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Kenya
Wednesday, April 29, 2026
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Opinion: What is BBI

Kenya as a country has many issues

  • We don’t have a national identity. What does it mean to be Kenyan? Our people care more about their rights than they do their responsibilities. We have 44 tribes that are competing for resources, and this leads to a spirit of tribalism, envy, distrust, and discord.
  • Our elections often end up in chaos and bloodshed; so every time an election approaches, we tremble.
  • We often feel that only some tribes or genders or types of people get opportunities while others do not.
  • Some counties feel that they have been left behind by others
  • Corruption is so prevalent that it’s a wonder things are still working. The counties are yet to deliver the great promise the framers of the constitution envisioned. Elections violence, floods, drought, terrorism, ethnic clashes, crime, and so forth perennially put Kenyan lives at risk.

These are the 9 issues that the creators of the BBI Report identified about our country.

 The 9 Pillars of the BBI report are:

  1. National ethos
  2. Responsibilities and rights of citizenship
  3. Ethnic antagonism and competition
  4. Divisive elections
  5. Inclusivity
  6. Shared prosperity
  7. Corruption 8. Devolution
  8. Safety and security

Think of Kenya as a sinner weighed down by sins. Think of BBI as baptism. BBI will dip the country into the waters of the River Jordan, like Namaan the leper who was told by Prophet Elisha to bathe in the Jordan 7times.

When Namaan came out of the Jordan, he was healed. St. Paul has said that we must put off the old man and put on the new man.

 Like a snake, Kenya must shed its old skin and emerge fresh and young and vibrant. We must put off the old man of corruption, tribalism, election violence, lack of national identity, and so forth, and put on the new man of unique identity, of responsibility, integrity, safety and security, cohesion and integration, peaceful elections, effective devolution, shared prosperity, and inclusivity.

When you are baptized, you become a new person. Your sins fall away. You are absolved. You are clean. BBI is not a magic document. We have to put in the work. We have to implement every part of it.

 But once we do so, you will watch as the country transforms from the inside out. BBI is not just about fixing our hardware as a nation. It’s also about fixing our software.

We have some computer viruses in our minds and hearts as a people, and in our systems, and BBI is the antivirus that will clean out all the bugs and dirt and malware and viruses and ensure everything runs smoothly.

 BBI is a reset moment for our country. It’s a new dawn for our country. BBI is the change we have always hoped of but hardly dared dream of.

 BBI is a rebirth roadmap for Kenya. It’s that reset moment we have often wished we could get. Ni Mwamko Mpya wa nchi yetu.

 The BBI document has diagnosed the country’s problems and provided a blueprint on how we are going to solve them. If implemented, this country will experience a cultural, political, social, and economic revolution that will propel us forward at an unprecedented speed.

For a long time, Kenya has not known itself or what it wants for itself. BBI is Kenya’s moment of self-reflection and self-realization, the moment when this country embarks on a clear path to self-actualization.

Osiris-Rex: Nasa asteroid mission confident of success

“We really did kind of make a mess.”

That was Dante Lauretta’s take after reviewing the first pictures to come down from Nasa’s Osiris-Rex probe following its bid to grab a sample from asteroid Bennu on Tuesday.

Dust and grit flew in all directions but that was good news, enthused the University of Arizona professor.

“Everything that we can see from these initial images indicates sampling success. So in case you can’t tell, I’m pretty excited.”

The principal investigator’s team now has to work out precisely how much material Osiris-Rex might have lifted from the surface of 500m-wide Bennu.

If it’s a kilo or more, it would represent the biggest extra-terrestrial sample cache since the Apollo astronauts gathered rocks from the Moon some 50 years ago.

But even a smaller amount would still be a great prize.

Bennu is a very primitive object, with chemistry preserved from the dawn of the Solar System more than 4.5 billion years ago. As such, it can tell us a great deal about how the Sun and the planets came into being.

Osiris-Rex used what had been described as a “reverse vacuum cleaner” to acquire its clutch of “soil”.

