CEO of Philips Electronics East Africa and was reported missing on July 19. The suspect was reported on 8th July, to have pushed Cohen on a staircase at their home causing injuries.
Cohen reported the matter to Parklands Police Station and later sought treatment at MP Shah Hospital in Nairobi.
The court stated that Cohen’s kidnap may have turned out to be murder since he was taken by the suspect and her associates to an unknown place.
The case will be mentioned on 16th September.
Kenya acquires new Cocaine Testing Machines

BY FAITH MUTETE – Barely days after the launch of state of the art DNA testing equipment, a delegation led by the Interior Cabinet Secretary Dr. Fred Matiang’i today headed back to the Government Chemist to unveil a crucial component to help curb against narcotics.
The equipment detects traces of cocaine in substances submitted by the police within record time aiding prosecution and deterrence of narcotics.
The equipment was unveiled by the Coordinator of Government Ministries and Interior CS Fred Matiangi.
Mau Evictions: Hundreds Flee ahead of Eviction Date fearing ‘Brutal Force’ by Police
BY GERALD GEKARA – Even as politics take center stage surrounding the long overdue eviction of Mau forest settlers, families have begun voluntarily moving out of the Mau forest.
This according to locals in the area is out of the fear for their lives as ‘forceful evictions last time led to the torching of houses and severe beating on dwellers. So far 4000 security personnel have been deployed in the area ahead of the planned second phase of the evictions in the vast Nkareta areas, Narok County.
“Last time we tried defending our valid land, the Kenya Forest Service officials descended on us badly. Out of the love for our families, we will peacefully vacate the forest,” a settler at Nkareta, Narok County.
The area which is mainly occupied by the indigenous Ogiek and Maasai communities is expected to be cleared of the human settlements who have been reported to have been encroaching the forest illegally.
However, Senator Kipchumba Murkomen, who has been on the ‘victims’ sides defending locals from the evictions, requested the residents to stay put. He faulted the Environment CS Keriako Tobiko for the evictions, alleging that he has been politically compromised to inflict suffering to valid title deed owners.
On the other side Kajiado Governor Joseph Ole Lenku and his counterparts; Kajiado Senator Philip Mpaayei, his Narok counterpart Ledama Ole Kina yesterday held a press briefing to affirm their support for the eviction.
Central banks are waking up to climate change dangers. It’s about time
The impact of climate change on the stability of individual financial institutions and the financial system in general is growing. It influences the types of activities that financial institutions will fund and the cost of finance.
For example, the increased frequency and intensity of floods, storms and droughts is complicating the insurance industry’s ability to assess insurable risks. It is also driving up insurance premiums.
It is affecting the ability of pension funds to plan their investment strategies. Banks are facing increased reputational and financial risks from financing activities that contribute to climate change. These activities include coal mining and cattle farming.
Globally, financial institutions and their clients are facing an increased risk of litigation for their failure to manage risks associated with climate change. For example, the Commonwealth Bank of Australia was sued for misleading investors by failing to disclose climate related risks in its 2016 annual report.
Financial regulatory authorities are beginning to respond to these developments. The central bank of Brazil requires banks to explain how they treat environmental risks when determining their capital requirements. The central bank of China incorporates environmental factors into its monetary policy framework and financial stability assessments.
New international standards encourage financial institutions to be more transparent about their exposure to climate related risks.
It is against this backdrop that the recent decision by the South African Reserve Bank (SARB) to join the Network on Greening the Financial System must be viewed. The Network consists of 42 central banks and banking supervisory authorities, including central banks from China, England, France, Malaysia, Mexico, the Netherlands and the European Central Bank.
The Network’s aim is to promote effective environment and climate risk management in the financial sector. It also aims to mobilise mainstream finance to support the transition toward a sustainable economy. Its members recently warned that if banks don’t adjust to climate change “they will fail to exist”.
The creation of the Network is an implicit acknowledgement that central banks and other financial sector regulators have not always paid adequate attention to the environmental impacts of the financial sector. The Network’s existence is also an acknowledgement that the financial sector has a responsibility to become more environmentally responsible.
This is a challenge for central banks. Their independence requires them to act without fear or favour. But addressing climate change requires them to encourage financial institutions to favour certain types of activities over others. For example, the Lebanese central bank changes the amount of reserves it requires banks to hold against their deposits according to how much they lend for renewable energy projects.
If central banks do not discriminate, financial institutions may continue financing activities that increase greenhouse gas emissions. This can raise the risk of droughts, floods, and more extreme temperature variability. This in turn can affect the quality and quantity of available land and water for producing food, and constructing new housing, education and health facilities. These factors can affect migration patterns, agricultural and other commodity prices. They can also affect aggregate demand, employment levels, public health and confidence in an economy. These are among the factors that often impact on financial stability and inflation.
