Archive for the 'Kenya' Category

Malaria No More’s mission is simple: to end deaths due to malaria.

Saturday, July 26th, 2008

malarianomore.jpg

Malaria No More is a nonprofit organization located in New York, NY that aims to end deaths caused by malaria in Africa. It was founded in 2006 at the first ever White House Summit on Malaria by leading non-governmental organizations such as American Red Cross, Unicef, Global Business Coalition, United Way, Millennium Promise, The Global Fund, and the United Nations Foundation.

With prevention and treatment methods, the United States was able to eradicate malaria by 1951 with the establishment of the Center for Disease Control and Prevention. In the 21st century, however, the disease is still endemic to 106 nations, threatening 50% of Earth’s population. It claims almost one million lives per year in Africa, and 3,000 lives of children per day. The hardest hit population are children under 5 living in poverty. The lack of money to buy bed nets and treatment combined with the humid, tropical environment preferred by mosquitoes and the malaria parasite put people in Africa at an enormous risk for contracting and dying from this treatable disease. It isa chief reason that of 20% of Zambian children die before age five.

In Kenya, approximately 90 people die daily from malaria. Said a Uganda doctor to Dr. Mark Grabowsky of the CDC and the Global Fund, “If you get rid of measles, we can close the measles ward. If you get rid of malaria, we can close the hospital,” illustrating the enormity of the problem of malaria. It is the one of the most deadly and prevalent diseases in Africa, yet also the most preventable and treatable.

Sources:

http://www.malarianomore.org/

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malaria_No_More

Malaria No More In Madagascar (Video)

Country Reports on Human Rights Practices in Kenya 2003

Friday, July 18th, 2008

By reading this post you will get a good insight of Kenya - “the truth behind the scene” and you should (read this article) as it may affect you if you’re gonna be in Kenya. The source (found at the bottom) includes much more information in each topic - it was just too much to publish in this “small” article.

The topics included is: Police corruption, Denial of Fair Public Trial, Freedom of Speech and Press, Freedom of Peaceful Assembly, Discrimination (of children and women).

Country Reports on Human Rights Practices in Kenya 2003 (Released feb. 2004)


The spread of HIV/AIDS, estimated to have infected approximately 14 percent (aprox. 4,312,000) of the population between the ages of 14 and 49 (and in some areas up to estimated 30% is infected), had increasingly adverse effects on the country’s wage-earners, including teachers and other professionals. A weakened infrastructure–unreliable power and telecommunication systems and roads in disrepair–exacerbated economic problems and disinvestment.

Police corruption

Police corruption was systematic and widespread. A July survey conducted by The Public Service Integrity Program found that the police force was viewed as the most corrupt entity within the society of the country. (more…)

Sex tourism in Kenya: One girl’s story

Friday, July 18th, 2008

A new report conducted by UNICEF and the Government of Kenya finds that thousands of girls in coastal tourist areas are being exploited in the sex-for-cash industry. Here is one girl’s story.

By Pamella Sittoni

MOMBASA, Kenya, 20 December 2006 – “If my father knew that I do this, he would kill me,” says Annie (not her real name). “But he does not provide enough for me and my daughter, so I have to do this to make some extra cash.”

Annie is from a lower middle-class family in Mtwapa, a coastal township near Mombasa. Kenya. She lives with her parents, who put food on the table and pay rent and other bills. As far as the family is concerned, Annie is an obedient child who is never out of the home beyond the 8 p.m. curfew set by her father.

But what they do not know is that Annie goes out almost daily in search of men. “Most of the men are Kenyans,” she says, adding that they pay her from $3 to $8 for sex.

Occasionally she has had sex with tourists, who pay up to three times more. “But it is not easy to get tourists. I can’t go to the beaches to hunt for tourists because police are always on patrol and they would arrest me,” she notes.

Influenced by peers

Annie is barely fifteen. Her daughter is 11 months old.

Her troubles began when she got pregnant while in Standard Eight. “My parents started treating me like an outcast,” Annie recalls. “If I asked for anything, they would ask me to find the man who gave me the baby to buy whatever I needed. They always reminded me that I had let them down in school.”

Like many other teenagers in Mtwapa, Annie was introduced to sex-for-cash by her peers. “They told me I could earn money easily by simply having sex with men,” she says.

‘I will forget about this life’

But Annie is aware that what she is doing is dangerous. “This is not a good life,” she admits. “Sometimes the men treat me badly. Sometimes they refuse to pay me and chase me away. Sometimes they do terrible things to me which I can’t even describe.

“The most horrible ones are the bouncers, who demand that I have sex with them before they allow me into the club where I could meet the tourists,” she adds.

“My father has said I should go back to school next year and repeat Standard Eight. Once I go back to school, I will forget about this life,” Annie says hopefully.