More properly called the Touch-and-Go Sample Acquisition Mechanism, or Tag-Sam, this device comprised a long boom with a ring-shaped collection chamber on the end.

The idea was to deliver a squirt of nitrogen when the Tag-Sam made contact with the asteroid.

The hope was this gas would stir up Bennu’s fragmented surface, leading to a considerable number of rocky pieces getting trapped inside the collection chamber.

The downlinked pictures certainly suggested the strategy was the right one.

Osiris-Rex may have been in contact with Bennu for only six seconds before retreating, but the sampling ring was flat and stable, and even pressing into the soil slightly. This should have maximised the chances of retaining material.

Rich Burns, Nasa’s project manager on the mission, lauded the the way his team managed to put the probe in just the right place on Bennu – almost exactly at the centre of the targeted sampling zone.

“We’re over 320 million km away from Earth at this point, and we touched this asteroid within a metre of where we intended to. So that’s extraordinary and a real credit to our team,” he told reporters.

Prof Lauretta once again on Wednesday’s paid tribute to the British scientist who conceived Osiris-Rex.

This was Bristol-born Michael Drake who held senior science positions at the University of Arizona in Tucson.

He worked up the concept for the mission but sadly died in 2011, aged 65, just months after Nasa had green-lit the project.

“I’m pleased to see that my dad’s legacy is being honoured at this exciting time in Osiris-Rex’s mission,” Michael Drake’s son, Matt Drake, told BBC News.

“My father’s idea to study near-Earth asteroids as a means of peering back in time to the birth of the Solar System finally came to fruition during [Tuesday’s] Tag event.

“As the principal investigator of this team from its inception until his passing almost 10 years later, he would have been incredibly proud of his team’s accomplishments.”

Osiris-Rex carries a plaque of remembrance to Michael Drake.

EAC, EU launch regional economic integration programme

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The EU Ambassador to Tanzania and the East African Community, Manfredo Fanti and the Secretary General of the EAC, H.E. Libérat Mfumukeko, launched a €16.4 million joint programme to strengthen regional economic integration, through advancing implementation of the Customs Union and Common Market Protocols.   

In particular, the Common Objectives in Regional Economic Integration (CORE) programme will be instrumental in moving towards a fully-fledged Customs Union, by supporting more robust information, communication and technology (ICT) based data exchange protocols for the clearing of goods. Thanks to digital solutions, customs operations will be simpler, quicker, as well as safer during this pandemic situation thereby resulting in a reduction of the costs of cross-border trade. 

A new impetus will be given through this programme to promote free movement of services, a crucial building block for the creation of the EAC Common Market. The CORE programme will support implementation of services’ liberalisation commitments, facilitating mutual recognition of professions and allowing companies to provide their services beyond their national borders. During the first two years, the focus of this programme will be on the insurance, accounting and distribution sectors. Additional sectors could be covered at a later stage. 

The capacity of the EAC Secretariat will be enhanced in order to ensure that this institution can deliver its overall mandate. “The economic integration of the East African Community is at the heart of our cooperation agenda. This programme will be a catalyst for making the economic integration a reality,” said Ambassador Fanti.  

EAC Secretary General Amb. Mfumukeko said the financing agreement comes at the right time when the Community had just marked its 20th Anniversary, adding that the EU had made significant contribution to the achievements made by the EAC in all the four pillars of integration, namely: the Customs Union, Common Market, Monetary Union and Political Federation. 

“It is my sincere hope that the EAC cooperation with EU will grow stronger based on the already existing robust foundation of our common goals. The EU has for many years provided significant support to various EAC programmes in sectors as diverse as peace and security, promotion of democracy and good governance, and fisheries,’’ he said.

This 60-month programme will be implemented by the EAC Secretariat. It will complement several other initiatives to providing economic empowerment to the people of the East African Community.

Ethiopia hails China President Xi for COVID-19 intervention

Chinese President Xi Jinping (R) meets with Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed Ali, Credit: Xinhua/Ding Lin.

Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed has hailed Chinese intervention to help his country’s fight against COVID-19.

