Investigations Launched Into Assault Of Journalists

Police have launched investigations into an incident in which journalists were attacked by rowdy youth in Homa Bay town.

The journalists were attacked during a press briefing by the Luo Council of elders over the weekend.

During the attack, George Odiwuor of Nation Media was punched in the stomach forcing him to seek medical attention at Homa Bay County Referral Hospital.

Odiwuor said he was suddenly attacked by the youth who complained that they were not happy with the media coverage they were giving some politicians in the region.

He said the youth began arriving when they were still conducting the interview but they stood some meters away.

“We conducted the interview but immediately we finished, the youth invaded us. One of them pounced on my stomach with fists and blows,” Odiwuor said.

Some of the journalists also received death threats from the rowdy youth. Ali Abich of Royal Media said one of them wanted to assault him but instead he only threatened that he would kill him.

A staffer at the State Department of Regional Development was also injured following an assault by the youth.

The journalists appealed to security agencies in the county to take action against the youth.

Homa Bay County Police Commander Samson Kinne said thorough investigations would be conducted.

“The youths committed a crime by attacking journalists. They must face the full force of the law. Some of them have been identified,” Kinne said.

Source: Kenya News Agency

State Intensifies Food Distribution In Hard-Hit Counties

The National Steering Committee on drought response has scaled up the food distribution in the country with key institutions and stakeholders joining in to pool together to supplement efforts by the Government to mitigate the adverse effects of the protracted drought facing the country.

President William Ruto established the committee in November of 2022 and mandated it to coordinate efforts to raise funds for drought response. Wakenya Tulidane campaign, an initiative by the committee has raised Sh650 million, proceeds donated by Safaricom, Equity Bank and Kenyans of good will to cushion the ravaging effects of drought in vulnerable areas.

Speaking in Mariakani Kilifi County during the distribution exercise, the Chairman of the Committee Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Safaricom Peter Ndegwa said that Wakenya Tulindane programme has so far received overwhelming support from Kenyans from all walks of life including institutions that have helped to actualize the goal of feeding hunger stricken citizens.

“The country has continued to experience prolonged drought that has affected a huge portion of our population. The weatherman has predicted that the rains are due in the next few weeks but before that, we have to ensure we play our part and help Kenyans in need,” said Ndegwa.

Ndegwa noted that approximately 6 million Kenyans have been affected. He added that his committee has started scaling up the distribution to far flung counties that traditionally were not rain deficient but have now been tremendously affected.

He further said that by the end of March, he is optimistic that they will have reached out to at least 1600 families.

“This week, we were able to distribute food in nine counties which we have equated to about 1053 families,” he said.

On water shortage, he said the committee is planning to rehabilitate 360 boreholes in 32 counties in partnership with Kenya Defense Forces and on completion approximately 2 million people will directly benefit from such.

On his part, Kenya Red Cross representative and a committee member Adam Kheri said the Red Cross community will work hand in hand with the committee to support the distribution efforts and will be keen especially where children were involved.

He noted that the programme would also help keep students in school especially in arid and semi-arid areas where their efforts will help augment the school feeding programme.

Source: Kenya News Agency

Eldoret Attaining City Status

Eldoret Municipality has reached the investment attraction phase in its historic journey to be conferred into the country’s fifth city.

Eldoret being the gateway to the northern transit corridor and gateway to East Africa Community, a 7-member states’ body with a total consumerism of 300 million people, has earned the town a great potential in both agriculture and industry within the context of its commerce sector which includes not only trade but also services and manufacturing.

The town has earned a huge boost by being headquarters of the North Rift Economic bloc (NOREB) which comprises of a number of counties which include Baringo, Elgeyo Marakwet, Nandi, Samburu, Trans Nzoia, Turkana, Uasin Gishu and West Pokot. Most of the people from the region carry out several businesses in Eldoret town promoting its commercial status.

In an interview with the Kenya News Agency, Eldoret Municipality Manager Tito Koiyet pointed out that Eldoret is one of the fast-growing towns in Kenya at a rate of about 5.1 per cent to 5.2 per annum in comparison to the national average of about 3.7 per cent.

He affirmed that the journey of elevation into city status has accelerated interest from investors in the field of manufacturing, agro-processing, hospitality and logistics.

“Eldoret is a logistics hub being one of the few towns in Kenya which are privileged to have an international airport, railway line, trunk roads like A8 road crossing the heart of the town and has close proximity to the industrialized urban towns in Kenya like Nakuru, Kitale, Kisumu and other towns within the north rift region,” said Koiyet.

