Friday, July 28, 2006

THE KENYA KENYANS WANT

  • Kenyans are tired of politics of self seekers, who are driven by greed, malice and hatred. Just listen to them as they shout and yell their hearts out in the name of "democracy "and "people of kenya". You may be tempted to think they reside on the moon if it wasn't for the fact that they dwell in kenya.
    On the contrary, Kenyan are well educated and very tolerant politically. This may look like a weakness to some but it is a real strength. As we forge ahead with our political dispensation it always wise to beware these self seekers whose goal and objective is nothing else but themselves.
    Here are some of the simple but practical things Kenyans want from their Government.
    1. Better transport network
    2.
    Electricity in every village
    3. Good schools; primary, secondary, middle colleges and universities.
    4. Clean and safe drinking water in every village
    5. Farmers to get what is their dues when they deliver their produce.
    6. Security for every Kenyan
    7. Decentrallized government so that people can get services without delay.
    8. Freedom to own property anywhere in the country without being harrased.
    9. Corruption free country where honesty and hard work is our clarion.
    10. Leaders who are equal to the 21Century challenges
    .


    Hon Koigi Wamwere has a very serious point. Seee below

    on the same note see what others say..............


"Where is the party of the people?
By Koigi Wamwere
Kenyans are some of the people who fought hardest for multi-party democracy against one-party dictatorship. Unbelievably, they are today saddled with the most rudderless, ethnic and divisive parties that make multiparty democracy more of a liability.
Why do Kenyans suffer the worst economy and politics? Are we cursed or don’t think hard enough about our problems and their solutions? Are we mentally half-baked?
I suggest we suffer as we do because we lack a true party of the people. But what people? They are the poor Kenyans who are the majority in all communities.
The party of the people is the party of all Kenyans that will speak for the poor without embarrassment.
Men and women are not born to suffer. They are born to enjoy life. Our mission in life therefore is to always improve our lives by fighting hunger, disease, homelessness and oppression.
Man is, however, born weak. Alone he cannot solve his problems. To solve problems, he must unite with others in parties that subsequently form governments.
Governments’ core function is therefore to solve people’s problems.
Unfortunately people are not monolithic, they pursue their interests and solve their problems as groups rather than individually. These groups then organise parties and governments to solve their problems.
When the rich form parties and governments, it is to make them richer with all manner of means. If ever the poor form parties and governments, it is to solve their pressing problems. When tribal leaders form parties and governments it is to establish ethnic apartheid with which they exploit and oppress their own people and those of other communities. And of course when Presidents and MPs form parties and governments, even in the name of the people, it is to perpetuate themselves in power and greater wealth.
How do people tell what kind of party and government they have? By looking at the history of its leaders, what they say and don’t say, how they live and what they do and don’t do. All cannot be wrong. For instance, an unrepentant dictator remains so even if he calls himself a democrat. A propagator of ethnic hate is a tribalist even if he proclaims himself a nationalist. Parties and governments of the rich avoid talking for the poor as they do leprosy. Parties and governments of the corrupt may condemn corruption but never ostracise or jail thieves or confiscate their loot.
The poor are the most disorganised group. They have neither vision nor a way of solving their own problems. They don’t even address their own problems. They take those of their ethnic leaders as their own.
Instead of organising themselves, they are content to follow the rich and live on the crumbs that fall from their tables. Others are even happier as foot soldiers and cannon fodder for ethnic wars. We laugh at Somalia but we are no better.
Fortunately for our rich and ethnic warlords, Kenyans don’t like ideal things. They prefer hell to heaven. Or is it that they don’t know how to get out of hell or they don’t know it is at all possible to get out of it?
We should get a party that will comprehensively address the following problems.
The first is tribalism that puts us all at war with one another and may burn our common home in a conflagration that will consume us all.
The second is poverty that is the poor man’s burden. As Europe has learnt from her revolutions, as long as the poor man is hungry, he will always remain angry and explosive. Poverty is not just immoral. It is the millstone that always drowns the economy and the common man.
The third is dictatorship, a hydra whose main head we may have cut but whose smaller heads are itching to take us back to the days of queue voting, politics of the big man and treason and denies registration to perfectly legitimate parties.
The fourth is the religion of corruption that has made money our god whom both the rich and the poor worship.
The fifth is the generational rot that we can only cure with "Ituika," that African traditional democracy that helped us replace old minds that want to die in power with persons who are not just physically strong but also ideologically progressive. Backward, greedy and reactionary youth will take us nowhere anti-change, corrupt and senile octogenarians have not taken us.
What our economy and governance need is not just the raw energy of youth but synergy of knowledge, experience and progressive ideas of both old and young.
Parties that don’t walk the talk have no business calling themselves parties of the people. They cannot form government of, by and for the people.
* Koigi wa Wamwere is the Assistant minister for Information and Communication. "

