Monday, September 1, 2008

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PNU confident of successful membership drive despite dissenting affiliates


By Beauttah Omanga and Joseph Murimi
Published on September, 19, 2008

Transport Minister Chirau Mwakwere has said a meeting of PNU supporters would be held in Mombasa on Saturday. Mr Mwakwere, who is also the PNU coast regional co-ordinator, said the meeting would be used to plan for the recruitment of members in the region.
"The Saturday meeting will be used to chart the way forward for Coast Province," he said.
But even as the minister tried to downplay the matter, the problems facing PNU intensified when a top Shirikisho Party of Kenya official announced they would reject the party.
SPK Director of Programmes, Sheikh Juma Ngao, who is also the Coast Supreme Council of Kenya Muslims (Supkem) boss, said PNU does not exist at the Coast.
"PNU cannot talk about organising recruitment at the Coast because the party does not have even a single member in this province," Ngao said.
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Transport Minister Chirau Mwakwere (centre) hands over a copy of the Narok plane crash report to Permanent Secretary Eng Ali after he received it from the Director of Air Accidents Investigation Department Eng Peter Wakahia (left) at Transcom House in Nairobi. Photo/STEPHEN MUDIARI . (DAILY NATION)
















Transport minister Ali Chirau Mwakwere with coast MP's while on a familiarisation tour of the port to assess the congestion situation of the containers at the port. Photo/ LABAN WALLOGA (STANDARD)

BIO+RESUME

Hon. Amb. Chirau Ali Mwakwere was born in 1945 at Golini, Kwale district. Mwakwere born to a very prominentDigo family attended local public schools.From 1964 to 1966 Mwakwere underwent Teacher Education training at the then Kenyatta College, (now Kenyatta University).

In 1974 he graduated with a Master of Education degree from the University of Birmingham, United Kingdom and a Diploma in Education from the University of Reading.He obtained a Master Trainer from the University of Connecticut, Hartford, USA and a Master of Science in Maritime Studies and International Transport from the University of Wales in Cardiff in 1982 and 1986 respectively.

In 1987 he became a Member of the Chartered Institute of Transport, United Kingdom. He is now a Fellow of the CIT From 1978 to 1979 he was the Political Secretary at the Kenyan Embassy, Saudi Arabia. In 1979 he became the pioneer Principal Bandari College in Mombasa where he served for ten years until 1989.Mwakwere was the Deputy National Executive Officer, KANU National Secretariat from 1989 to June 1991.

He then went into self employment until when he was appointed to serve as the country’s High Commissioner to Zimbabwe in June 1992. His posting at Harare had accreditation to Mozambique, Swaziland and Lesotho. He served at Harare for six years upto 1998.From 1996 to 1997 he was the special envoy to the Great Lakes Region of Africa and also served concurrently as High Commissioner.From 1998 to 2000, he was relocated and named as the Ambassador of Kenya to United Arab Emirate based in the modern city of Abu Dhabi and was accredited to the rich island State Qatar.

Upon retirement from the government service, Ambassador Mwakwere took a job as the Director, Business Development, Africa Region with a multinational corporation based in the Middle East. At the same time he served as Director, Kenya Commercial Bank.During the 2002 political wave, Ambassador Mwakwere joined politics less than three months before the general election and became a key member of transforming the brief-case political party Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) that ended up absorbing all the KANU rebels then known as Rainbow Coalition.In the election Mwakwere he captured the Matuga parliamentary seat.Upon entering the National Assembly he was appointed Assistant Minister in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs where he served for only six months (January to June 2003).

In June 2003 he was elevated to the full cabinet and was appointed the Minister for Labour and Human Resource Development where he served for one year until June 2004.When President Mwai Kibaki reshuffled his cabinet and formed a Government of National Unity, Mwakwere was appointed to the prestigious and high profile Foreign Affairs ministry.As the country’s top diplomat, Mwakwere represented the head of state in many international head of states functions, such as the funerals of Pope Paul II in Rome and PLO leader and President Yasser Arafat in Cairo Egypt. In another cabinet reshuffled, Mwakwere was again relocated this time around, to the one of the key and equally powerful Transport portfolio.

Mwakwere lost his ministerial position after losing his parliamentary seat following a successful election petition in February 2010. In the by-election held in July 2010, Mwakwere retained his parliamentary on a landslide beating his nearest opponent by more than 6000 votes. In the cabinet reshuffle of August 16, 2010, Mwakwere was appointed Minister for Trade.

The Minister also held several offices which include Council Member of Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology (JKUAT) (1990 – 1992), Council Member at the University of Nairobi (1987 – 1991), appointed Life Governor, Agricultural Society of Kenya (ASK) in 1989 and a Deputy Director, fourth 4th All Africa Games Secretariat, Nairobi.
Mwakwere is married to Rose and they have been blessed with three grown up children, two sons and a daughter.

