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Nairobi Governor Mike Sonko gives Star newspaper three days to apologize over article concerning his health

BY PRUDENCE WANZA – Nairobi Governor, Mike Mbuvi Sonko has given the Star newspaper three days to apologise over an article that was published today concerning his health status.

Sonko says if the paper fails to apologise or retract the defamatory statement he will institute legal proceedings against The Star.
Sonko further claims that the story portrayed him as an immoral person suffering from HIV/AIDS.
He further cites that the article portrayed him as an escaped convicted criminal and should not be trusted with a public office particularly the people of Nairobi who have elected him as the Governor of Nairobi County.
Through his lawyer Cecil Miller ,the Nairobi Governor, says the apology should be in words acceptable to him and given similar prominence as of the publication complained of.
Sonko says the malicious astatements were published without inquiring with him the truth of the story.
“The said publication has inflicted great prejudice to and has caused me extreme damage as a businessman and a community leader especially as the elected governor of Nairobi County,”reads the letter.
In the letter Miller says the local newspaper deliberately chose to recklessly publish the malicious false information against his client with a view of damaging his reputation as a businessman and Governor of Nairobi County.

Man charged in court for stealing from Equity bank.

BY PRUDENCE WANZA – A man has been released on Sh. 300,000 cash bail for attempting to steal Sh. 880,000 from Equity bank.

The accused Steve Gordon Ochieng, is also charged of stealing a cheque of Sh. 200,000 from the same bank.

He denied the charges before Chief Magistrate Martha Mutuku at Milimani Law Courts.

Security consultant Mwenda Mbijiwe charged of obtaining money by false pretences

BY PRUDENCE WANZA – Security consultant, Mwenda Muthuri Mbijiwe charged in court for allegedly Obtaining Sh. 150,000 from one Fadhili Abdi Mohamed by falsely pretending that he was in a position to secure his sister, Shamso Abdirahman, a job placement at United Nation a fact he knew to be false.

He denied the charges before Chief Magistrate Martha Mutuku at the Milimani Law Courts. He was released on a cash bail of Sh. 50,000.

He was released on a cash bail of Sh. 50,000.

Mutongoni MCA Baridi now moves to Supreme Court in power bid

BY PRUDENCE WANZA – The acrimonious battle pitting a controversially elected Mutonguni Ward MCA in Kitui County has now found it’s way to the Supreme Court.

Baridi Felix Mbevo, has now moved to Justice Maraga ‘s court to challenge the nullification of his victory by the Court of Appeal.

The Court of Appeal had nullified Baridi Mbevo’s election after his arch rival petitioned the court alleging that he won the election.

A court of appeal bench consisting of Justice Githinji, Justice Waki and Justice Warsame.

Baridi Mbevo is a close ally of Kitui Governor Charity Kaluki Ngilu while his nemesis Musee Mati is close to Makueni Governor Professor Kivutha Kibwana.

The political duel has become a political comedy in Mutonguni Ward, part of larger Kitui West Sub County and the most populated ward in Kitui West.

It is the home and political bed rock of the former Minority leader in Parliament the late Francis Nyenze. The same was inherited by incumbent Mp Edith Vethi Nyenze.

At 47, New KRA boss is the Youngest ever Commissioner General

BY ABEDNEGO MBUA – Mr. James Githii Mburu, the newly appointed Kenya Revenue Authority Commissioner General is famed with the corruption purge in which detectives arrested more than 57 tax collectors associated with graft.

Mburu, the youngest ever KRA Boss at 47 years of age joins the authority at a time when the focus is on fighting graft based on a lifestyle audit of various staffers. His appointment was a foregone conclusion as the organization had anticipated that the position would be retained by a tried and tested person.

He replaces Mr. John Njiraini who failed to meet tax targets set by the government and was embroiled in a pension scandal involving the authority.

Njiraini also had a run in with a tiles dealer who claimed he was slapped with a tax bill as a way of fixing him.

Mburu was selected out of a board list of 3 that included, ICPAK Boss, Mr. James Mwatu.

The initial board interview was conducted by Price Waterhouse Coopers who narrowed down to a final shortlist of five that included prominent names from the international arena and the local corporate world.

His appointment takes effect on 1st July 2019, upon the retirement of current KRA Commissioner General, John Njiraini at the end of this month.

 In his current role as KRA’s chief of intelligence, Mr Mburu has developed a formidable intelligence gathering infrastructure that has brought to grief the plans of many a tax evader.

Career

During his tenure which started with his appointment in March 2017, the new KRA boss has overseen complex and highly sensitive tax investigations touching on powerfully connected companies and individuals.