Koiyet noted that Eldoret being an agricultural town has earned it high ratings from people with interest in investing in agricultural value addition and processing particularly in avocado, coffee, macadamia, maize which is the main crop as well as processing of animal feeds and other by-products that are coming from agriculture.

He commended the presence of an international airport, national referral hospital, and educational facilities like Moi and University of Eldoret universities as key to the attainment of city status.

The manager alluded that having an international airport like Moi is a key infrastructural facility for urban growth. Besides facilitating faster access to the country’s capital Nairobi and other regions, the airport provides ease of access to regional and international markets for the perishable agricultural export products like flowers among others hence boosting foreign exchange earnings.

He further said that Eldoret is educational hub as it hosts a number of internationally recognized universities which work in collaboration with the municipality in areas like carrying out research and studies of various types within the municipality and also around the country.

Koiyet mentioned that Eldoret is also a hub of medical services with a leading national referral hospital, the Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital (MTRH), which has pumped so many other opportunities in the space of medical services in Eldoret, making it one of the busiest medical destinations in Kenya with people coming from various parts of the country as well neighbouring countries like Congo, Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi and South Sudan.

“Eldoret itself, as it embarks on the journey of becoming a city, is fully prepared to host all the opportunities that come. The county and the municipality have invested in relevant infrastructure to support the influx of investors. We have done roads, drainage, street lights, we are doing non-motorized transportation and improving facilities as well,” said Koiyet.

“The county government has also been talking to various investors who are already investing in hospitals and other social amenities,” he added.

Koiyet confirmed that negotiations with various investors are ongoing from both the county and the municipal levels as well as at the national level with the main areas of interest being housing, logistics and warehousing as well as general construction for infrastructural development and other social amenities within the region.

The journey to the conferment of Eldoret in to the country’s fifth city received a huge boost from the UK which supported the municipality to develop Urban Economic Development Plan. The plan entails detailed study of the opportunities that are available in Eldoret and as a result, a long list of value chains was identified that any investor could readily invest in with assured return on investment.

The main areas of focus in the plan are in Trade and Services, Infrastructure Development and Economic Empowerment.

Koiyet pointed out that there was a wide range of opportunities identified in the final report prepared by the Ad Hoc committee on the conferment of Eldoret into a city that was handed over to the UK High Commissioner Jane Mariot.

“Two weeks ago, we had the UK High Commissioner to whom we officially handed over the report. As we speak, we are in what we call investment attraction phase where a list of projects have been identified sounding as potential investment opportunities and The Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office of the British High Commission has kindly accepted to do some seed funding for those investors who wish to pick up some of those opportunities,” said Koiyet.

In regard to affordable housing, Koiyet stated that the municipality has sufficient space of undeveloped land which is serviced and other land which requires redevelopment to accommodate all levels of residents from single bedroom dwelling units to 3- and 4-bedroom.

He hinted on the idea of constructing high-rise buildings to accommodate as many people as possible by affording them urban living standards.

“There is a national effort by the President to ensure every city has sufficient housing for its residents and Eldoret has not been left behind. We are working together with the national government and our governor is more particular about improving the housing of Eldoret residents. The town has fairly enough space to construct houses suitable for all cadres of people in Kenya particularly for affordable housing,” he said.

The chairperson of the Ad Hoc Committee on conferment of Eldoret to city status, Willy Kenei, who also serves as Uasin Gishu Kenya National Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KNCCI) chairperson revealed that the committee is satisfied that the municipality has met all the requisite requirements by the law to become a city like infrastructural facilities like roads, street lighting, markets, fire stations, waste disposal and disaster management capacity.

“As the Ad hoc committee we looked into many criteria provided by the law to ensure that if we become a city, the residents will be able to be served by the services and utilities available in the municipality. We are satisfied that the municipality has sufficient infrastructural development to support the city. We have sufficient health care services, educational facilities, airport, crematorium and many others,” said Kenei.

He noted that industrialization would spur growth in Eldoret and that the government is ready to set up industrial parks and economic zones.

He added that infrastructural development in terms of roads, waste management and power is already developed and that the only thing an investor would do is come with equipment and set up their manufacturing ventures.

“We have raw materials especially in the agriculture sector, human resource, education institutions in this region and the labour are readily available. This will be a game changer in terms of economics of the city which will also be a key opportunity in providing employment to many residents,” explained Kenei.