Presenting a report to the Ethiopian parliament, Ahmed said Chinese support, including through COVID-19 medical supplies, has provided essential help to the east African country’s fight against the spread of COVID-19.

The Ethiopian Prime Minister in particular commended the continued support from a non-profit organization founded by Chinese tech entrepreneur Jack Ma.

“We’ve received lots of COVID-19 medical supplies as donations especially from the Jack Ma foundation as part of an African continent-wide medical assistance scheme,” Ahmed said.

“Ethiopia was the primary beneficiary of the COVID-19 medical supplies donation, in addition to serving as a transport hub for the whole of the African continent,” the PM further said.

Ethiopia has confirmed 89,137 COVID-19 cases and 1,352 COVID-19 related deaths so far.

The east African country confirmed its first case of COVID-19 on March 13.

The Ethiopian PM also thanked China’s support for the landmark Sheger park project, which he said is a testament to the strong bilateral ties.

Initiated by the prime minister, the Sheger park project is being carried out with a view of beautifying and making the capital of the East African country Addis Ababa a hub of urban tourism as well, whereby it provides outstanding attraction in the city and also helps boost the country’s tourism and economy.

With the financial support from the Chinese government and contracted by the China Communications Construction Company, the project includes the construction of the Central Square (about 48 hectares) and the 12-km river treatment, from Entoto Mountain to Peacock Reach.

The Chinese-funded 12-km section of the 56-km beautifying Sheger Project was launched in October 2019.

China News

FBI says Iran and Russia have US voter information

US national security officials say Iran was responsible for sending threatening emails to Democratic voters.

The emails appeared to come from a far-right pro-Trump group and were meant to “incite unrest”, National Intelligence Director John Ratcliffe said.

Mr Ratcliffe also said US officials found Iran and Russia had obtained “some voter registration information”.

The announcement comes 13 days before the presidential election.

The unusual intelligence briefing this close to the vote is seen as a testament to the government’s concerns over voting interference and disinformation campaigns from foreign actors.

Mr Ratcliffe said Iran’s “spoof emails” claimed to be sent by the far-right Proud Boys group in order to “intimidate voters, incite unrest and damage” President Donald Trump.

He added that the voter data could be used in attempts to “communicate false information to registered voters that they hope will sow confusion chaos and undermine your confidence in American democracy”.

Mr Ratcliffe said officials “have not seen the same actions from Russia”, but are aware they have some voter information.

In many states, voter data is available upon request, though each state has different requirements on who can request voter information, what data is available and how this data might be used, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

“If you receive an intimidating or manipulative email in your inbox, don’t be alarmed and do not spread it,” Mr Ratcliffe said, calling the actions to influence US voters “desperate attempts by desperate adversaries”.

What it may mean

This announcement inevitably has shades of the 2016 Russian interference in the US election.

In that election thousands of fake bots were created on social media pretending to be American voters.

Democrat computer systems were also hacked.

From this announcement though it’s unclear how Iran and Russia obtained the information – and exactly what info they have.

You only have to look at your spam filter to see that many people have your email address.

The main charge against Iran is it has sent “spoof emails” to voters in swing states. If true, this is unlikely to be a sophisticated attack.

In many states too, voter registration information is publicly available.

And nowhere in the announcement was there any further information about how widescale the emails have been.

FBI Director Christopher Wray joined Mr Ratcliffe at the news conference. He said that US election systems were still secure and “resilient”.

“You should be confident that your vote counts,” Mr Wray said. “Early, unverified claims to the contrary should be viewed with a healthy dose of skepticism.”

The officials did not offer further details on how the voter data was obtained or what the Russians may be doing with the information.

US intelligence agencies concluded in 2016 that Kremlin-backed hackers were behind an effort to undermine Hillary Clinton’s presidential run, using both cyber-attacks   and fake news stories planted on social media.

Iran has not managed to successfully hack US systems.

The emails in question were addressed to registered Democratic voters in several states, including the key battleground of Florida, and urged them to vote for Mr Trump – or else.

“You will vote for Trump on Election Day or we will come after you,” the emails said, according to US media.

