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137 new cases reported, as Health Ministry inspects Nyeri county preparedness

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Health CS Mutahi Kagwe today confirmed 137 cases tested positive for COVID-19 in the last 24 hours – By Gerald Gekara

Kenya’s tally now stands at 3,594 out of 3167 samples tested in 24 hours.

32 more people recovered from the virus, raising Kenya’s success tally to 1,253 recoveries. However 3 more patients succumbed to Covid-19 bringing death toll to 103.

Speaking in Othaya, Nyeri County, Kagwe lauded efforts by County governments in fighting the coronavirus pandemic.

“Cutting the cycle of COVID-19 transmission, cannot be won by the Government alone, without the involvement of the people. Success will depend on the level of involvement of the people,” We will continue to work with by offering support to upgrade the county human resource and equipment capacity.” Said CS Kagwe.

The CS called on healthcare workers to work within the guidelines of the Ministry of Health and the skills they acquired on how to handle COVID-19 disease.

Kagwe also bashed claims that the country is running out of Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) noting that the country will no longer import PPEs, since it can supply from its own capacity.

“The country will no longer import the PPEs because local manufacturers are producing enough,” assured Health CS Kagwe.

AstraZeneca to supply Europe with 400 Million doses of COVID-19 vaccines

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AstraZeneca Plc has marked a contract with European governments to supply the locale with its potential antibody against the coronavirus, the British drugmaker says – By Gerald Gekara

The contract is for up to 400 million dosages of the antibody, created by the College of Oxford, the company said on Saturday, including that it was looking to grow fabricating of the antibody, which it said it would give for no profit, amid the pandemic.

Deliveries will begin by the end of 2020.

The bargain is the primary contract marked by Europe’s Comprehensive Immunizations Organization together (IVA), an organization shaped by France, Germany, Italy, and the Netherlands to secure immunization measurements for all states soon long as possible.

“This will guarantee that hundreds of millions of individuals in Europe will have to get to this vaccine, of course in case it works and we are going know that by the conclusion of summer,” the company’s chief official, Pascal Soriot told reporters.

COVID-19: Catholic bishops call for protection of vulnerable groups

Rt. Rev. Virgilio Pante
Rt. Rev. Virgilio Pante, Bishop, Diocese of Maralal in Kenya || PHOTO COURTESY

Catholic Bishops want the Government to protect vulnerable groups against Covid-19 effects – By Gerald Gekara


The bishops fingered truck drivers, refugees, the pastoralists communities, medically ill patients as vulnerable groups the government should specifically target.


“We laud the government so far for the management of Covid 19. We must now focus on vulnerable groups”, KCCB said.
In a statement read on KCCB behalf by Bishop.of Maralalal.


They were speaking during the Corpus Christi Mass and Adoration at the Holy Family Basilica. Corpus Christi is a major event in the calendar of the Catholic Church. It is the Centre of all Sacraments.

The Feast of Corpus Christi (Body & Blood of Jesus Christ) is the summit of all Sacraments.

Why history will judge Burundi’s Pierre Nkurunziza harshly

Pierre Nkurunziza, Burundi’s football-loving president and self-proclaimed pastor, has died at the age of 55. By all accounts this was death most cruel. He was soon to hand over power to his handpicked successor, Major General Evariste Ndayishimiye.

Ndayishimiye, the former army major, recently won a controversial election which was reaffirmed by the constitutional court only a few days ago. This would have been the first time in Burundi’s history that power was transferred peacefully from one leader to another, albeit from the same party.

So what does Nkurunziza’s passing mean for the transition process in Burundi? And to Burundi’s regional relationships?

When Burundians look back, some will remember their president as a man who laid the foundation for a belated political transition. Others will see his departure as good riddance. History will judge Nkurunziza as someone who brought unnecessary pain to a nation that had long suffered from political misrule, but who in death bequeathed it a golden opportunity for renewal.

Iron fist

Nkurunziza had been president of Burundi for the past 15 years. He came to power first as a parliamentary nominee in 2005, later winning two controversial popular elections.

He ruled with an iron fist, making few compromises. For example, his insistence in 2015 on changing the constitution to enable him to have a controversial third term in power plunged Burundi into civil unrest of near civil war proportions. Thousands died and many fled the country.

To many, Nkurunziza was a hardliner within his National Council for the Defence of Democracy-Forces for the Defence of Democracy party. He presided over wide-scale purges of opponents and the muffling of the press. He also oversaw the rise of the much dreaded Imbonerakure – militias that terrorised any real and perceived opponents.

His untimely passing, therefore, presents the nation of 11 million with an opportunity to chart a new path.