No surprise then that his has been a turbulent tenure with legal suits filed by activist Omkiya Omtata seeking to block his appointment both as Commissioner of Intelligence and most recently as candidate for Commissioner General.

Insiders familiar with the recent recruitment say concerted efforts were mounted both internally and externally seeking to block his appointment as KRA boss with the bulk of them driven by fears about his stringent position regarding tax evasion and corruption amongst KRA staff.

Achievements at KRA

Through the intelligence network he set up, high profile tax evasion attempts have been blown up with severe consequences for those involved.

Some of the more prominent ones include the abortive attempt in 2017 by Darasa Investments Limited in which taxes in excess of three billion shillings would have been lost through irregular duty-free sugar importation.

In 2018, intelligence helped to bust a multi-billion shilling tax evasion scheme by Chinese building materials retailer Housemart, a matter which is still pending before the courts.

Prominent personalities who ended up on the KRA intelligence boss’s radar include former Nairobi Governor Evans Kidero and his advocate Professor Tom Ojienda both of whom are fighting multi-million tax evasion cases.

Mr Mburu’s most recent assignments have included the high profile tax evasion investigation against Humphrey Kariuki’s Thika based Africa Spirits factory and corruption investigations into fraudulent activities that led to the arrest last month of close to eighty KRA staff.

Mr. Mburu, joined KRA twelve years ago in May 2007 with a brief to strengthen tax audit operations for the domestic taxes department. He rose through the ranks serving as second in command at the tax investigations department between ….. and February 2017.

He was appointed Commissioner of Intelligence and Strategic operations in March 2017, a docket responsible for intelligence management, corruption investigations, cyber surveillance and local and international tax information exchange.

The department is also tasked with representing KRA in government-wide law enforcement initiatives including at the Multi-Agency Task force.

Other works

Prior to joining KRA, Mr Mburu worked as technical standards officer at the Institute of Certified Public Accountants of Kenya (ICPAK), where he met his current boss and outgoing KRA Commissioner General, John Njiraini.

He briefly worked with CFC bank for … years between … and …. before rejoining his former boss, who had at the time joined KRA in April 2006 as Commissioner of Domestic Taxes.

Insiders say that the outgoing KRA boss has high regard for Mr. Mburu’s competence and uncompromising stand towards tax evasion. Mr. Mburu is reputed to have been a close confidant of the outgoing boss.

African universities need structures to assess and measure the impact of grants

Since Africa’s earliest modern public universities were established on the continent in the 1940s, these institutions have struggled to generate adequate and sustainable funding. For the most part, universities on the continent depend on money from national governments; grants; donations from international donor communities and industries to fund their learning, teaching and research activities.

But most lack proper institutional evaluation to record and track the outcomes of various grants after projects or programmes are completed. Usually, evaluations entail nothing more than a financial audit report and main outcome of the project.

This approach does little to show how a particular tranche of funding has contributed to a university achieving its mission, vision and short-to-long term plans. But universities favour it because they pride themselves on being autonomous and self-regulating.

For instance, in recent times some African universities have received grants to train PhD candidates in various fields. When the grants end, there’s only one key indicator: how many beneficiaries have graduated. This doesn’t take into account whether the project followed proper systems of accountability. It also doesn’t identify the various lessons learned from implementing the project. That means there’s no learning platform for future projects.

I set out to study how universities in Africa evaluate funding once programmes or projects are completed. I also offered some ideas about improving this evaluation, and why it is so important. I argue that evaluation is a critical tool for decisions on improving performance. It also assures that African universities are getting value for money from grants, donations and the like.

University funding

For starters, it’s useful to identify where university funding is coming from in Africa. Grants are popular. So is financial support from national governments, northern and western universities. The international donor community is involved, too, and so are philanthropic organisations.

Some examples from across the continent show just how varied and valuable grants are.

In the 2015/2016 academic year, the Office of Research and Development at the University of Ghana received US $32 million from nine international donor agencies.

In 2010, a grant profiling on the University of Ibadan in Nigeria’s website revealed that the university had 106 grants worth more than $US 17 million – and that 101 of those providing the grants were international.

The University of Nairobi in Kenya is not clear on the amount it receives from donors. But, of the 16 donors it mentions on its website, only one is Kenyan.

So how are these grants and donations assessed? In the last 15 years many of the continent’s universities have established grant offices. Their role is to strategise and attract funds from external sources. But in most cases these offices don’t have clear “grant policies” to guide their operations and the use of grants received. This lack of clear policy also means that programmes implemented under external grants can’t be properly evaluated by the universities when those grants expire.