Kenei pointed out that the committee is in the final stages of preparing the report which upon completion, would be handed over to the county executive who will in turn hand it to the County Assembly to be tabled and discussed on. The Assembly will later forward the report to the Senate for further discussion and recommendations and finally handed over to the President for consideration of the conferment of Eldoret into a city.

“As stakeholders from this region most likely at the end of the year, Eldoret will become a city. This will attract many investors from outside Eldoret and even internationally to come and set up manufacturing ventures,” he said.

Source: Kenya News Agency

County In Drive To Promote Adoption Of Alternative Building Technology

Nakuru County Government has rolled out a training programme to equip the youth with skills on alternative building technology that uses cheaper materials in order to boost the supply of affordable housing.

Governor Susan Kihika said that her administration has set up an Alternative Building Materials Technology Center (ABMTC) at Kagoto polytechnic in Bahati Sub-County to train and equip the youths with skills in the manufacture and use of cheaper building materials.

“The center is equipped with machines designed to help in the manufacture of alternative building materials. The county has acquired high capacity Hydraform Interlocking Brick (HIB) making machines to help train the youth on production of the building blocks,” stated the Governor.

Ms Kihika noted that the use of alternative building materials other than stones could cut the overall cost of construction, reduce the total time taken to put up a building and hence increase home ownership in a country grappling with a shortage of houses.

She indicated that Youth Polytechnics and Technical Vocational Education Training Institutes (TVETS), if well-funded, equipped and given grants to conduct research, have the potential to come up with new technological innovations that would see future houses being made in record time with or without use of brick and mortar.

According to her, the real estate market is in the hands of a well-financed few, consigning many to being tenants who live in houses they can hardly put up on their own.

Ms Kihika decried what she described as “the apparent selectiveness in the real estate sector” as many developers only have rich and middle-class income earners in mind when putting up housing units.

“With the cost of land and building materials ever-rising and developers mainly targeting the high-end market, potential homeowners should go the unconventional way when looking for solutions. We want to equip our youth in polytechnics and Technical Vocational and Educational Institutions (TVETS) with skills that will provide practical solutions through innovations.

“The alternative building technology will enable the country to meet its ambitious housing plan provided by the government and as a result solve the housing shortage in different parts of the country,” she stressed.

The governor observed that heavy investments in training of craftsmen in the manufacture and use of alternative building technology will also revolutionize the country’s industrial sector.

In the new technology being propped up by the devolved unit, the bricks are broad compared to quarried ones and are placed one upon another without any need of binding mortar, something that is helping builders cut down on construction costs.

The bricks are designed to be arranged in such a way that there is no room for creating lines of weakness.

At the ABMTC centre, trainees will also be equipped with technical skills on the use of red earth, or any slow draining soil as likely commercial ventures in making building blocks the long-run in event quarrying is exhausted.

“The training is also fashioned to encourage individuals in rural settings to bake mud bricks, dry them in the sun and build houses with sticky clay being used as mortar. Vagaries of weather, like rain, will have little effect. There is also no need to keep pouring water on the outside during the drying process, known in construction lingo as curing,” stated Ms Kihika.

In Hydraform Interlocking Brick (HIB) building technology, the foundation filler could be anything from crushed stones to sand and cement or simply concrete slabs.

Though materials like sand and cement would be greatly halved in usage, one would still need them during the interior plastering process. This casting acts as a binding method for the laid-up bricks.

The Governor said this was cost-effective compared to purchasing materials. The building could be strengthened inside and outside with a screed of plastering for added strength and durability, which gives the house a permanent outlook.

Experts have indicated that there is urgent need to review the 1940 building code that recognizes stone as the only building material and expunge from the law pieces of statutes which he notes are frustrating development of affordable housing units by both the state and the private sector.

They have also expressed concern that land in Kenya is obscenely expensive. A current survey indicates that prices of land in Nairobi are highest in the continent. This has frustrated the provision of housing and basic infrastructure by the government.

Source: Kenya News Agency

Government Has Spent Sh13 Billion On Relief Food – CS Duale

Defense Cabinet Secretary Aden Duale has said that the government has so far spent Sh13 billion to buy and distribute relief food to Kenyans affected by the drought and in dire need of relief food.

Speaking this morning in Garissa Township Sub County where he led a food distribution exercise, Duale said that the government would continue to distribute relief food and warned that action would be taken against any officer found to have diverted the food elsewhere.

According to the National Drought Management Authority, more than 45,000 households in Garissa County are facing starvation.