Source:

http://www.unicef.org/

Up to 30% of girls in some Kenyan resorts are involved in the sex industry

Friday, July 18th, 2008

The UN children’s fund Unicef, which looked at resorts along Kenya’s coast, found that 15,000 girls aged 12 to 18 were engaged in casual sex for money.

Another 2,000-3,000 girls and boys were involved in full-time prostitution, said the study - carried out jointly with the Kenyan government.

European men represented half of all their clients, the report said.

The 15,000 girls are said to live in the resort areas districts of Mombasa, Kilifi, Malindi, Diani and Kwale.

Poverty is the reason, Unicef says: many families see the sex industry as the only way of putting food on the table.

Local clients

Clearly, what is going on here is unacceptable. Unicef feels that it’s time for zero tolerance… especially of sexual violence against children,” a spokesman said.

“Kenya should be seen as a no-go zone for sexual exploitation of children,” he added.

Italian, German and Swiss nationals are the most common clients of child sex workers among tourists - at 18%, 14% and 12% respectively.

Kenyan men are the largest single group of clients, comprising 38% of the total.

A “staggering” 75% of people involved in tourism thought it was acceptable for girls to exchange sex for cash, and 60% said the same for boys, the study showed.

Many were also implicated directly in the exploitation of children, it added.

“Child sex workers are often compelled to deliver sexual services to Kenyans - beach boys, bar staff, waiters, and others - in order to access tourists. During the low tourist season, the local market for child sex workers keeps the system going,” the report said.

Sources:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/

http://www.unicef.org/

Sydsvenskan

http://sydsvenskan.se/

Father’s Day Speech by Barack Obama

Saturday, June 21st, 2008

Barack Obama, with roots in Kenya and now running for presidency 2008 in America, made a great speech on father’s day which we wish to share with you as this does not only apply to USA only but to everyone in every country who want´s to grow (up). If someone is having the speech on text, please post it here.

Sincerely,

Peter Frank

Apple iPhone to come to Kenya!

Saturday, May 31st, 2008

June 9th 2008 will be a very interested date when Apple CEO Steve Jobs will open up WWDC and tell the world.. what!? To begin with we hope it will be the second generation of Apple iPhone - so simple to use as all other gizmos should be! And it has been announced already that Orange is the telecom company that will sell it in Kenya. If you can get you hands of one, then you will be lucky as you will not need no other gizmo/phone/computer to make your life a bit happier and easier when it comes to communicate, taking picture and even getting a bit of education as Internet will be even easier to use thanx to the browser in iPhone that just whipes the competition away! I know that for a fact!

Safaricom launches 3G service

Saturday, May 31st, 2008

Kenya’s largest mobile operator, Safaricom has launched its 3G network commercially. Subscribers will have access to high-speed mobile data services at speeds of up to 7.2 Mbps. The 3G technology will be available in Nairobi and its environs first, and rolled out throughout the country within the next year, the company announced at a media briefing. Safaricom launched a trial of 3G services in October 2006 and in October 2007 was awarded the licence to launch commercially. Trials on the 3G network were tested in a large-scale environment at major events. CEO Michael Joseph said Safaricom is diversifying beyond its traditional mobile voice service, to become an integrated voice and data provider, enabling data communications for businesses and consumers. The new broadband services will initially target corporate customers and small and medium-sized enterprises. Subscribers will need to acquire 3G-enabled handsets in order to access the internet, e-mail, calendars and other multimedia services. PC users will access the service using either a broadband modem plugged into a computer or a wireless router that allows a group of users high-speed access to the internet.

This will really open up to mobile internet usage for the masses! Together with the upcoming sale of Apple iPhone we will have lowed the bars even more to the masses of the people of Kenya.

Source:
TelecomPaper

AccessKenya invest USD 3.5mln in WiMAX network

Saturday, May 31st, 2008

Kenyan ICT service provider AccessKenya Group has invested USD 3.5 million to build out the largest WiMax network in Kenya with an initial deployment of 35 base stations. This network will form the backbone of its Access@Home guaranteed high speed broadband residential service. The firm has also offered its existing corporate customers a special offer of completely free equipment and a 20 percent discount on the price of the service. MD Jonathan Somen said he believes the new service will offer a quality of internet connection in the home that has simply not been available in Kenya until now.

Note:
WiMAX , the W orldwide I nteroperability for M icrowave Ac ces s, is a telecommunications technology aimed at providing wireless data over long distances in a variety of ways, from point-to-point links to full mobile cellular type access.

Source:
TelecomPaper
Wikipedia about WiMAX

Child Trafficking and Sexual Abuse Common at the Coastline

Thursday, April 17th, 2008

Since the beginning of time humans and animals has lived close to the water. And tourists draws to water too to relax and take a good swim. But some tourists do things they wouldn’t dare to do in their own country. At home they would suffer prosecution, their neighbours and relatives would know and in jail they would get hell as hurting a child is a no-no even for a murderer. But when “this” European, American, Australian, Japanese (not exclusivle only) comes to a country like Kenya, Thailand or Lithuania with high rates of people with low or no income these tourists thinks it’s ok to abuse children. Well.. it’s not! No matter where it is!