This isn’t always a problem. International donors almost always have systems in place to evaluate the use use and impact of their grants. But industry donors and governments tend not to. So there really isn’t any way for universities to know if these grants are worthwhile, effective and add value.

The solution to this gap is an institutional grants evaluation framework that could be rolled out across the continent. Such a framework already exists elsewhere. For example, the European University Association has an institutional evaluation programme that’s conducted periodically. One of the aspects it examines is how grants are used and whether they are supporting universities’ missions, visions and outcomes.

A valuable framework

This sort of framework would have several benefits for African universities.

It would provide organisational learning and allow for future impact studies and assessments of grants. It would also improve accountability within universities and restore trust among university staff and donors. It would ensure that donor grants are properly used.

Some work is being done to address this issue. The Centre for Research Evaluation on Science and Technology (CREST) at Stellenbosch University in South Africa, through the Department of Higher Education, is helping the country’s universities to monitor government grant-related activities. Also in South Africa, universities are beginning to draw up frameworks to guide their grant programme implementation.

The broader framework I’m proposing for African universities should focus on improving policy and practice in the utilisation of all grants which flow into a particular university.

In addition, the design of the framework should define activities, inputs, performance indicators, deliverables, means of verification, outcomes and outputs and results expected from the use of the grant. Crucially, it should also speak to the broader mission and vision of the respective universities; their mid- to long-term strategic plans; the expectations from regional bodies from universities; and above all the core mission of every university: teaching, research and community engagements.

This won’t be easy. The continent’s universities lack capacity around issues of monitoring and evaluation. More people are needed who have been trained in higher education operations. Universities need to train their administrative staff in monitoring and evaluation and also employ experts in that field to work in institutions’ strategic offices.

Despite the challenges, though, universities on the continent must prioritise proper grant evaluation. Without real focus and planning, grants will not do the good they ought to and universities may lose out.The Conversation

Harris Andoh, Research Policy Expert in Institutional Research, Monitoring and Evaluation, Tshwane University of Technology

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

Sperm banks recruit unpaid donors by playing into masculine stereotypes

The sperm bank market is growing as an increasing number of people rely on sperm donation to have babies, from lesbian couples to heterosexual ones where the male partner is infertile, and single mothers who decide to have a child on their own. Faced with this increasing demand, sperm banks must recruit more donors. But it is not always an easy task – especially in the UK and Australia where it is illegal to pay donors or preserve their anonymity.

In a study recently published in Marketing Theory, my colleagues and I found that sperm banks in these countries solved this challenge by playing into traditional male stereotypes and selling sperm donation as an experience that makes donors feel more masculine.

A stereotypical hero figure. IVF Australia

Sperm banks used imagery of heroes saving “damsels in distress” and soldiers defending their country against the idea of foreign sperm invading. This followed reports of “sperm shortages” that meant sperm had to be imported to meet rising domestic demand. And it seems to have worked. These strategies helped the UK and Australian sperm donation markets to recover from the dip in the number of donors experienced between 2012 and 2015.

Time and effort

Donating sperm will often involve several visits, a variety of medical checks, and the provision of a large amount of personal information. So donors must be willing to give their time and effort. Yet, in the UK and Australia, sperm banks cannot pay their donors for this.

Plus, donors must provide their name and details if potential children decide to contact them upon turning 18. As a result, it is quite a challenge for UK and Australian sperm banks to recruit donors. The survival of sperm banks in the UK and Australia was threatened and they had to find a new strategy.

Playing on patriotic instincts. Andrew Harker/Shutterstock.com

In this research, we studied the advertising campaigns of eight fertility clinics and five sperm banks in the UK and Australia to try and understand how to recruit sperm donors without paying them. We saw that the advertising strategy of sperm banks relied on two main ideas of stereotypical masculinity: the hero and the soldier.

When using the idea of the soldier, ads represented the sperm donor as fighting off foreign invasion, doing his part for the nation, and being noble and selfless. We saw ads that referenced old World War I recruitment posters claiming that their country needed them (and their sperm).

Here the propaganda imagery and phrases are used to associate sperm donation with duty, honour, and patriotism. A more humorous version can be found in a short video clip where British sperm cartoons (proudly wearing the British flag) rally to frighten foreign sperms away. This frames the act of donating sperm as a (safer) way to fight a war for Britain.