The NDMA in conjunction with the county government is currently conducting water trucking to affected areas, and school feeding programmes to help keep the children in school, while a section of Non-governmental organizations and well-wishers are conducting cash transfers to the vulnerable.

“We have experienced low rainfalls in the last few years and it is not in Garissa only. Even in places where we used to experience enough rains are becoming drylands and so the government has spent Sh13 billion to buy relief food for Kenyans,” Duale said.

“We want this food to reach everyone who is suffering and we will not allow those who sell and transport relief food or those who supervise the distribution exercises to the most vulnerable members of our society to play with this food,” he added.

Garissa Township MP Dekow Mohamed said that there is need to consider distributing more relief food in the town where more people who lost their livestock to drought have migrated to.

“We have a problem here because other sub counties are considered where township is left out in food distribution programmes. We are the most affected because people have migrated here and need this relief food too,” Dekow said.

The MP further urged the county government to fast track the process of finding more permanent water solutions so that every citizen in the county can have access to clean water for both domestic use and for livestock.

The CS was also joined by Garissa County Commissioner Boaz Cherutich, county security committee members, officials from the NDMA and a section of the MCAs.

Source: Kenya News Agency

Women Group Mills Profits From Brooding Pots

A hole here, a hole there: a brooding pot has holes strategically placed around it to help chicken farmers warm their brooders using charcoal, in a sustainable way without incurring huge costs and losses.

Just as the brooding pot cannot hold water like other pots, so do brilliant business ideas without start-up capital.

Sheila Khai knows this only too well, when she reflects back on the struggles and hardships she has undergone since she ventured into the world of self-employment, though with no regrets.

All that she haboured were well crafted ideas and business plans that remained just that, ideas.

It was frustrating, she admits because being a woman, she had no property on her name that she could use as collateral to secure a loan. Her only hope were household items that could not guarantee anything substantial.

“Nothing comes for free but through sheer hard work. There is no shortcut to success. You have to sweat for a certain period in order to attain your desired goals in life,” she offers.

When she brought a group of women in Nakuru County together to pool resources and invest in manufacturing charcoal powered brooder pots made from clay, they had no idea the deal would turn into a giant enterprise that would transform their socio-economic livelihoods.

At the beginning, members of Virtuous Women Group were only three, but as reality descended on most women, the group expanded to the current 14.

Our interview at their premises along Geoffrey Kamau Road is constantly interrupted as poultry farmers flock into the well-stocked shop to buy brooding pots.

“Being a woman and with a passion to see women change and grow their endeavors, I joined other like-minded women to start table banking, where we could pool resources and loan amongst ourselves at a fee,” she says, noting that, that is when their name ‘Virtuous Woman’ came to being.

“The idea was to create a platform to mobilize women and provide opportunities for them to have their own business and access the market for the product at competitive rates,” she adds. They had to work on a common agenda to be able to succeed but they had no capital to start with.

Reserved, soft-spoken and reflective Ms Khai says starting the business was a challenge. But as a team, the group members approached the Women Enterprise Fund (WEF) where they secured Sh100, 000 funding which they used as seed capital.

“When we started the business, we had Sh10, 000 only. We could not buy pottery wheels and raw materials. We did not then have capacity to hire workers,” explains Ms Khai who coordinates the group’s activities.

She says the group has been invited to different exhibitions across and outside the country to showcase its range of products.

The demand for the Virtuous Women Group’s brooding pots in neighbouring Uganda and Tanzania has triggered a frenzy of activity among its members who want to exploit the opportunity to turn around their economic fortunes.

Ms Khai adds, “There was an exhibition that we were invited to showcase our goods in Nairobi and we made very good sales. After we showcased our products at the East Africa Expo, we gained a foothold in seven African countries. We also have many local clients.”

She says the innovation is not only designed to help poultry farmers who do not have electricity raise chicks but also to cut on electricity costs for those connected to the national grid.

The brooder, molded from clay soil, resembles a traditional cooking pot with small protruding stumps to raise it from the ground. Holes are strategically placed around it to allow for ventilation for slow burning of the charcoal while emitting heat.

Bits of charcoal are placed in the pot and lit, to allow for gradual release convectional heat to the surrounding keeping the chicks warm.

“Chicks require heat for the first five weeks when feathers are developing. After this period, they can maintain their own body temperature,” she explains.

According to the coordinator, the glowing coals are then covered with wood chippings and ash before the pot’s brim is closed .With a two-kilo tin full of charcoal, the brooding pot operates for up to 30 hours warming about 300 chicks aged less than three weeks.