“Change your party affiliation to Republican to let us know you received our message and will comply.”

As of Wednesday, over 40 million Americans have cast early votes in the presidential contest between Mr Trump and Democrat Joe Biden.

Tanzania President John Magufuli ,the holly treat to Covid-19 pandemic

Tanzania President John Magufuli’s idiosyncratic handling of the coronavirus pandemic has put the country in the global spotlight. Now one of the region’s most unconventional leaders is seeking a second term.

When Covid-19 arrived in Tanzania, President Magufuli didn’t believe in people staying at home. He wanted them to get into the churches and mosques to pray.

“Coronavirus, which is a devil, cannot survive in the body of Christ… It will burn instantly,” Magufuli, a devout Christian, pronounced on 22 March from the altar of a church in Tanzania’s capital, Dodoma.

He would later speak against social distancing and the wearing of masks, and questioned the efficacy of testing after sending various animals and fruit to be checked for the virus – he announced that a papaya, a quail and a goat had all tested positive. The president said he could not countenance closing down the economy, and excoriated neighbouring countries for doing so.

Although many might dismiss Magufuli’s approach as eccentric, it is emblematic of his combative style.

He also purged thousands of so-called “ghost workers” – essentially non-existent employees – from the public payroll, and fired officials considered corrupt or under-performing, in public. Sometimes this was even done live on television.

And he clamped down on what he saw as extravagant spending, cancelling Independence Day celebrations for the first time in 54 years. Instead, he ordered a public clean-up, getting his own hands dirty by picking up rubbish outside State House.

In the first year of Magufuli’s presidency, this approach earned him a great deal of praise, inspiring the Twitter hashtag: #WhatWouldMagufuliDo. While some posts mocked the president’s austere policies – for example: “Was about to buy myself an oven then I asked myself #WhatWouldMagufuliDo” with a photo of a saucepan suspended over candles – others called for more African leaders to emulate his leadership style. In 2017, a Kenyan professor went so far as to call for the “Magufulication” of Africa during an address at the University of Dar es Salaam.

But from the outset, it was also clear there was a darker side to his leadership – that a number of his initiatives would slowly chip away at the country’s democratic space.

The rap song which came true

In January 2016, barely two months into his term, his administration announced that state TV would no longer broadcast live parliamentary proceedings, as a cost-cutting measure. The opposition saw this as censorship as it was among the few ways it could hold the government to account. It planned demonstrations against the ban, but the government responded by banning all protests.

Another example of such censorship was Magufuli’s response to a 2017 song by popular Tanzanian rapper Nay wa Mitego. Less than a day after its release, Mitego found himself in police custody.

“Is there still freedom of expression in this country?” the raspy-voiced artist, whose real name is Emmanuel Elibariki, had rapped.

“What if I speak and later find myself at Central [Police Station]?”

“Are there leaders who make stupid decisions? There are!”

“Are there those who miss [former president] Jakaya Kikwete? There are!”

He was accused of insulting the president and maligning the government. The fear he sang about had come true – he was now being detained at the Central Police Station in Dar es Salaam that he referenced in the lyrics.

Although President Magufuli ordered Nay wa Mitego’s release just a day later, he advised that the song should be reworked to include lyrics about other problems in the society, such as tax cheats.

Magufuli’s administration has continued to roll out a cocktail of bold and unusual directives, introducing new laws intended to increase revenue from multinational mining firms.

In 2017, Acacia Mining, a subsidiary of Canadian parent company Barrick Gold, was slapped with an incredible $190bn (£145bn) tax bill over royalties the government said it owed, though it denied any wrongdoing. As part of the settlement, Barrick eventually agreed to pay $300m after buying out Acacia, and a new operating company, Twiga Minerals, was formed with the government owning 16% of the joint venture. Barrick and the Tanzanian government also agreed to the sharing of unspecified future economic benefits from the mines on a 50-50 basis.