Climate also poses a legal challenge
The South African Reserve Bank’s mandate is set out in the country’s Constitution. Article 224 states that the SARB must “protect the value of the currency in the interest of balanced and sustainable economic growth”. This is an unusual but not unprecedented mandate. Central banks with similar mandates include those of the Philippines, Russia, Malaysia and Tanzania.
But what exactly does this mean? The term “balanced and sustainable growth” has no precise and universally accepted economic meaning. It is also not clear what the Constitution means when it says that the SARB’s mandate is to protect the value of the currency “in the interest” of “balanced and sustainable” growth.
As the SARB’s Governor recently noted, the Constitution “tells us what to do, but it is not explicit about how we do it”. This is true. The Constitution gives the SARB wide discretion in interpreting its mandate. The SARB currently interprets its mandate narrowly as requiring it to prioritise protecting the value of the currency. This certainly falls within the scope of its constitutional authority. However, it is not the only interpretation that would satisfy this requirement.
For example, the mandate also could be interpreted more broadly as imposing a dual responsibility on the SARB: to protect the value of the currency and to promote environmentally sustainable growth. Sustainable growth could mean growth that meets the needs of the present generation without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their needs. In this case, the SARB would be failing to meet its Constitutional responsibilities if its policies and actions protected the value of the currency but were implemented in a way that resulted in increased funding for large carbon emitters.
What a different approach would look like
A more environmentally responsible approach to its mandate may not lead the SARB to adopt different policy decisions. However, it would lead it to pay more attention to their implementation.
For example, Article 10 of the South African Reserve Bank Act gives the SARB broad authority to trade in different types of financial instruments. These include those issued by government as well as those issued for commercial, industrial and agricultural purposes. The environmental impact of its decision to raise or lower interest rates could vary depending on which financial instruments it decided to buy or sell in implementing its interest rate decision.
The SARB’s decision to join the Network is prudent and responsible. Climate change is a reality and it is adversely affecting the financial sector. However, the SARB now needs to take the next step. This would be to reconsider whether it is interpreting its mandate in a way that is both constitutionally defensible and environmentally and socially responsible.![]()
Danny Bradlow, SARCHI Professor of International Development Law and African Economic Relations, University of Pretoria
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Linturi’s Lawyer says There was No Wedding Ceremony but an Engagement Ceremony between Kaitany and Linturi
BY PRUDENCE WANZA – Senetor Mithika Linturi’s lawyer Muthomi Thiankolu has told the court that there was no wedding ceremony between Linturi and Marianne Kitany but it was an engagement ceremony that took place.
This was during Marianne Kitany’s cross examination on the fourth day of the divorce proceedings.
Muthomi showed the court a document tilted Engagement Invitation which is alleged to have been used to invite guests at the event.
The lawyer went on to tell the court that there was a difference between an engagement and a marriage and that the two can not be the same.
However Kitany told the court that the invitation card also indicated that it was going to be a ‘Koitoo’ ceremony which according to the Nandi culture meant a wedding ceremony.
Muthomi went on to tell the court that Kitany lied when she told the court that they were married under the Nandi and Meru customary laws.The lawyer said that is the reason why witnesses are not coming to testify because she lied about the marriage taking place under Meru customary laws.
Kitany defended herself saying that if indeed she was lying the witnesses should have come to court and said she was lying.
Kitany went ahead to tell the court that witnesses from Meru have been threatened not to testify in court.
She revealed that the master of ceremony during their wedding has also been threatened not to testify in court and that she has put an affidavit in court to show that the two witnesses have been threatened.
Linturi’s lawyer also accused Kitany of lying to the court saying that there was a lot of inconsistency in what she told the court regarding the dates of their wedding ceremony.
According to Kitany the ceremony took place on 26th March,2016 while Muthomi told the court that she filed documents in court saying that she got married on 16th April, 2016.
However Kitany told the court that she did not write that particular part of the document and that the lawyer should stick to the amended document in his line of questioning.
During the cross examination Kitany told the court that Linturi stole title deeds of properties belonging to his relatives and charged them in a bank without her permission and secured loans with them fraudulently through forging signatures.
Muthomi went ahead to question Kitany by asking her if she was aware that the exchange of miraa under the Meru customary laws does not indicate a union or perceived as a symbol of marriage. Kitany responded by saying that it is only a witness in the matter who is an expert on customary laws that can answer that.
Kitany was also questioned on how she was able to build the properties she claimed to have paid more than 26million and she stated that she had her own savings from her previous jobs way before she joined the Deputy President’s office.
The divorce hearing is expected to continue tomorrow with more witnesses lined up to testify in the matter.
How a century-old dispute between Japan and South Korea threatens the global supply of smartphones
Japan and South Korea are showing no signs of resolving an escalating trade dispute, which traces back to 1910. It now poses a threat to the world’s tech supply chain and has potentially severe consequences for the global economy. And the dispute is being played out within a complex confluence of historical grievances, domestic politics, the ongoing US-China trade war and a looming global recession.