The brooder pot whose retail price ranges from Sh1000 to Sh1500 is made from refined clay. Clay soil is a poor conductor of heat. That means the radiation of the heat in the brooding house is slow.

“Cooking apparatus made from clay keep foods warm longer than their metal variants. The brooding pot operates on the same insulation concept as traditional cooking pots. The charcoal burns to release convectional heat that to keep the chicks’ brooding area warm,” Ms Khai explains.

The risk of injury to the chicks is diminished as the holes are few and around the neck of the pot.

The holes at the top of the pot also help in regulating the amount of oxygen circulating in the charcoal chamber. Low amount of oxygen facilitate prolonged hours of burning, the coordinator says.

“Apart from helping farmers who are not connected to electricity, the brooder pot comes in handy during power outages. Just like the bulb brooders, the chicks move far away from the pot when the heat is more than they need. A safety guard must, however, be placed around the pot to prevent the young fowls from burning.

To find the market for their products, the group has tapped on social media platforms such as WhatsApp, Facebook and Instagram. It runs a page known as Virtuous brooder pots where they advertise their products.

The group attended a training offered by the Women Enterprise Fund where they learnt entrepreneurship, book keeping, online marketing, record keeping and making investment plans.

“When we come for meetings, we first finish our table banking activities then embark on pottery,” adds Khai, whose flexibility guarantees timely delivery of orders.

Among the lessons she says the group members have learnt include the need to set high standards and targets which she admits have been their guiding factors everyday they open the shop.

“In the world of business, you must set yourself high targets if you want to succeed and at the same time, you must ask yourself what levels you want to reach and from there strive to make your dreams come true,” adds Ms Khai.

She advises all would-be entrepreneurs to be patient saying that despite the challenges, there is joy in self-employment and only those who have a strong will reap the fruits of their labour.

Women Enterprise Fund Regional Credit Officer Ms Janet Ratemo says coming together has occasioned a shift in perspective that has led to a better standard of living for the women.

She notes that the fund is offering opportunities to women especially in rural areas, to transform their socioeconomic status through development projects.

“The fund has disbursed Sh14.5 billion to 7,800 women groups in this region. Am delighted to say that the repayment rate is 98 percent as I encourage women to visit us and get financing to start projects that will give them income to feed their families and pay school fees for their children,” states Ms Ratemo.

The credit officer further reveals that the fund finances 60 percent of Local Purchase Order on tenders made by women.

Women Enterprise Fund Regional Credit Assistant Ms Phyllis Muthoni says they are unlocking access to finance for women enterprises to create sustainable green and decent jobs, ensuring that women in Kenya are not left behind.

She adds that women should embrace the fund to solve the social, environmental and governance challenges in their communities as the only way to alleviate poverty.

Source: Kenya News Agency

Youth In Agribusiness Receive A Boost From Sh1.65m Equipment Donation

The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and the Italian Agency for Development Cooperation (AICS) have donated equipment worth Sh1.65 million to five youth groups in agribusiness in Kisumu County.

The donation comprising two tricycles Dayun and three Honda motorbikes was issued to the beneficiaries as part of Phase I of the Innovative Food System project in the Lakeside County.

The programme seeks to support and strengthen youth-led agribusiness enterprises to overcome production challenges and improve the food systems in the area.

The beneficiaries were drawn from groups dealing in poultry, aquaculture, vermiculture, and milk value addition.

According to David Makongo, a FAO official, the grant is geared towards solving transport and access to market challenges affecting the selected groups.

“One of the major challenges for these groups was access to the market forcing the enterprises to hire transport services which directly impacts the cost of production,” said Makongo.

While speaking during the handover event, Makongo noted that with the implementation of the initiative, food systems in Kisumu’s rural-urban communities would improve.

The programme also saw the formation of the Food Liaison Advisory Group (FLAG), information generation, mapping food systems and developing Kisumu County food systems strategy.

He said the organization has set aside grants to the tune of Sh7 million to support 15 groups to enhance their efficiency in production.

“FAO is keen on helping the youth and women to create employment and income opportunities,” Makongo observed.

Speaking at the event, the CECM in charge of Agriculture, Irrigation, Livestock and Fisheries Kenn Onyango urged the beneficiaries to use the farm equipment effectively to add value to the agricultural value chain systems to boost food and nutrition security in the County.

Apart from this programme, the County is also implementing the recently launched Kisumu County Youth in Agribusiness Strategy 2022-2027 which envisions increasing the number of youths involved in agriculture.

Source: Kenya News Agency