Thursday, July 27, 2006

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chicagotribune.com >> Nation/World
CONFLICT IN THE MIDDLE EAST
Israeli casualties, war doubts on riseSummit ends without deal to stop fightingBy Joel Greenberg, Tribune foreign correspondent. Tribune correspondent Cam Simpson contributed from RomePublished July 27, 2006
JERUSALEM -- On a day of heavy Israeli casualties and failed international talks to end more than two weeks of fighting, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert faced growing domestic doubts Wednesday about the army's tactics and the overall wisdom of Israel's offensive in Lebanon.As televised images of wounded soldiers raised haunting memories of Israel's 18-year occupation of southern Lebanon, Olmert told lawmakers of plans for a new 1.2-mile-deep buffer zone there as critics began raising questions about the army's performance and credibility in the face of determined resistance by Hezbollah.
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Putting up a stronger fight than expected, Hezbollah guerrillas inflicted heavy losses on Israeli troops, killing nine soldiers and wounding 25 in the worst single-day toll for the Israelis since the start of the campaign.In Rome, world leaders disbanded a meeting on the crisis without agreeing on how to end the fighting, which has claimed more than 460 lives. While the United Nations, European Union and others wanted an immediate cease-fire, U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice insisted on the U.S. position that any truce be accompanied by a wider agreement that includes Hezbollah's disarmament.Pleading for "an immediate and comprehensive cease-fire," Lebanese Prime Minister Fuad Siniora warned the diplomats that only despair and fanaticism would emerge from Lebanon's rubble, and he accused Israel of war crimes."Is the value of human life less in Lebanon than that of citizens elsewhere? Are we children of a lesser God?" Siniora said, according to a copy of his remarks. "Is an Israeli teardrop worth more than a drop of Lebanese blood?"The world leaders signed a final statement pledging to "work immediately" toward a cease-fire, and Rice said it would be used to help draft a UN Security Council resolution in the coming days on the need for an international force to separate the warring sides. She said a separate meeting would be convened among nations interested in sending troops for such a force.In Washington, White House spokesman Tony Snow said two ranking U.S. diplomats would remain in the region to consult "with partners and allies on how to move forward . . . to make conditions proper for a cease-fire."In addition to the intense ground fighting Wednesday, Hezbollah fired more than 150 rockets into northern Israel despite the army's continuing offensive to stop such launches, the army said. The rockets wounded more than 30 people and damaged property.Bint Jbeil, the hill town where the army suffered its heavy losses, is a key stronghold of Hezbollah about 2 miles from the border with Israel. It has been the focus of an Israeli ground push into Lebanon that the army says is meant to kill the group's fighters and destroy its bunkers and rocket stocks in villages near the frontier.Most of Bint Jbeil's 30,000 residents have fled, but several hundred are believed to remain in the town, along with an unknown number of Hezbollah guerrillas dug in among the homes.Maj. Gen. Udi Adam, chief of the Israeli army's northern command, said several dozen Hezbollah fighters ambushed troops from the crack Golani brigade as they advanced into the town. The guerrillas set off explosives and opened fire at the soldiers, killing eight and wounding 22, an army spokeswoman said.The soldiers killed most of the attackers, and the Israeli casualties were evacuated under fire to helicopters, Adam saidThe military said that an additional soldier was killed and three others were wounded when guerrillas fired an anti-tank rocket at a house occupied by troops in the neighboring village of Maroun al-Ras, which the army said previously that it had taken."I assume there will be more days like this, regretfully, and these days can happen," Adam said.The general said troops would carry out raids in Bint Jbeil and neighboring villages but would not occupy them."The definition of the operation was to seize high ground in the Bint Jbeil area and not capture the entire town; it is too big a town, and we decided that there is no reason right now to occupy it," Adam said. "We are free to act in the whole area, and that is the mode of operation, that is, we go in and out of all kinds of places, not only Bint Jbeil."But the number of casualties in Wednesday's fighting, coming after losses in similar clashes in recent days, led some critics to question army tactics."When [the army] falls into ambushes time after time, and is surprised each time anew, this series of events has to be stopped," Rafi Noy, a retired general and former chief of staff in the army's northern command, told Channel Two television. "It's not good when this happens to an army that is so trained and so professional."The losses in Bint Jbeil also were a blow to the army's credibility after some senior officers announced in media interviews Tuesday that resistance in the town had been broken and that it was under the control of Israeli forces."The war is leading us by the nose to sink deeper in the Lebanese mud. . . . The moment the army will be in Lebanon for an extended period, it will be hell for us in there," said Ran Cohen, a dovish lawmaker and reserve army colonel, The Associated Press reported. "The deeper we get drawn in, the worse it will be."The leader of Hezbollah, Sheik Hassan Nasrallah, said in a televised speech early Wednesday that his group would wage a guerrilla war against the Israelis in southern Lebanon. "What's important in the ground battle is the degree to which we inflict casualties on the Israeli enemy," Nasrallah said.Olmert told a parliamentary committee Wednesday that Israel wanted to establish a 1.2-mile-deep buffer zone in southern Lebanon that would be free of Hezbollah guerrillas and deter rocket attacks on Israeli soldiers and civilians.However, Olmert indicated that Israel would not go back to an occupation similar to the "security zone" it maintained in southern Lebanon in the '80s and '90s. Defense Minister Amir Peretz spoke Tuesday of controlling the area with firepower to prevent the entry of guerrillas.In the southern Lebanese city of Tyre on Sunday, an Israeli bombing hit an empty building where Hezbollah's commander in the south has offices, wounding 13 people nearby, AP reported.A total of 51 Israelis have been killed since the start of the military campaign, 33 of them soldiers. More than 400 Lebanese, most of them civilians, have been killed in Israeli attacks.----------jogreenberg@tribune.com
Copyright © 2006, Chicago Tribune