The transition

We could anchor Burundi’s political transition to Nkurunziza’s decision not to seek a fourth term of office, which he first signalled in 2015 and reiterated in 2018. Having muscled his way to a third term through the intimidation of judges of the constitutional court, and subsequently winning controversial elections, Nkurunziza must have understood the ramifications of his continued hold on power.

His decision to “step aside” was instrumental in tempering political opposition and potential violent challenge to the status quo. Handpicking a successor, like many African strongmen, ensured both change and continuity – actions borrowed from the playbook of neighbours such as the Democratic Republic of Congo and Angola.

It is highly unlikely, therefore, that transition in Burundi will dramatically deviate from the existing status quo, given the existence of entrenched interests, particularly the military and ruling party elites.

The fact that there’s an institutionalised dominant party will ensure ideological continuity, regime endurance and the strategic sequencing of transition or succession.

It is also crucial to appreciate that when authoritarian leaders die in office, more often than not regime elites coalesce rather than fragment. Regime elites are best served by ensuring the maintenance of the status quo.

In Burundi’s case this means rallying around Nkurunziza’s chosen successor, Ndayishimiye.

The sudden death of Nkurunziza is therefore unlikely to result in a fundamental change of direction.

Protecting the legacy

In handpicking the trusted party secretary, Nkurunziza ensured that his legacy wouldn’t be challenged or derailed by either the opposition or an outsider.

Nkurunziza had taken other steps to ensure that his influence on matters of the state continued uninterrupted. He had designated for himself the role of “supreme guide of patriotism”. This was no doubt designed to ensure a “subservient” successor president whose fortunes would have been at the behest of the ex-president.

The incoming president is considered to be more open-minded and less prone to violence than other generals. But the death of his predecessor doesn’t necessarily provide him with an open hand to do as he pleases, given the need to balance various competing elite interests within the party and the military.

The country’s new leader will also have to consider mending fences with its neighbours.

Burundi’s regional and international relations have ranged from frosty to toxic. Burundi blamed the failed coup attempt against Nkurunziza in 2015 on its northern neighbour, Rwanda. Bilateral relations and trust plunged to an all time low.

Rwanda saw Burundi as sympathetic to the FDLR rebels in the DRC fighting against the Rwanda government. In turn, Burundi accused its neighbour of actively supporting opponents of Burundi’s own regime. Many of those opponents found shelter in Rwanda. So did thousands of refugees.

Burundi took exception to this. Nkurunziza’s personal relationship with Rwandan leader Paul Kagame was, at best, frosty. His death presents the ideal opportunity to reset relations between Burundi and Rwanda.

Global pariah

Burundi under Nkurunziza was cast as a global pariah. International financial and economic support was all but frozen. Long accused of gross human rights violations, Burundi became hostile towards the international community. It purged national and international NGOs, and expelled the personnel of international institutions. The World Health Organisation’s country representative was the most recent casualty.

President Ndayishimiye now has the opportunity to be his own man, and chart a different course for Burundi. The hope is that it will be one of prosperity, and peace and good neighbourliness.The Conversation

David E Kiwuwa, Associate Professor of International Studies, University of Nottingham

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Dramatic finale as Valencia denied by 10-man Levante

 Valencia were held to a 1-1 home draw by 10-man Levante in La Liga after the visitors levelled eight minutes into stoppage time with a VAR-awarded penalty on Friday.

Gonzalo Melero converted the last-gasp spot kick to cancel out Rodrigo’s late opener as Europe-chasing Valencia stayed seventh on 43 points from 28 games.

The result left Levante in 12th with 34 points.

Earlier, Granada beat Getafe 2-1 on the second day of play in La Liga after a three-month break due to the COVID-19 crisis.

The lack of recent play made for a slow start at Mestalla, but Valencia dominated and were left to rue missed opportunities at halftime.

They had the clearest chance when Carlos Soler’s shot crashed onto the crossbar in the 29th minute, and came close again as Mouctar Diakhaby’s header hit the post on the stroke of halftime.

The game finally sprung into life in the late stages.

Ronaldo misses penalty as Juve squeeze into final with Milan draw

Cristiano Ronaldo missed a penalty as Juventus were held to a 0-0 draw by 10-man AC Milan on Friday but the Turin side still squeezed into the Coppa Italia final as the season restarted following a three-month stoppage for the novel coronavirus.

Juve qualified for Wednesday’s final on away goals following their 1-1 draw in the first leg of the semi-final, played on Feb. 13, and face Napoli or Inter Milan who meet on Saturday.

The two key moments happened within six seconds of each other early in the match played behind closed doors at the Allianz Stadium.