CURRICULUM VITAE

Cabinet Position: Minister for Trade

EDUCATIONAL BACKGROUND
Primary School: Kwale Primary & Intermediate school
Secondary School: Shimo La Tewa High School
High School: Shimo La Tewa High School
College: Kenyatta College

UNIVERSITY EDUCATION
University of Reading - Diploma Science
University of Birmingham – M. Ed Degree
University of Wales (Cardiff) - MSc. Degree in International Transport and Maritime Studies

OTHER COURSES/TRAINING RECEIVED
Fellow of the Chartered Institute of Transport (FCIT)
Master Trainer Programme - University of Connecticut - USA
Maritime Trainer's Course - Singapore Polytechnic
Educational Management & Administration - Moray House College, Edinburgh

WORKING EXPERIENCE
(Continuously in govt. service since 1967)
Lecturer - Mombasa Polytechnic
Headmaster - Krapf Memorial Secondary School
Headmaster - Aggrey High School
Lecturer - Kagumo Teachers' College
Curriculum Developer - Head of Educational Research & Evaluation (K.I.E),
Political Secretary – Ministry of Foreign Affairs, (served in Saudi Arabia)
Principal - Bandari College
Deputy National Executive Officer, KANU HQ

DIPLOMATIC EXPERIENCE
Ambassador to the U.A.E and Qatar
High Commissioner to Zimbabwe,
accrediated to Mozambique and to the two Kingdom of the Lesotho, and Swaziland.
Special Envoy to the Great Lakes Region

MINISTERIAL APPOINTMENTS
Minister for Trade (currently serving)
Minister for Transport
Mininister for Foreign Affairs
Minister for Labour and Manpower Development
Assistant Minister for Foreign Affairs

POLITICAL EXPERIENCE
PartyLeader - Shirikisho Party of Kenya
Summit Member of Party of National Unity (PNU)
Founding Member of NARC
Founding Member LDP - Rainbow
Deputy National Executive Officer - KANU


HOBBIES
Golf
Sports in general

THE STANDARD


Sh130billion road project to link EAC

Updated 4 hr(s) 5 min(s) ago (Sept 10, 2008)
By Jackson Okoth

A detailed plan to upgrade the entire Eastern Africa railway network is being undertaken by the private sector.The project to cost an estimated Sh130 billion will run through Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Southern Sudan, Rwanda, Burundi and Ethiopia.It involves construction of a new 1.4 metre diameter standard gauge line, linking the East African Community countries. Design work and financing for the project will be ready by June next year. The main drivers of the project are top brass in Kenya’s industry to be headed by Mabati Rolling Mills Chairman Manu Chandaria. The group recently presented a master plan to the Minister for Transport Chirau Mwakwere.

The plan comes in the wake of frustrations expressed by Uganda, which relies on Mombasa for shipment of its import and export cargo, through the rail. If implemented, this will have a significant impact on trade between EAC countries, now slowed down by a dilapidated railway network and poor road links. The standard gauge railway network is designed to ensure higher performance and speeds for both passenger and freight trains.

Oldest in the world

"With the kind of speeds available on the standard gauge line, we shall be able to move to anywhere within its network in less than 10 hours," says Mr Nduva Muli, managing director Kenya Railways, who is also a member of the group.

The Kenya Uganda Railway is billed as one of the oldest in the world, where 85 per cent of all lines are now on standard gauge."This upgrade will enable Kenya and the region become a logistics hub," says Muli.This consultative group that has already been formed in Kenya, aims to engage the
Government at cabinet level, to adopt its standard gauge railway master plan.The group’s key terms of reference will involve promotion of similar consultative groups within the East African region, for the development of a standard gauge railway network throughout the region.Other members include Susan Kikwai MD Kenya Investment Authority, Betty Maina, CEO Kenya Association of Manufacturers

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Stop picking on Mwakwere


What’s all the hullabaloo about Transport Minister Chirau Ali Mwakwere appointing his brother to the Transport Licensing Board? Given what transpires in this country, aren’t we being just a touch hypocritical?
Family members have been known to inherit positions of power without questions being asked. Sons take over from fathers, while wives inherit their husbands’ positions.One of the Deputy Prime Ministers occupies the same ministry as his father once did. As far as brother’s go, Mwakwere has learned from the best. Didn’t the Prime Minister appoint his brother Assistant Minister earlier this year?
Since this culture seems to be well grounded, lets not pick on Mr Mwakwere. The question that should concern us is whether the brother has what it takes to perform.Until we root out the culture of appointing our family members, let us hold our peace.

Salma Mohamed, Malindi


http://www.eastandard.net/letters/InsidePage.php?id=1143993364&cid=17&

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THE NATION


Kibaki names new Council members

By ANTHONY KARIUKI
Posted Wednesday, September 10 2008 at 14:44 and PPS


President Kibaki has named Prime Minister Raila Odinga and his deputies Musalia Mudavadi and Uhuru Kenyatta in an expanded National Economic and Social Council.