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Wednesday, July 26, 2006

THE REALITY OF THE GAME IS HERE. IN OTHERS WORDS

"Somebody once said that politics is like prostitution. The more money one gets, the more powerful they become. So powerful that they are able to get paid for services not rendered. Look at the way MPs have been swarming over Moyale and Marsabit districts, commissioning a borehole here and promising a dispensary there. Nobody knows where the money came from, but just because they are in power we believe in them.

* * *

Every election cycle yields its fair share of winners and losers. The big loser on Monday, undoubtedly, was the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), which emerged with nothing after a spirited campaign, prompting a wag on one FM station to brand it the Likely Dying Party. Wow!

* * *

Even after becoming an Assistant minister, Mwangi Kiunjuri still thinks like a tout on Racecourse Road, acts like a tout on Latema Road and talks like a tout on University Way. While Palaver appreciates that Kenya is a land of opportunity and anyone can become anybody, Kiunjuri has failed to decode the difference between manning a bus stop and being in Government. If proximity to the powers that be cannot make him respect public institutions like the ECK, what will?

* * *

Steadman said LDP and Narc were the most popular parties. Yet they lost to Kanu and Narc-Kenya in the just-concluded by-elections in Moyale, Laisamis, North Horr, Saku and Nakuru Town. Unless the Steadman samples are from the moon and the error of margin is absolute, the pollsters have boxed themselves into a circus. Their perception of reality seems to be a mirage to the public. Over to you, George Waititu.