Then there was his highly contentious decree that Tanzanian schoolgirls who get pregnant cannot return to school even after they have given birth. And in 2018, Tanzania passed a law to punish anyone questioning official statistics, making the state the sole custodian of data. The World Bank said the changes were “deeply worrying”.

Getting Tanzania’s transport moving

But critics agree that Magufuli has contributed to Tanzania’s development in recent years, investing in several large infrastructure projects such as the creation of a standard gauge railway to connect the country with its regional neighbours, the expansion of major highways, and the construction of a bus rapid transit system in the commercial hub of Dar es Salaam. He has also increased electricity production to the grid which has reduced the need for power rationing.

And he has revived the state-run national airline, Air Tanzania, which, plagued by debt and mismanagement for years, was effectively grounded with only one plane in its fleet when he took office.

The president appointed a new board and chief executive of the company, which has gone on to purchase six new planes and integrate others which were under maintenance.

The leader of the East African nation has also introduced free education for all Tanzanians in public schools up to the fourth year of secondary school.

‘Data darkness’ over coronavirus

But it is Magufuli’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic which has brought particular international attention to his governance in recent months.

After the first case on 16 March, the only immediate shutdown was of schools and learning institutions. It took about a month for the country to bring in other restrictions – such as halting sporting activities and closing borders.

Buses and public transport carried fewer passengers, and numbers at pubs and restaurants were restricted, but World Health Organization (WHO) Africa director Matshidiso Moeti accused Tanzania of acting slowly to curb the spread of the virus.

“In Tanzania we have observed that physical distancing, including the prohibition of mass gatherings, took some time to happen and we believe that these might have been probable factors that led to a rapid increase in cases there,” the WHO official said in April.

Markets and other workplaces stayed open as normal, as did places of worship.

“We have had a number of viral diseases, including Aids and measles. Our economy must come first. It must not sleep… Life must go on,” Magufuli has said.

“Countries [elsewhere] in Africa will be coming here to buy food in the years to come… they will be suffering because of shutting down their economy.”

In early June, Magufuli declared the country “coronavirus-free”, and the health ministry also announced the closure of coronavirus treatment and isolation centres, which had been set up across the country.

Given Tanzania stopped publishing numbers of its coronavirus cases in May, it is difficult to verify how well the country’s approach has worked. The country had 509 infections when it published its final tally on 29 April.

“The country operates in data darkness,” Tanzanian analyst Aidan Eyakuze noted recently.

Hospitals around the country appear to be operating normally, though independent media and NGOs have not been able to check that themselves as access has been restricted.

‘I know what it means to be poor’

Magufuli was keen to deal with the virus on his own terms, rather than being influenced by the actions of other regional and international leaders. He styles his governance after Tanzania’s first president, Mwalimu Julius Nyerere, who was always fiercely independent.

“Our founding father was not someone to be directed to be told what to do… Those who devise these kinds of rules [lockdown] are used to making these directives that our founding father refused,” Magufuli said, referring to Nyerere’s habit of rejecting advice coming from Western nations, who the committed socialist distrusted.

Magufuli grew up under Nyerere’s rule in a village in north-western Chato district along the shore of Lake Victoria, and says his modest background has inspired his own desire to work for the Tanzanian public.

“Our home was grass thatched, and like many boys I was assigned to herd cattle, as well as selling milk and fish to support my family,” he said during his 2015 campaign.

“I know what it means to be poor. I will strive to help improve people’s welfare,” he added.

After school he worked for a year as a senior school maths and chemistry teacher before returning to further education. He worked for a few years as an industrial chemist before resigning in 1995 to run for the parliamentary seat in his own Chato constituency. After taking that seat, he quickly rose through the ranks to be appointed deputy minister for public works.

The department’s senior minister, Mama Anna Abdallah, says his no-nonsense style, focused on efficiency and results, was quickly evident. In his first year in the job he succeeded in steamrolling through the building of a long-delayed road.

“He is a person who seems to want to leave a legacy… That’s his character, he wants to make sure things are done properly,” she told me.