The second image that we found sperm bank advertisers playing into was that of the everyday hero. In this example, the act of sperm donation is associated with saving lives. Central to this is the idea that creating a life and saving a life are equivalent using the imagery of lifesaving professions such as firefighters and lifeguards.

In these ads, sperm banks present sperm donation as an (easier) way to prove your heroism. Another image used was of a white collar man in a grey suit with a purple superhero cape. The ad seemed to suggest that he could achieve this sense of heroism simply by donating his sperm.

Humour helps deliver the hero imagery. IVF Australia

It is quite fascinating to see how traditional gender imagery can be used to reframe the experience of sperm donation as positive and masculinity-affirming as opposed to awkward, scary, or even degrading. It seems that offering a valuable experience provides a much stronger motivation than simply appealing to people’s desire to be altruistic.

This can offer lessons to other organisations, such as charities, that struggle to motivate their donors to give time or money. The challenge is to frame the experience as valuable to donors in the right way.

For sperm banks, the risk is falling into simplistic, sexist tropes. There’s a fine line between appealing to and repelling donors. We found that the use of humour and irony seems to help avoid this trap. And, in doing so, it provides a valuable experience for men of reaffirming their sense of masculinity – though this may well have to evolve, as society increasingly challenges the ideas of traditional gender roles.The Conversation

Laetitia Mimoun, Lecturer in Marketing at Cass Business School, City, University of London

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

UON student to be detained for 5 days for Allegedly Threatening MPs using 60 phones

BY PRUDENCE WANZA – The man alleged to have sent threatening messages to Busia women Representatives Florence Mutua and other members of parliament will be detained for five days to allow police to complete investigations.


Principal magistrate Peter Ooko ruled that he has considered the documents and cards involved in the case and that five days were sufficient for investigations. 


Alex Anyolo Kikuyu, a University of Nairobi masters student studying management accounting is accused of sending threatening messages to the legislator on 27th May 2019 through several mobile phone numbers.


The content of the message was”hi kindly don’t walk alone around Parliament round about and do not visit intercontinental Hotel this week. Some politicians have hired mercenaries who were at my brother’s house last night and I have heard everything they said. Your life is in danger”. Another one read “You will be assassinated”.

The Women later reported the matter at Parliament Police Station.
The suspect was on 5th June arrested at Makadara Area of Nairobi and police recovered four mobile phones, 13 Identity Cards, 37 safaricom lines used plates and 23 Telkom lines used plates.
From the used lines, police were able to single out the lines that were uses to send the text messages.

The investigators were seeking seven days to enable them record statements from witnesses who are Members of Parliament who have also reported their complaints in different parts of Kenya since the incidents occurred while they were on recess.

They also want to subject the mobile phones of both the complainants and the suspect to cyber security for messages extraction and analysis.

The police claimed that Anyolo risks absconding if granted bail/bond since he has knowledge of the weight of the matter and also cover his traces.


It is also believed that the suspect did not act alone and has accomplices who are yet to be arrested 

President Uhuru Kenyatta announcss ban on Single-plastic in Parks

President Uhuru Kenyatta has today announced a ban on the use of single-use plastics in protected areas in the country.

The ban announced on World Environment Day covers national parks, forests and beaches, and will become effective on 5th June 2020

The ban comes two years after Kenya banned the use, manufacture and sale of environmentally harmful plastics, polythene bags and packaging materials.

“As you are aware, Kenya is hosting to the global environment programme, and has remained a campaigner for a sustainable environment. In light of this commitment, two years ago we banned the use, manufacture and sale of environmentally harmful plastics, polythene bags and packaging materials,” the President said.

“Building on this, today we are announcing another ban on single use plastics in all our protected areas, including: National Parks, beaches, forests and conservation areas, effective 5th June 2020,” he continued.

The President made the announcement when he addressed the plenary session of the ongoing Women Deliver 2019 Conference at the Vancouver Conference Centre in Canada.

Raila Visits Bomet Governor Joyce Laboso in London Hospital

Former prime minister Raila Odinga visited ailing Dr. Joyce Laboso, whop is in london for treatment of an illness yet to be disclosed.

The goveror has been away on a 1 month medical leave and all functuions were left with her deputy governor, Hillary Barchok.

“During her four-week absence, Deputy Governor Hillary Barchok will hold brief for her. She will be assisted by the county secretary Evalyn Rono and the chief of staff Jayne Sigilai,” statement from the communication office.

Raila was accompanied by Kenya’s Special envoy to the UK, Manoah Esipisu.

It is however interesting that most leaders in public offices would rather fly out to get medical services, than trust our very own health facilities. Anyways,…