* * *

If Danson Mungatana doesn’t get a ministerial position for making the Narc-Kenya dream a reality, then politcs is truly a dog’s job. Mungatana has been so consistent in his praise for Narck-Kenya that if he paid as much attention to his Garsen constituency, the villagres would be living in nirvana.

* * *

And finally …

If only that busybody William Kabogo would descend from the skies in his cacophonous helicopter, his constituents cry, he would realise there are no roads in Juja".

Friday, July 14, 2006

The African students intership at the United Methodist Publishing House in Nashville Tenneesee

Publishing House intern program nurtures African students


A UMNS photo by Kathy L. Gilbert


African seminary students surround the Rev. Fred Allen (third from right) in front of the United Methodist Publishing House.
African seminary students, Emmanuel Naweji (from left), Nsenga Gad Mpoyo, Newlove Annan, Okitakoyi Lundula, Wilson Marimi and Dominic Dadzie surround the Rev. Fred Allen (third from right), executive director of African American Initiatives/International Outreach at the United Methodist Publishing House in Nashville, Tenn. They are the first in a new African Internship Program created to nurture seminary students interested in a career in Christian publishing. With Allen as their mentor, the students spent June 12-30 learning about the industry from Publishing House staff. A UMNS photo by Kathy L. Gilbert. Photo #06758. Accompanies UMNS story #413. 7/11/06
July 11, 2006

A UMNS Feature
By Milse Furtado*

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UMNS) - Six seminary students from three African countries got more than they bargained for after a summer internship at the United Methodist Publishing House.

And so did staff at the Nashville United Methodist agency.

At an emotional chapel service to say goodbye June 29, it was evident students and staff had made lifelong friendships.

The six students were the first in a new, three-week African Internship Program created by the Publishing House to find ways to nurture seminary students interested in pursuing a professional career in Christian publishing, marketing, merchandizing and distribution.

"This is really one of our most exciting programs," said the Rev. Fred Allen, executive director of African American Initiatives/International Outreach at the Publishing House. Allen also served as mentor for the young students.


Emmanuel Naweji
Emmanuel Naweji
"Almost throughout their lives in Africa, the interns had to live on the edge of social and political unrest, thus having to overcome some overwhelming odds that would have broken lesser persons," he said.

"As they shared their powerful testimonies of faith with the United Methodist Publishing House family, we were profoundly inspired by their deep commitment to God through Christ and their love of the United Methodist Church."

Life-changing experience

"My experience at the Publishing House was more than a learning experience, and it was also a turning point of my life," said Emmanuel Naweji, a native of the Democratic Republic of Congo and a student at Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary, Evanston, Ill.

"My dreams have been redirected. I actually dream of pursuing a doctorate program so that I will be able to combine church and development of African communities through writing, teaching and preaching."

"Being here for these past three weeks was a life-changing experience in many ways," said Nsenga Mpoyo, also from the Democratic Republic of Congo and a student at Candler School of Theology, Atlanta.


Nsenga Mpoyo
Nsenga Mpoyo
"I came to have a deep sense of what it takes to get from an idea to a finished product ready to be published," he said.

"At the United Methodist Publishing House we learned the art of hospitality, love, unity, hard work, commitment and quality," said Wilson Marimi of Kenya, a student at Gammon Theological Seminary, Atlanta. He said the students witnessed the staff's "love of God individually and collectively."

"We were blessed more than mere words can be able to describe," he said.

Allen said these first six students were chosen based upon recommendations from the deans of the schools of theology.

Struggles on the journey

The students had stories of struggle and triumph that they shared during their June 12-30 stay in Nashville.

"I always pray to God not to remove any mountain in front of me, but I rather ask him to strengthen me to climb whatever mountain that is in front of me," said Newlove Annan of Ghana, a student at Gammon.


Okitakoyi Lundula
Okitakoyi Lundula
The other students participating in the program were Dominic Dadzie, Ghana, attending Candler; Nsenga Mpoyo, Democratic Republic of Congo, attending Candler; and Okitakoyi Lundula, Democratic Republic of Congo, attending Garrett-Evangelical.