Juventus were awarded a penalty in the 16th minute after the VAR officials spotted the ball hitting Andrea Conti’s elbow but Ronaldo, whose late penalty in the first leg turned out to be decisive, slammed his effort against the foot of the post.

It was the second penalty missed by the 35-year-old in two seasons at the club.

Milan cleared the ball upfield but, as they did so, forward Ante Rebic aimed a wild kick at Danilo and was sent off, forcing the visitors to play for more than 70 minutes with 10 men.

Milan, missing veteran forward Zlatan Ibrahimovic with a calf injury, held out well but rarely threatened to snatch the goal that would have taken them into the final.

They caused Juve only one real fright when Hakan Calhanoglu was close with a diving header early in the second half.

“The emotions are strange,” said Juventus defender Leonardo Bonucci. “After 90 days, we were playing again in an empty stadium and it was strange at the start.”

Juventus coach Maurizio Sarri did not give a post-match interview while his counterpart Stefano Poli was left to reflect on the goal they conceded at home and Rebic’s red card.

“We committed the naive act of ending up with a man less. Then afterwards we had a great game and then we had chances to go ahead,” he said.

“The results are clear, two draws. The difference was subtle. I don’t think we played worse than our opponents in the two games.”

Kenya Rugby Union parts ways with Paul Feeney

Paul Feeney has left his role as Kenya Rugby Union Technical Director by mutual consent.

Paul was working mainly with the men’s sevens squad, Shujaa as well as the other national squads.

He left the role at the end of April this year owing to the uncertainty around the COVID-19 situation and the need to be at home with his family in New Zealand.

Under his management, Shujaa won the 2019 Rugby Africa Men’s Sevens in Johannesburg,South Africa, a result that secured qualification to the 32nd Olympic Games which will now take place in Tokyo, Japan in 2021. He also guided the Kenya Morans to cup final victory at the 2019 Tusker Safari Sevens.

It is unfortunate he has been unable to complete the ongoing sevens world series due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The process to fill the vacancy arising from his departure is currently ongoing and interested parties are requested to submit their applications on the Kru website

The Kenya Rugby Union would like to thank Paul for his work during his time with us and wish him success in the future.Kru said in a statement on its website and obtained by uzalendo news

Team Cheruiyot lose in virtual race

The Norway trio of Henrik, Filip and Jakob Ingebrigsten claimed victory at the Maurie Plant Memorial 2000m virtual race, one of the events in the Impossible Games held Thursday night.

It was also a night that saw a number of records fall.

The Ingebrigsten brothers defeated their Kenyan counterparts- Team Cheruiyot which comprised of world 1500m champion Timothy Cheruiyot, Commonwealth Games champion Elijah Manangoi and Edwin Meli.

The exhibition event of the Oslo Diamond League was held concurrently at the Bislett Stadium in Oslo and Nyayo Stadium in Nairobi.

As was highly anticipated, the difference manifested itself in the race which was run some 4000miles apart with the Kenyans particularly struggling with weather having to brave heavy downpour at the capital Nairobi which also stands at 1795 metres above the sea level compared to Oslo’s 23 metres.

In Oslo, Jakob- the youngest of the brothers was the first to cross the finish line in 4:50.01 (European record) ahead of Henrik who clocked 4:53.72 while Filip placed third in 4:56.91

Cheruiyot clocked the fourth- fastest time in the race of 5:03.05 to lead his Kenyan compatriots with Meli placing fifth and second in Kenya in 5:13.12 while Manangoi came home sixth and third in 5:18.63.

DCI dismantles Mugging ring operating in Nairobi

Mugging suspects nabbed by Detectives from the Directorate of Criminal Investigation based in Kamukunji have been arraigned in court.

The suspects were in traced in connection with brutal incidences of migging Ronald Ngala, Luthuli, River Road and Racecourse.

The suspects were charged with Robbery with violence before Makadara Law Courts.

All the five suspects were positively identified by the complainant who is a business man within River Road.

The case will be mentioned on 7th July, 2020 for bond consideration.

LSK moves to expel Attorney General Kihara for shaming Maraga

Attorney General Paul Kihara and Solicitor General Ogeto have been expelled from the Law Society of Kenya.

An Ordinary General Meeting will be convened virtually to decide duo’s fate on July 23.

LSK President Nelson Havi argued that the two had brought ridicule, shame, disrepute and dishonour to the office of an advocate and as members of LSK.

Uzalendo News has now learnt that the LSK had earlier requested Kihara and Ogeto to oversee the swearing-in of the 41 nominated judges within seven days from May 13.

However, the two failed to do so. This according to Havi, is a complete disregard of Judicial Service Commission, which they are members.