Japan has officially removed South Korea from its list of trusted trade partners that receive preferential treatment for importing sensitive Japanese-made goods, as of August 28. The list of goods includes chemicals that are crucial to producing the semiconductor memory chips found in most modern electronic devices.
This means that Japanese companies will now have to apply for a licence to export the chemicals to South Korean companies, a process that could take up to 90 days. Semiconductors are South Korea’s top export item. With manufacturers reliant on the chemicals from Japan, any delay in their production could pose a significant threat to the country’s economy and the South Korean currency, the won, which has already dropped 8% against the US dollar this year.
From a global perspective, South Korea semiconductor giants Samsung and SK Hynix, which supply 60% of the world’s memory chips, have warned that they can’t rule out production disruption if the Japanese export restrictions remain in place. Any delay to supply could cause serious disruption to global tech supply chains and significantly impact other tech giants, like Apple and Huawei, who use memory chips and displays from Samsung.
A conflict with deep roots
Japan has given no indication that it will change its mind. It claims the restrictions are a response to a national security concern, alluding to leaks to North Korea.
With no evidence put forward to support this, the likely scenario is that Japan’s action is part of an escalating and ongoing dispute involving historic grievances that date back to Japan’s colonisation of the Korean peninsula more than a century ago. During World War II, Japan conscripted more than 670,000 Koreans as forced labourers to support its military ambitions.
The recent decision to remove South Korea from trusted trade partner status originates with a South Korean high court ruling in October 2018. The court ordered Japanese companies to compensate individual victims of forced labour including the “comfort women” – Korean women taken as sex slaves and forced to work in war-time brothels.
Japan insists that most of the necessary compensation was settled as part of a US$500m payout under a treaty signed in 1965 and then a new agreement that was reached in 2015. But the current South Korean president, Moon Jae-in, created a taskforce in 2018 which concluded that the 2015 agreement did not reflect the opinions of the victims, especially their demand that Japan admit direct responsibility. Tokyo refuses further discussion of this issue and the bilateral relationship has continued to deteriorate.
The dispute is an emotional one for both countries. Thousands of South Korean protesters have marched on the Japanese embassy in Seoul, to express their displeasure at being downgraded as a trading partner. Many South Koreans have also vowed to boycott Japanese products, and there are reports that petrol station operators have been urged to stop refuelling Japanese cars.
Global slowdown
Both Japan and South Korea are integral to the world economy and disruptions will have spillovers that will go beyond the two antagonists. The most immediate threat is to the global tech supply chain, but any slowdown increases the likelihood of a worldwide recession.
The dispute has come at a particularly bad time. Major economies are currently experiencing weak growth with negative numbers coming out of the UK and Germany and a general slowdown in the US, China and India. With the world’s two largest economies, the US and China, involved in an escalating tariff war that is chilling business investment, confidence and trade flows across the world, the Japan/Korean trade spat will only add to business uncertainty.
There is little indication as to when these disputes will be resolved, or in whose favour. Add to this the chaos surrounding Brexit and businesses are left wondering what will happen next. Not surprisingly, firms are already adopting a wait and see attitude, postponing investment and waiting for clarity amid increasing uncertainty, as bond markets send alarming signals of a looming recession.
Shifting power, weaponising trade
In the past, the US would have stepped in to prevent any flare up between its two South-east Asian allies from getting going out of hand. But the Trump administration has been hesitant to get involved, despite the important role both countries play in monitoring North Korea’s nuclear ambitions.
In a telling sign of shifting power in the region, China has already offered to step in and help mediate the dispute. The foreign ministers of the three countries met recently but failed to set a date for the annual meeting of their leaders.
China considers stability a priority and has been actively seeking to bolster regional economic integration as its relationship with the US sours. It will also be worried about the impact the Japan-South Korea trade spat could have on large Chinese technology companies like ZTE and Huawei, which rely on US suppliers like Qualcomm for chips and semiconductors. But if the US trade sanctions cut off this source of supply, they will be looking to South Korea for the vital components.
Another concern globally is Japan’s use of national security to justify its trade policy. This weaponising of trade follows Donald Trump’s citing of security concerns when putting tariffs on steel and aluminium imports. China sees the trade war as an attempt to disrupt its core development strategy, the Made in China 2025 plan, prevent it’s reemergence as a world power and views the trade dispute through the lens of security and sovereignty.
World Trade Organisation (WTO) rules which govern trade between countries are, to a large extent, based on norms. They include a national security exemption clause which relies on members applying it in good faith. Once member states start taking advantage of the provision, there is likely to be a cascading effect, tempting more countries to weaponise this exemption in a tit-for-tat trade war.![]()
Pushan Dutt, Professor of Economics, INSEAD
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.