By 2015, Magufuli wanted to run for the presidency. He is said to have been considered a consensus candidate for the Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM) party – which had been in power for 54 years. Analysts say his lack of a political base was seen as an asset rather than a liability, his name not associated with corruption unlike some of his contemporaries.

The elections were the tightest in the country’s history, but Magufuli pulled ahead to win with 58% of the vote.

Threatened for speaking out

As Tanzania approaches the vote for a new presidential term, calls for other regional leaders to emulate Magufuli’s style have long diminished. He has faced criticism from political opponents, civil society and Western countries, who say he is oppressing the opposition, curtailing press freedom and holding foreign companies to ransom.

But as a president who has often styled himself as a stout African nationalist and a devout Catholic waging war against foreign powers seeking to exploit the East African nation, Magufuli is unlikely to be bothered by such censure.

In the country, few have stood up to him, but for some of those who have, the consequences have been grave.

The president’s pronouncements are often final, says Zitto Kabwe, an opposition leader who has been arrested more than a dozen times since 2016.

“The state wants us to keep quiet, they threaten us. The best weapon for us is to speak up and radicalise even more,” he told the AP news agency in July.

The main opposition candidate in the forthcoming election is Tundu Lissu from the Chadema party, who survived an assassination attempt in 2017, and required nearly three years in hospital abroad for treatment and rehabilitation. No-one has been convicted for the attempt on his life, and there have been no updates on the police investigation. A few weeks ago he was barred from campaigning by the electoral commission for seven days for alleged ethics violations regarding remarks he made against the president.

But while Magufuli discourages challenges to his authority, he is keen on speaking directly to members of the public and hearing what they have to say.

At the end of July, he chose to be driven rather than flown home from a state funeral so he could stop along the way to listen to bystanders’ concerns. He stopped in Mkuranga and listened to their issues – about grabbed land, marital problems, women who had been disinherited, a school without desks. The president tried to find solutions, including holding a fundraiser on the spot.

An expat who worked for the multinational Telco says some of the country’s civilians seem to genuinely love a president who gets things done.

As the fight for the presidency draws to a close, Magufuli has the advantage of incumbency, and is backed by a party that has never lost the presidency.

Opposition candidate Tundu Lissu is promising economic growth and respect for human rights. The other key opposition contender is Bernard Membe, a former minister and member of the CCM central committee, who is standing for the ACT-Wazalendo party.

If Magufuli does win a second term, he has promised to continue with infrastructural development and improve people’s livelihoods.

But unless his style of governance changes, some opposition activists, independent journalists and critics will fear for their future.

Champions league round up

Salzburg 2-2 Lokomotiv Moskva

Vitali Lisakovich scored his first UEFA Champions League goal in a see-saw draw. Éder put Lokomotiv ahead with a powerful header before Dominik Szoboszlai curled in a superb long-range equaliser on the stroke of half-time. Zlatko Junuzović rifled rejuvenated Salzburg ahead after the break, only for Lisakovich to nod in and earn a share of the spoils.
Key stat: Salzburg have only failed to score in one of their last 15 home matches in European competition.
27/10: Lokomotiv vs BayernAtlético vs Salzburg

Bayern 4-0 Atlético

Champions Bayern started their title defence with an emphatic victory against Atlético. A Kingsley Coman double bookended fine strikes from Leon Goretzka and Corentin Tolisso as Diego Simeone’s men suffered their joint-heaviest UEFA Champions League defeat. Bayern’s winning margin could have been greater but for Niklas Süle striking a post.
Key stat: Atlético conceded four goals in a UEFA Champions League game for only the second time.
27/10: Lokomotiv vs BayernAtlético vs Salzburg

Real Madrid 2-3 Shakhtar 

A Shakhtar team including seven starters aged 21 or under pulled off a stunning upset in Madrid. The visitors raced into a 3-0 first-half lead thanks to Tetê’s composed opener, Raphaël Varane’s own goal and Manor Solomon’s finish to a fine team move. Madrid threatened a comeback but Luka Modrić and Vinícius Júnior’s goals were all they could muster.
Key stat: Madrid shipped three first-half goals in a UEFA Champions League match for the first time since September 2005, against Lyon.
27/10: Shakhtar vs InterGladbach vs Madrid