Twelve Cabinet ministers of lead ministries also join the council. Other members are drawn from the private sector, government institutions, registered professional bodies, labour organisations and international experts.
The Council is mandated to advise the Government on coordinated policies geared towards accelerated economic growth, social equity, employment creation and reducing poverty and inequality.
It also authorised to give professional opinion on development issues from time to time
Prime Minister Raila Odinga, Deputy Prime Ministers, Uhuru Kenyatta and Musalia Mudavadi join the Council.

Ministers appointed are: William Ruto (Agricuture), John Michuki (Environment and Mineral Resources,) Kiraitu Murungi (Energy), Samuel Poghisio (Information and Communication), Chris Obure (Roads), Chirau Ali Mwakwere (Transport), Henry Kosgey (Industrialisation) and Mutula Kilonzo (Nairobi Metropolitan).

Others are: Planning and National Development Minister, Wycliffe Oparanya, Higher Education Minister, Dr Sally Kosgey, Minister for Justice and National Cohesion, Martha Karua and Public Health Minister, Beth Mugo as well as the Attorney General, Amos Wako.
The International experts who were appointed are: Engineer Lee Yee Cheong of Malaysia, Dr Chung Kunmo of South Korea, Prof Hiroyuki Hino of Japan and Dr Victor Koh of Singapore.
Since 2005, the Council has advised the Government on various policy measures targeting accelerated pace of national development that culminated in the conceptualisation and development of the Vision 2030.

Among the specific tasks that the Council is supposed to undertake include the creation of a forum in which the Government, private sector and labour unions can identify and recommend to the government for implementation.
It also has the task of developing and recommending to the cabinet policies that will promote social equity, economic growth, create employment, and reduce poverty and inequality in the country.
President Kibaki chairs the Council, whose members meet at least four times a year.

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Human error to blame for crash

By DAVE OPIYO
Posted Tuesday, September 9 2008 at 16:55

Bad weather and human error were to blame for the plane crash that claimed the lives of Roads minister Kipkalya Kones and three other people. This was the verdict of the team of aviation experts investigating the crash at Enoosupukia, Narok South district.The experts presented their findings to Transport Minister Chirau Mwakwere on Tuesday.

Mr Peter Wakahia, the head of investigations described the accident as a 'controlled flight into terrain’ phenomenon, responsible for half of air crashes worldwide.Controlled flight into terrain is the process by which a perfectly operational aircraft crashes under the control of a pilot.Mr Wakahia said poor visibility due to fog and inadequate flight planning by the pilot contributed to the fatal incident that also claimed the lives of Assistant minister Lorna Laboso, the minister’s bodyguard Kennedy Bett and pilot Christopher Schner on June 10.

Mr Kones, who was the MP for Bomet, and Ms Laboso, the MP for the neighbouring Sotik constituency, were on their way to Ainamoi to monitor the by-election caused by the death of Mr Kimutai Too.Mr Wakahia, who is also the head of the Aircraft Accident Investigations Unit revealed that the all the parts of the chartered single-engine Cessna 210E aircraft were in good condition.

The aircraft was operated by Skytrade of Wilson Airport.“Based on this, we can say that it is the pilot who decided to fly at that particular altitude despite the fact that he did not know the terrain well.”He went on: “The pilot did not therefore lose control of the plane...he just did not know he would hit the ground.”Mr Wakahia said based on the information gathered by his investigators, the team came up with 24 major findings on the crash and further came up with seven recommendations on how to improve aviation safety in the country.The team also presented a simulation of the flight path the plane took to the point of accident.

The recommendations include:

-The Kenya Civil Aviation Authority to consider restricting the issuance of aviation licences to foreign nationals to non commercial activities.
-The office of the president to develop standards to regulate group travel for senior government officials.
-Immigration department be more vigilant in the issuance and renewal of work permits to expatriate aviators.
-That the Kenya meteorological department make available detailed weather forecast to pilots.
-The Kenya Civil Aviation Authority improve on their Very High Frequency coverage and further take measures to increase awareness of the 'controlled flight into terrain problem and to implement preventive measures.

The team of investigators included: Mr Anthony Kirokien, Mr Enos Ndoli, Mr Peter Munyao and Mathioya MP Clement Wambugu, a member of the parliamentary committee on Energy, Transport and Roads.It had 90 days to investigate the crash and present the findings to the minister.
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Rail system to be upgraded


By ODHIAMBO ORLALE
Posted Monday, September 8 2008


The Government plans to replace Kenya’s obsolete rail system with a modern and efficient one in the next decade.The ambitious project is part of a multi-billion-shilling master-plan by a team made up of Kenya Railways Corporation officials and representatives from the private sector.

Transport minister Ali Mwakwere assured the group of the Government’s support, saying the project to replace the current metre gauge with a standard gauge railway line would increase efficiency, safety and maintenance.Asked how the plan would fit in given the 25-year contract between Rift Valley Railways and the Kenyan and Ugandan governments to run the Kenya-Uganda railways, the minister said it would compliment and not frustrate their efforts.

Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni and Prime Minister Raila Odinga are on record describing the current rail system as obsolete. On Monday, Mr Mwakwere said: “We cannot continue to use an obsolete rail system, what we want to do is just an improvement and it will not affect the RVR contract.”

The minister said the plan was in the best interest of RVR, saying: “We’ll prove a more viable and efficient system that will be a win-win for all the parties involved.”Under the plan, four new rail lines would be built - one will be from Lamu in Coast Province to Lokichogio in Rift Valley en route to Juba in Southern Sudan. Another would be from Nairobi to Garissa in North Eastern Province. The third would be from Nanyuki in Central Province to Addis Ababa in Ethiopia, through Maralal, Marsabit and Moyale, and the fourth from Nairobi to Arusha in Tanzania.

Their master-plan

The chairman of the group, Mr Manu Chandaria, appealed to the minister to present their master-plan to the Cabinet for discussion and adoption. He said the railway built by the colonial government over a century ago had outlived its usefulness.“The standard gauge rail network is designed to ensure speedier passenger transport of between 120 kilometres per hour and 160 kilometres per hour.”



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The Cutting Edge:
September 3, 2008

Transport minister Chirau Ali Mwakwere and the Traffic Commandant should crack their big whips on the immorality being purveyed in matatus in Nairobi, urges Benson Mugambi. “On almost all the routes, matatu crews are playing videos with explicit content.” But the most daring, he adds, is a Route 45 matatu, which has on its door, in black and white, the words, ‘Parental warning - Explicit content’. And true to their word, they screen obscene videos.



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OTHER MEDIA


KQ launches flights to Congo

Written By:Judith Akolo
Posted: Tue, Sep 09, 2008

National Carrier Kenya Airways is set to begin three weekly flights to Congo, Brazzaville.Transport Minister Ali Mwakwere and Congo's Transport and Civil Aviation Minister Emile Ousso signed the agreement that will see KQ increase its routes in the continent.

They said Congo, Brazzaville had put measures in place that will ensure the safety of passengers and aircrafts flying the region.
Mwakwere said the Ministry is continuing to review bilateral Air Service Agreements aimed at opening up more opportunities for Kenya Airways and expanding the route network.Ouosso said his country is entering the agreement with Kenya in order to take advantage of Kenya Airways ability to transport business people from China, whose trade with Brazzaville has increased yet lacked direct flights from China to Congo, Brazzaville.Mwakwere said the much-anticipated direct flights between Kenya and Congo Brazaville would offer solutions to the business community, tourism sector and travelers between the two countries.

"The signing of this agreement will open up a number of trade opportunities between our two states. If the business opportunities are exploited, it will increase trade volumes, thereby ensuring that commercial relations between Kenya and Congo are enhanced for the benefit of the two peoples," said the minister.

Mwakwere said the reviews and the conclusion of the new agreements are aimed at opening up opportunities and expanding the available route networks for local operators, with Kenya Airways currently serving 43 international and domestic routes in over 36 countries in Africa.He said the available opportunities had led to an increase in the number of passengers using Kenyan airports, thus necessitating the expansion programmes currently going on at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport and Kisumu Airport.


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Crash caused by poor visibility-report

Written By:KNA , Posted: Tue, Sep 09, 2008

The plane crash that claimed the lives of former Cabinet Minister, the late Bomet MP Kipkalia Kones and Assistant Minister Lorna Laboso resulted from poor visibility.A report released Tuesday by a team that carried out an inquest into the cause of the crash said other possible causes could have been inadequate flight planning by the pilot.The team led by Engineer Peter Wakahia however said there were 24 other probable causes which will soon be published after the report is presented in parliament.

Transport Minister Chirau Ali Mwakwere said the ministry was carrying out a research which will ensure air safety in the country and avert such calamities in future.Mwakwere said he would peruse the report before presenting it to the cabinet, parliament and to the public.

The committee recommended among others increased surveillance on Commercial Pilot Certificates, improvement of Very High Frequency Coverage to ensure safety of aircrafts and restricted use of aviation licenses issued to foreign nationals for commercial activities.Mwakwere also revealed that preliminary reports to the KQ Cameroon crash also showed that bad weather and pilot error caused the accident that led to the deaths of over 114 people.

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'Kenya will not be a dumping ground'-Kibaki'

President Mwai Kibaki has directed the Kenya Bureau of Standards and other relevant Government agencies to be extra vigilant in order to apprehend and prosecute those importing sub-standard and counterfeit goods.Saying the Government was aware that the manufacturing sector is threatened by unfair competition from imported sub-standard and counterfeit goods, President Kibaki emphasized that no one will be allowed to turn Kenya into a dumping ground."We must not allow Kenya to become the dumping ground for sub-standard goods," President Kibaki said.The President was speaking on Saturday when he officially opened the Revital Healthcare (EPZ) Limited, a pharmaceutical company at Changamwe in Mombasa .