Mpoyo, who was born and raised in a Christian environment, joined the church at age 15.

He decided to stop medical school after three years because he knew it was not what he was called to do. "This was the hardest decision I ever made in my life," he said. He moved to Zimbabwe and got his bachelor's degree in divinity from United Methodist-related Africa University in Mutare.

Naweji said he always knew he was called for ministry. His mother used to have evangelists come over for prayer meetings, and they would tell her "this boy is called for ministry."

However, two months before his dream of studying abroad became reality, his father died of poisoning. After an uncle introduced him to Africa University, he graduated with a degree in agriculture and business. Then he enrolled in seminary in the United States.

"I want to be a teacher someday and be able to write books so that we can also express our African beliefs. and Christian culture to the rest of the world," said Naweji.

God calling


Wilson Marimi
Wilson Marimi
Born to a farmer family, Marimi was named "Mugambi" by his grandfather, which means "spokesman and judge in a council of elders."

While studying at Moi Teachers College in Kenya, Marimi heard God calling him one night.

"I went to sleep at around 1 a.m., but two hours later, I heard a voice calling, 'Mugambi! Mugambi! What are you doing?' I woke up thinking it was my roommate who was calling me, but I realized he was dead asleep. I went to sleep again, but after 30 minutes, the same voice called me again. I woke up, but there was nobody I could see. I went back to sleep, and the same voice called again. 'Mugambi! Mugambi! What are you doing?' I realized it was God who was calling me. I just said, 'God, if you are the one calling me, use me where others have been defeated.'"

The son of a district lay person in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Okitakoyi Lundula has always pursued a ministry of music. Singing in the church and in the family choir made him a better Christian, he said. "That's how I started knowing God - not in the Bible but through songs."

Known among peers as "reverend, pastor, and bishop," Lundula is pursuing a master's degree in divinity.

Dominic Dadzie
Dominic Dadzie
Dominic Dadzie was raised in the Catholic Church. His parents fished for a living.



While he was student leader of a military task force, soldiers attempted a coup of the government. Dadzie was not involved in those operations, but some members of the armed forces picked students at random for questioning, he said. In an effort to avoid conflict, he sought refuge in Nigeria. Already aware of a call to ministry nudging, the call became clearer when he decided to enter full-time ministry, returned to Ghana and was ordained in 1991.



"One church tried to get me into the ministry in Nigeria, but I said, 'No, I want to go back to Ghana.' They asked me if I had no fear and I said 'No God will take care of me.'"



He is pursuing a master's degree in theological studies.



True measure of success

Annan grew up in a Christian environment. "I have been in ministry, not ordained, but in ministry ever since I was born, and I was called to the ordained ministry to be a candidate in the year of 2000," he said.


Newlove Annan

Newlove Annan
He received his call through dreams while he was in Ghana pursuing his undergraduate degree in religion and music. "God was telling me to go and do his will and to rely on him totally."

Annan also wants to further his education. "I actually want to go to (the) institute of sacred music at Yale to get a doctor's degree in church music. Right now, I am concentrating on graduating with a dual degree in divinity and sacred music from ITC." Gammon is one of the seminaries that constitute the Interdenominational Theological Center in Atlanta.

"As a result of the African Seminary Interns," Allen said, "(we) have underscored the belief that a true measure of success is not merely a return on the dollars expended on product development and publication of resources, but also a measure of the impact we have on the lives touched by our products and programs, especially in regards to our interns."

*Furtado, an intern at United Methodist Communications, is a senior communications major at United Methodist-related Rust College, Holly Springs, Miss.

News media contact: Kathy L. Gilbert, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.