Inter 2-2 Mönchengladbach

Following a cautious first half, this contest burst into life after the interval. Inter struck first as Romelu Lukaku found the net for the ninth European game in a row but the advantage proved brief, Arturo Vidal tripping Marcus Thuram and Ramy Bensebaini levelling from the spot. When Jonas Hofmann raced clear to slot in with six minutes left, Mönchengladbach looked set for a famous win, only for Lukaku to score again in the 90th minute.
Key stat: Lukaku has now bagged 40 goals for Inter in just 56 appearances.
27/10: Shakhtar vs InterGladbach vs Madrid

Olympiacos 1-0 Marseille

Ahmed Hassan struck in added time to give Olympiacos an opening win. The match appeared destined for a stalemate despite the home side’s second-half dominance, with Giorgos Masouras having a goal ruled out for offside. Darío Benedetto was denied by José Sá at the other end, but Hassan had the final word when he rose unmarked to head in Mathieu Valbuena’s cross.
Key stat: All three UEFA Champions League meetings between these teams have finished 1-0 – but this was the first home win.
27/10: Porto vs OlympiacosMarseille vs Man. City

Man city 3- 1 Porto

Luis Díaz’s stunning solo effort gave the visitors the lead, though Sergio Agüero quickly levelled from the spot after Pepe felled Raheem Sterling. City continued to hold sway after the restart and were finally rewarded when İlkay Gündoğan curled in their second from a free-kick and substitute Ferrán Torres fired in a third.
Key stat: Porto’s record away to English clubs in European competition now reads: W0 D3 L17 (F11 A53).
27/10: Porto vs OlympiacosMarseille vs Man. City

 Ajax 0-1 Lverpool

Liverpool returned to winning ways in fortuitous circumstances as Nicolás Tagliafico put through his own net following Sadio Mané’s similarly miscued shot before the break. Fabinho brilliantly cleared Dušan Tadić’s lob off the line and Davy Klaassen’s howitzer came back off the upright as Ajax piled on the pressure, but Liverpool held firm.
Key stat: Liverpool kept only their second clean sheet in 13 UEFA Champions League away games.
27/10: Liverpool vs MidtjyllandAtalanta vs Ajax

Papu Gómez’s strike capped an impressive attacking display from last season’s quarter-finalists. The hosts, playing their first ever UEFA Champions’ League group stage fixture, were undone in the first half by goals from Duván Zapata and Luis Muriel either side of Gómez’s effort. Debutant Aleksei Miranchuk added a fourth from the bench.
Key stat: Atalanta have scored 18 goals in five matches in all competitions this season.
27/10: Liverpool vs MidtjyllandAtalanta vs Ajax

Safaricom mulls support for SMEs in the wake of COVID-19

As the covid-19 pandemic continues to devastate economies and take a toll on businesses, Kenya’s telecommunication giant Safaricom has reiterated its commitment to work with SMEs who have borne the greatest brunt of the virus even as the company outlines measures it is putting in place to insulate itself from the virus shock.

Speaking to CNN’s Richard Quest, Safaricom CEO Peter Ndegwa elaborated the nexus between Safaricom’s future and Kenyan SMEs that are the lifeline of the country’s economic growth.

“We want to take it to a new level. We want to go into new products. And we also see a big opportunity for SMEs. We know that SMEs have been affected significantly by Covid prices as they come back to life after Covid. We want to support SMEs. So, SMEs control 40 percent of their economic activity and employ 80 percent in Kenya. We want to be two empire SMEs to do their business better,” Mr. Ndgegwa said further adding: “The Covid crisis is much more about socio economic crisis… We’ve been able to manage the health effect much better. I do believe that we need to support SMEs because most people, 80 percent of their employment in Kenya and across Sub-Saharan Africa comes from SMEs.”

Mr. Ndegwa said that the telco has been working with the government and other players in introducing digital opportunities that SMEs can tap into. “That’s why we really want to empower SMEs using M-PESA and also through digital services so that we can bring them back. We have been working with the government and also other partners to support them to come back into the country.”