President Kibaki encouraged local manufacturers to focus on the export markets, saying the Government has created a suitable environment for an export-driven industrial sector by honouring it obligations under the existing regional as well as bilateral trading pacts.Said the President, "These include, the East African Community, the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA) and the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA), among others.

"He, therefore, urged the local manufacturing companies to seize the conducive opportunities opened by the Government to increase their production capacity and create more jobs for Kenyans.President Kibaki also challenged investors in the EPZ to diversify from apparels into other products, saying there were many unexploited opportunities in horticulture and floriculture processing, pharmaceuticals, sisal dart boards, security printing, assembly of batteries and torch bulbs, fortified blended foods, plastic products and call centre services among others.The Head of State observed that diversification is the challenge that faces the Export Processing Zones that were initially mandated to diversify the country's export base from the traditional agricultural goods to processed end-products by attracting both international and local investments into the country.

In this regard, President Kibaki commended Revital Healthcare for being one of the few companies in the EPZ, that does not manufacture apparels and its products are being exported to the neighbouring countries of Sudan , Burundi , Tanzania and Zambia , thus earning the country valuable foreign exchange."I am glad to note that this factory has already commenced operations with a production capacity of 20 million syringes per month, making it the largest facility of its kind in East and Central Africa ," the President said.

For Kenya to attain and sustain a ten percent annual economic growth, the President stressed that more emphasis should be put on industrialization, adding that the manufacturing sector is expected to play a critical role in propelling the country's economy to a middle level status in two decades in line with the Vision 2030.President Kibaki said the manufacturing sector will also be critical in supporting the country's social development agenda through the creation of jobs by attracting foreign direct investments.The Head of State, therefore, called on investors to embrace new technologies in order to raise productivity and make the country's industries internationally competitive.On its part, the President said his Government is implementing various recommendations to reform the transport sector and to facilitate the movement of goods and services in to address some of these challenges facing the manufacturing sector.

He reiterated that the port of Mombasa and border entry points of Lunga Lunga, Taveta, Namanga, Isebania, Malaba and Busia will operate on a 24-hour basis, while all unnecessary road blocks have been removed.President Kibaki disclosed that the Ministry of Industrialization and all other regulatory agencies have also been directed to consolidate their license regimes in order to reduce bureaucracy and enhance efficiency."The government is also working on modalities of strengthening local production capacity by encouraging consolidation and establishment of special zones and parks to better service the export-oriented firms," the Head of State said.

In this connection, the Head of State urged investors to complement the Government initiatives by developing new products through value addition which will enable them to penetrate new markets, especially the Middle East and the Far East .He said the Government will soon amend the EPZ act to reflect the country's changing development needs, adding that the changes proposed under the EPZ Act are being considered in line with the VISION TWENTY THIRTY flagship projects."They include development of industrial and manufacturing zones in different regions of the country.

In addition, five Small and Medium Enterprise industrial parks in key urban centers will be developed. Local authorities will play a critical role in developing these parks by providing relevant infrastructure and services to make them attractive," President Kibaki said.Speaking during the occasion, Medical Services Minister Prof. Anyang' Nyong'o said the ministry had put in place proper regulatory laws to guard against counterfeit of drugs and non-pharmaceuticals to enable pharmaceutical companies to prosper in the country.

The Minister said dumping of substandard drugs was not only detrimental to health but also hampered growth of the pharmaceutical industry.Cabinet Ministers Beth Mugo of Public Health and Sanitation, Chirau Ali Makwere of Transport and Najib Balala of Tourism were among senior Government officials who attended the occasion.

Friday, August 1, 2008

HOME PAGE



Politics

PNU in bid to gain broader membership

President Mwai Kibaki’s penchant for holding closed-door PNU meetings – invariably at the Kenyatta International Conference Centre – can lend the party the air of a boardroom outfit. It makes its plans in closed rooms, and since it never holds public rallies, those outside its political circle never know exactly what it is up to.
Even as the party embarks on recruiting members next month, the gripe among party staff is whether this boardroom approach can generate the public enthusiasm necessary for the recruitment to be a success, which is something ODM or even the Kanu of old can teach PNU.

Recruitment

On August 22, Kibaki chaired yet another PNU get-together at KICC, which doubled as a Parliamentary Group meeting. This time a timetable for the recruitment as well as for grassroots and national elections was agreed on.
From mid-September, the recruitment drive begins at sub-locations. (A PNU affiliates’ meeting on July 23 agreed that PNU will recruit directly, while maintaining corporate status.)
On October 12, grassroots elections begin, culminating in the election of national officials in November or early December.
“For the PNU, the elections serve two purposes. One is for the purpose of compliance with the Political Parties Act. But the other more important reason is to transform the party into a mass movement,” said Moses Kuria, the programmes director at the PNU secretariat.
Such transformation, without a captivating message is not easy to effect. Indeed, the concern among foot soldiers is that there is no real general on the horizon to organise the necessary campaigns.