/Peter

The recent incident in which 18 children were rescued from the hands of suspected child traffickers from an unregistered children’s home in Likoni, Mombasa, is an ominous sign that the Coast is becoming a human trafficking gateway.

The children were later returned to their homes in Mwatate constituency, Taita District.

Children, especially those from poor families and those from the streets are increasingly being lured into these homes, with promises of better lives, but instead, they end up being abused by the owners of these homes.

In the Likoni incident, the 18 children were reportedly being exposed to harsh and inhuman conditions, while being offered one meal a day.

Unregistered homes

“The main problem has been caused by the proliferation of unregistered children’s homes where child traffickers masquerade as philanthropists, only to turn into beasts and abuse their charges,” says Taita-Taveta children’s officer George Migosi.

Poverty and child neglect also contribute to the problem, according to Mr Migosi, as some parents fail to fend for their children and see it fit to give them away to the homes.

Mr Migosi pointed out that out of the 18 children rescued from Mombasa, four were from the same family. They are being held at Mwatate Children’s home.

“The father, who has since parted with his wife, has a case to answer for neglecting the children, and saw it fit to give them away to the woman who has since been exposed as a child trafficker,” said Mr Migosi.

The woman from Mwachabo Location in Mwatate has since been arrested together with a male accomplice.

Joyce Bahati Wali and Mr Paul Nzuku Katha have been charged in a Voi court for conspiring to engage in child trafficking and are out on bond, awaiting fresh charges to be preferred against them by the Children’s Department.

Human rights groups have, on many occasions, rang alarm bells over the issue of child slavery especially in Malindi and Mombasa, where tourists engage in sexual abuse of underage girls, as well as sexually assaulting boys.

There have also been fears that some corrupt children’s officers connive with the traffickers to cover up the evil.

“Some of the senior children’s officers could be involved in the child trafficking scandals, as it beats logic why such a vice could take root in society and yet they are supposed to investigate these things,” says a volunteer officer in Mwatate, Mr Eric Mbaruk.

Kenya has been cited as one of the origins of children trafficked into the UK and other countries in Africa.

In September last year, police in Western Province smashed a racket involving child traffickers, which had been going on for years.

During the incident, officers, posing as potential customers, arrested a key “supplier” and four others in Kericho Town. One of the key suspects, a woman, brought children from a village in Emuhaya.

Many children trafficked in the country end up in major towns working as house helps and baby-sitters.

A Congolese woman was also charged recently in a Nairobi court with trafficking children.

The woman was accused of taking the children to DRC to work in the commercial sex industry.

In the UK, an estimated 500 African children a year, many of them babies, are being trafficked and end up working as virtual slaves.

The revelations were made late last year when it is said children were sold by their poor parents for up to $10,000 (Sh630,000 million).

Teenage girls

An undercover reporter, working for the Daily Telegraph newspaper, was offered several children for sale by their parents in Nigeria: Two boys aged three and five for $10,000, or $5,000 for one, and a 10-month-old baby for $4,000.

Teenage girls - including some still pregnant - were willing to sell their babies for less than $2,000.

The Telegraph report said that “impoverished African parents are being lured by the traffickers’ promises of ‘a better life’ for their children, thousands of kilometres away.

But, once brought to Britain, the children are used as a fraudulent means to obtain illicit housing and other welfare benefits, totalling tens of thousands of dollars each a year.

Pascal Mwandambo And Sam Kiplagat
Nairobi

Source:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200804151281.html

Sydsvenskan

Where IT Lessons Are Free

Thursday, April 17th, 2008

Residents of Ongata Rongai found it hard to believe when David Chege Njoroge said he was opening a school where local youth could learn about computers for free.

"I recall our pastor telling us about the college one day. I thought it was a hoax," says 18-year-old Grace Nduta. "Where would you study without paying a single cent? But I have never paid a single cent since enrolling in January."

Jerry Ross, an American who lives with his Maasai wife in Ongata and volunteers at Saviour Computer College, says 27-year-old Njoroge is doing a noble thing by giving young people in the region an opportunity.

Wesley Mose, one of the two instructors at the college, says most of the students, aged between 18 and 26, are thrilled by the opportunity to study the several computer packages on offer.

Prospective students have to prove their financial need and provide a letter of recommendation, either from their church or area chief.

"This is not just a place to pass the time; it is a learning centre," says Daniel Githinji, who hopes to become a civil engineer. "I finished high school last year, and the only thing I was doing until February was hanging out at the bus stop. Now I am learning something about computers."

There are 50 students enrolled in the college; some Form Four leavers, a few Standard Eight graduates and children from orphanages in the neighbourhood.

READ REST OF THE STORY

John Makeni
Nairobi

Source:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200804141095.html