Malindi MP Aisha Jumwa back in court for murder charges

Malindi MP Aisha Jumwa appears before an open court at the Mombasa Law Courts on Monday, August 31, accompanied by lawyer Cliff Ombeta/CFM

Malindi Member of Parliament Aisha Jumwa is today set to appear before Mombasa courts to face murder charges that clouded the Ganda ward by-elections. – By Gerald Gekara.

The vocal Malindi legislator is set to take plea on the murder charges levelled against her.

According to his lawyer, Dunstan Omari, Aisha Jumwa took her mental assessment, a requirement of remandees charged with murder. He dismissed claims that Jumwa was denied bail over her decision to boycott the psychiatric tests.

“Our client is a very respected member of the society, she is part of the legislature in charge of making laws. Why should she not honor her obligations.”

Aisha Jumwa was taken in as a suspect, after one supporter was injured in a meeting that Jumwa opposed. Shots were fired to disperse the irate locals, leaving one person dead.

Since her decision to ditch ODM, Jumwa has been in and out of courts, and police stations.

US Election 2020: Trump and Obama lock horns in rival rallies

US President Donald Trump and his predecessor, Barack Obama, have directed blistering barbs at each other during rival rallies.
Stumping in Pennsylvania for Democratic White House nominee Joe Biden, Mr Obama likened Mr Trump to a “crazy uncle” and said he gives succour to racists.


In North Carolina, the Republican president mocked Mr Obama for being wrong about the 2016 election outcome. With 13 days to go until this election, Mr Biden holds a solid lead nationally. But the margin is slimmer in the handful of US states that could go either way and ultimately decide the outcome on 3 November.

Americans are voting early at a record pace this year, with 42 million having already cast ballots both by post and in person.

What did Trump say?

Mr Trump trained most of his fire during his rally in Gastonia on Wednesday evening on his current Democratic challenger for the White House. He said the choice for voters was between a “Trump super-recovery” or a “Biden steep depression”. Mr Biden has been off the campaign trail all week preparing for the final presidential debate on Thursday night in Nashville, Tennessee, while Mr Trump barnstorms the battleground states.

The president could not resist taking a pop at Mr Obama, who hit the campaign trail in person about an hour earlier for the first time since the August political conventions. “There was nobody that campaigned harder for crooked Hillary Clinton than Obama, right?” Mr Trump told rally-goers, who booed at the mention of his old adversaries’ names. “He was all over the place.”
The president added: “I think the only one more unhappy than crooked Hillary that night was Barack Hussein Obama.”

Mr Trump, a Republican, also mocked Mr Obama’s reported initial lack of enthusiasm for the White House bid of Mr Biden, who was his vice-president from 2009-2017.


In 2016, Mr Obama reportedly pressured Mr Biden to sit out the race and allow Hillary Clinton to run, believing she had the better chance of defeating Mr Trump. Last year Mr Obama said there was a need for “new blood” in the Democratic leadership, which was widely interpreted as a slight to Mr Biden.

What did Obama say?

After lacerating attacks on Mr Trump over his handling of the coronavirus and the economy, Mr Obama turned at a drive-in rally in Philadelphia to the president’s tweets.


He said if Mr Biden won, “we’re not going to have a president who goes out of his way to insult anybody who doesn’t support him, or threaten them with jail. That’s not normal presidential behaviour.”


Mr Obama – who remains one of the most popular figures in the Democratic party – said voters would not tolerate such conduct from a family member, “except for maybe a crazy uncle somewhere”.Why are folks making excuses for that?” he said. “Oh, well that’s just, that’s just him. No, it’s… no! There are consequences to these actions.


“They embolden other people to be cruel. And divisive. And racist. And it frays the fabric of our society.” He added: “That behavior matters. Character matters.” On the pandemic, Mr Obama alluded to his rival’s recent bout of Covid-19: “Donald Trump isn’t suddenly going to protect all of us. He can’t even take the basic steps to protect himself.”

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