PNU has a variety of party organs, but many are inactive. Its headquarters along Nairobi’s Lenana Road have been in a deep lull since the hysteria of the General Election ended.

Planned revitalisation

During the elections the party had an Election Board that might be resuscitated to handle the elections bit of the planned revitalisation. But who exactly will be doing what is something that does not seem to have been properly thought through yet.
One of the key decisions the meeting of August 22 made was to appoint provincial co-ordinators, or “convenors”, for the purpose of the coming exercise. It appears that they will be shouldering most of the responsibilities.

Rift Valley has Minister George Saitoti, Coast Province has Minister Ali Mwakwere, Nairobi has Minister Beth Mugo, Nyanza has Minister Sam Ongeri, Eastern has Minister Kiraitu Murungi, Western has Minister Noah Wekesa, and Central has Deputy Prime Minister Uhuru Kenyatta, while North Eastern has Minister Yusuf Haji and Wajir West MP Adan Keynan.
What is quite intriguing from this list is that figures who are officially Kanu like Messrs Kenyatta, Haji, Ongeri and Keynan have been selected to be PNU co-ordinators.

For one, it has been assumed that affiliate parties like Kanu will not be participating in the elections and will comply with the Political Parties Act on their own.
Hence most of them, from ODM-K to DP to Ford-K to Narc-Kenya, will not – as corporate members – participate in the PNU recruitment and elections affair.
Mr Kenyatta’s selection as convenor for Central Province is quite curious as he is Kanu’s chairman.
The unusual positioning suggests he wants to keep a keen eye on PNU’s development in his home province, something that can only be attributed to the fact.

Of the affiliates, it is only Kanu that has members who will be involved in this co-ordination, the exception being Ford-Kenya’s Noah Wekesa, who has been selected to carry out that role in Western province. (Note: His Kwanza constituency technically falls under the Rift Valley. This suggests that Ford-Kenya’s Bungoma heavyweights – Mr Musikari Kombo and Foreign minister Moses Wetangula – opted out.)

Kanu’s legal pointman Mr Justin Muturi, the former MP for Siakago, justified the Kanu men’s new postings as merely meant to “assist” in areas where they carried the most clout and experience.
He pointed out, though, that they could not participate in the PNU elections even as delegates as long as they remained officials of Kanu. But that does not preclude them from pushing proxies, which is where their real interests may lie.
Hold elections
Mr Kenyatta and his colleagues might have time to freelance because their party does not have to hold elections until 2010, having last held them in 2005.
Indeed it is the only party that will not have to go through that exercise as part of meeting the requirements of the Political Parties Act. All the others, from ODM to PNU to ODM-K, maintain only “interim” officials.
What Kanu has suffered is a severe depletion of many top officials, but the party constitution empowers the chairman and the executive committee to appoint acting officials until the next elections are held.

A group in the Rift Valley close to Gideon Moi has been pressing for a delegates conference to chart the party’s future.
Nominated MP George Nyamweya, who has been a close associate of Mr Kibaki for many years, introduced a new spin to counter the widespread view that the President is suddenly showing interest in political parties because he is interested in grooming his successor.
The big picture, according to Mr Nyamweya, is about keeping the grand coalition alive.
“The President is interested in this revitalisation because the Act forming the grand coalition agreement specifies two parties – PNU and ODM. If the PNU misses out on compliance (with the Political Parties Act), this will threaten the grand coalition itself,” he offered.
Small parties stand to lose grievously from the Political Parties Act. For one, besides showing evidence of membership in every province, parties will be expected to have offices in all 148 districts.

A full branch network will have to cover 210 constituencies. The vast majority of registered parties will not be able to meet these requirements and will, in effect, die off.
In a back-handed way, the new Act may help develop a political culture of a few strong parties, which many have long hoped for.
In doing this, the Political Parties Act might do a lasting service to our political institutions.





Kibaki to meet Coast MPs

By Caroline Mango

Published August 29, 2008

President Kibaki has booked a date with all Coast MPs at State House, Mombasa.
The meeting comes a day after Prime Minister Raila Odinga met the legislators and outlined his plan for the region.
Kibaki told Transport minister and Matuga MP Chirau Mwakwere that he would like to meet the leaders in a follow-up meeting.
On the agenda are issues they listed when they met the President a month ago in Nairobi.
Mwakwere has informed the MPs about the meeting. They are expected to hold discussions on Friday afternoon, after the Head of State receives athletes who arrived in the country on Wednesday.

Assistant minister and Kinango MP Gonzi Rai said on Thursday expectations by the MPs would largely dwell on feedback by the President on matters raised at their last meeting, at his Harambee House office.
Kibaki is expected to brief them on steps his Government has taken so far to solve issues top on the agenda.
They include land, water, human-wildlife conflict and appointments to key positions.
They also expect him to state his stand on the appointment of Coast residents to parastatals in the region, including the Port of Mombasa and other key Government positions.

East African Community Minister Amason Kingi said their expectations would be that the President would outline the GovernmentÕs strategy in solving thorny issues like land.