Thursday, July 13, 2006

THE UNITED PUBLISHING HOUSE INTERNSHIP EXPERIENCE

The new African Students internship program at the United Methodist Publishing House (UMPH), was concluded on June 30, 2006, with an oxmoronical ending. It was a bitter sweet ending, in the fact that the interns and the UMPH staff, had bonded in a way that all felt a moment of great fellowship, which was derived from the symbiotic relationship which had been built in that three weeks duration through the wonderful hospitality,love, sense of purpose and kinship in Christ Jesus, and the way the African students interns had adjusted into the new settings within a very short notice followed with the quick departure when the rhythm and beats were on a quick formation.
On one hand, the interns had not expected to be lavished and pomped with a kind of hospitality and love they received from the entire staff led by the most gifted, smart and intelligent president, Mr Neil M.Alexander whose humility was depicted by the way he mingles with his and what the interns were exposed to during their short internship program.
On the other hand, the UMPH staff was not expecting a bunch of African students who were full of energy and a strong sense of purpose, accompanied with a strong testimony and commitment in their call to serve God and their fellow human beings. It was a moment of great learning from both sides as the aspiring publishers cum sales representatives were taken through a marathon of introduction into a world they had never imagined of venturing earlier on.
It was inspiring and a big blessing to be guided and taken through a process through which resources are developed right from when an idea is born to the end of a finished product. The most able Miss LeeDell Stickler, senior development Editor and one of the most talented teacher I have come across made our stay and training more than interesting. Every intern was always looking for to be with her in her department board room. Her whole team was full of energy and charisma as they guided us through and along this new terrain. Mr Andrew J. schleicher, the editor of Newscope and Faithlink demonstrated his grasp of the ideas in the whole aspect of creation right from our ecosystem to the unfair trade policies being subjected to the developing countries to the pollution and destruction of our environmentt due to poor perception towards the environment as a result of the poor interpretation of the Genesis episode of creation where man is told by God to "rule" or have "dominion" over the entire creation. Miss Cathy Robinson set the tempo by taking us through an elaborate process of the MBUs and SBUs all aspects of the operations within UMPH. She crowned it all by taking us to the picnic over the weekend where we had a very pleasant moment with her Church congregation plus her daughter, Mary. Mr John F. Kutsko, the Director of academic and Professional Resources, proved in a remarkable way the genius in him by the he handled and directed various sessions charged with the duty of coming up with the guidelines in the process of coming up with news resources and all that is involved in coming up with such things like titles, books and the expenses involved in the process of developing those resources. The United Methodist News service under the guidance of Miss Cathy L. Gilbert kept the interns on the spot as her camera were clicking without a stop in order for her to capture the unfolding panorama. The director of sales made the whole occasion even more colorful through his creative ways of handling the sale department staffed with one of the most talented staff as it pertain the skills of communication plus marketing strategies. Wait until you encounter Miss Marilyn E. Thornton, the lead Editor African/American Resources and you are made to sit by the African fire and hear beautiful Biblical stories and interactions of children of God as they try to relive the African arena of story telling and bringing the Bible to the people in more cultural way.A bishop is on the way in the near future. When the occasion for his appointment comes, Miss Faye R.Lyons will be the most happy lady in the whole world. She presented one of the interns with a precious gift geared towards that occasion. This soft spoken lady is someone people need to meet and see why wisdom and temperance are among the four cardinals of virtue.
The whole of the historic experience was made possible by a man who is so gifted and blessed with a talent very few people posses. This is no other but Dr Rev. Fred Allen. Right from the moment we met him waiting for us at the Nashville airport to chauffeuring us everywhere in Nashville and welcoming us to his beautiful home, where prepared the sweetest and delicious hot dogs and hamburgers to the swimming moment, where some of the interns had the first lessons of swimming, the morning briefings where the previous day activities were thoroughly dissected through our critique, the whole episode would have lost the real meaning and aimed. Through his brotherly guidance we bonded in such way that it was as if the interns had known each other for many years.
At the farewell fellowship, there was clear evidence that God had accomplish his intended mission and he was at the center of the whole encounter and that seeds of love and friendship had been sowed. For more information log at www.umc.org/site/c.gjJJTbMUIuE/b.1844133/k.D473/Publishing_House_Intern_Program_nurtures_African_Students.htm