ÒLargely, we will expect more from him because we handed over our demands on issues we felt had not been resolved in the region for a long time. Land is top on the list,Ó said Kingi.
The MPs are also demanding the immediate re-constitution of the Mombasa Water Board, a deadlock they said had delayed funds to repair the Mzima Springs, a major water source for Mombasa and its environs.



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BUSINESS DAILY




Global campaign targets safety on Kenyan roads

August 28, 2008:
The International Road Assessment Programme is being carried out in the country to ensure safety.The IRAP is part of a reforms process in the transport sector that is meant to address the various issues contributing to the large number of road accidents in the country.Last year the Transport ministry, Roads ministry, Automobile Association of Kenya, the Kenya Roads Board and IRAP, signed a memorandum of understanding to facilitate the implementation of this project.IRAP is an international programme that started in 2006 to develop tools to help low and middle income countries address the issue of road safety and the economic returns of having safer roads.

Safety awarenessTransport minister Chirau Mwakwere said his ministry is committed to continue playing its policy role in matters related to the management of the transport industry, especially road safety.This financial year the ministry has planned to undertake intensive multimedia road safety awareness campaigns targeting all road users.Once the study is complete the report is expected to be handed over to the ministry of transport, in April, to implement it.

A steering committee is already in place, mainly made up of ministry officials and IRAP, to oversee the study.Missing from the steering committee is the private sector, a major player in the industry. None of the individual players, matatu sector or even Kenya Private Sector Alliance (KEPSA) is represented in the initiative with the ministry planning to lead the whole initiative.This report will not be the first addressing issues of road safety in the country. Various national plans and the ‘Michuki rules’ are examples of initiatives that have been put in place to reduce road deaths .

Speed governorsToday the rules, which called for wearing of safety belts and speed governors, are being broken with Mr Mwakwere stating it was not his job to ensure that they are followed, but the work of the police.The IRAP will undertake the study in the country, looking at road inspection data supported by aggregate national statistics for total road deaths to find out how many casualties are recorded on the roads.Statistics from IRAP show that 1.2 million people die and a further 50 million are injured or permanently disabled in road crashes globally.Road Safety involves implementation of policies, project funding, recognition of multi sector ownership, road design, vehicles education and road user education. Similar programmes have been carried out or are under way in Singapore, Vietnam, Costa Rica, Chile, Argentina, Peru, South Africa, Nigeria and Serbia.






African aviation safety in spotlight

Posted to the web on: 26 August 2008

AFRICA has a high aviation accident rate proportional to its air traffic, an aviation conference heard yesterday.
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), the US regulatory body, said “political will” was needed to make African skies safer.

Speaking at the 14th Aviation and Allied Business Leadership Conference in Johannesburg yesterday, top FAA official Robert Sturgell urged African leaders to share aviation safety information globally.
Sturgell said the US had asked the International Civil Aviation Organisation (Icao), a United Nations agency, to make the US’s entire aviation audit report public.

Icao requires member states to adhere to the universal safety oversight audit, which promotes aviation safety through the regular auditing of safety oversight systems.
The US bars all countries that fail to comply with the Icao standards from extending their air services to that country.

Sturgell said Africa had 4,5% of the world’s air traffic, but accounted for 25% of total accidents.
Noting that the US was helping some sub-Saharan countries to comply with Icao standards, Sturgell said Africa’s air traffic was growing faster than the global average.
“This growth is good news, but we need to make sure that our ability to meet safety standards grows as well,” he said.
Transport Minister Jeff Radebe agreed that aviation safety statistics in Africa made “poor reading”.
He said accidents related to poor ground handling at the airports were a “concern”. Some airports in Africa were saddled with outdated air traffic and navigation technologies, infrastructure deficiencies and a lack of skills.

Radebe said SA was making progress in liberalising the country’s skies.
However, his Kenyan counterpart, Chirau Ali Mwakwere, said there were still some instances where one had to fly to another continent in order to reach another African country.
He said African countries were increasingly opening up their air space to airlines from sister countries, even though the pace of this liberalisation “may not be as fast as some people would desire”.
“The easing of unnecessary restrictions involving travelling for our citizens across the continent, movement of high-value goods and perishable horticultural products could benefit our people and open up more markets for our products,” he said.

African Civil Aviation Commission president Chris Kuto said what African countries needed was a “common civil aviation policy”. He said some policies were not friendly to aviation on the continent.
Christian Folly-Kossi, secretary-general of the African Airlines Association, said the recent European Union-US open sky deal had increased pressure on Africa to create a “single air space” too.

http://www.businessday.co.za/articles/topstories.aspx?ID=BD4A830167

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President and First Lady warmly received on arrival in Mombasa

Nairobi, August 25, 2008

Thousands of jubilant wananchi today lined up the road to receive President Mwai Kibaki and First Lady Mama Lucy Kibaki who arrived in Mombasa this evening at the start of a 6-day official visit to the Coast.
The plane carrying the President and the First Lady touched down at Moi International Airport shortly after 6.00 p.m.
They were warmly received at the airport by Coast leaders and other Government officials led by Ministers Chirau Ali Mwakwere, Najib Balala, William Ruto, Amazon Kingi, Assistant Ministers Ramadhan Kajembe, Calist Mwatela and Gonzi Rai, several Members of Parliament from the region and Mombasa Mayor Abubakar Mondhar among others.
Thereafter, the President and the First Lady were entertained by groups of traditional dancers and choirs.

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Coast MPs to report Raila to the President



Published on 25/08/2008
By Caroline Mango

Discontent against Prime Minister Raila Odinga will be on the rise in the next few days as Coast MPs take their accusations against him before President Kibaki this week.
MPs are waiting to register their anger over what they term undue interference by the Prime Minister in the region.

Key among the issues they will be accusing Raila of is his stand that the new Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) boss be hired competitively, regardless of his ethnicity. Their discontent against Raila will be coming soon after another disquiet by MPs from the South Rift region who expressed their displeasure at the decision to evict their people from the Mau forest.

MPs Hassan Joho (Kisauni), Gedion Mung’aro (Malindi), Danson Mungatana, Kazungu Kambi (Kaloleni), Gonzi Rai (Kinango), Dan Mwazo (Voi) and Benedict Fondo (Bahari), are leading the protest and are expected to present their demands to Kibaki when he visits Mombasa starting Tuesday.
Although a section of critics are branding the MPs tribalists, the legislators have vowed to press on with their demands under the Coast Parliamentary Group (CPG) forum.
They are said to have drawn up a list of people from the Coast whom they believe are qualified for the job, to be presented to both Kibaki and Raila.

Vice chairman of the CPG, Gedion Mung’aro who is also the Malindi MP, says the issue "is not negotiable and that the President must appoint a Coastal to the position."
"We are the ones who passed a vote of no confidence on (former MD Abdallah) Mwarua because we do not support failures. We also know that the Coast region has competent people who can fill that position and that is why the issue is no longer negotiable. It’s a demand that must be met," he says.
Mung’aro, an ODM MP, says Coast Province has many qualified people to fill the position at the port and other key positions in Government.

"We are not tribalists like some people have branded us. We have let outsiders work at the helm of the port before. We are telling the Prime Minister that the same decentralisation dream he has for this country is what we stand for," he said.

Wrong perception

While in Mombasa, Kibaki is expected to open the region’s Agricultural Society of Kenya (ASK) show.
He will also meet area MPs as a follow-up to an earlier meeting held at his Harambee House office, Nairobi, earlier this month where issues on land, education and appointment of people from the Coast to key Government positions were discussed.

A visit by Raila to restore order at the port about two weeks ago appears to have stoked the fires of regionalism following the sacking of Mwarua.
The legislators, including those allied to ODM, appear to have been ruffled by Raila’s remarks during a homecoming party for Changamwe MP Ramadhan Kajembe that the appointment be based on merit and not restricted to Coast Province. The Prime Minister said the port belongs to all Kenyans and its top management can be drawn from any part of the country.

Although Mwarua’s sacking was welcomed by local MPs, the choice for a successor has become a dicey issue with legislators from the region, including Transport minister Chirau Mwakwere, snubbing Raila’s port tour.
Former KPA bosses perceived to have come from ‘outside the region’ include Mr Brown Ondego who steered the port for six years, Mr Joseph Munene who served for three months and Mr Philip Okundi who worked for nine years.
But Cabinet minister Amason Kingi, a close Raila ally, says there is need for Coast MPs to seek a win-win solution. He says Coast MPs need to sit down with Raila, because there appears to be a wrong perception over his remarks and intentions.

"The Prime Minister’s position is that the Port of Mombasa be run by a competent person regardless of his origin and we are saying we want somebody from the region," he says.
"We can address the concerns of the Prime Minister on competence while at the same time ensuring that one of our own is at the helm of the Port," he adds.
Kingi says he has prevailed upon MPs to meet Raila over the matter, which he says is sending wrong signals to the grassroots.

Scholars from the region say protests by the local leadership stem from historical injustices inflicted on Coast people by successive governments in managing national resources.
A Coast scholar, Prof Mohammed Hyder, says while its important for the MPs to fight for the interests of the Coastal people, they should not mix emotions with issues and compromise competence, especially in matters of management of national assets.

He says, traditionally, all national assets based in various regions are managed by people from those areas but that this should not be used as an excuse to pick less qualified candidates.
"The Government should do more by training those in various industries to enable them rise to the occasion when they are needed to fill top positions," Hyder says.
Kisauni MP Hassan Joho, another ODM MP and a close ally of Raila, says its only fair for Coast MPs to protect the region’s interests.

"KPA is a national asset just like Mumias Sugar, Kenya Planters Co-corporation Union and the Lake Basin Authority. How many of those other parastatals are headed by Coast people?" posed Joho.
"We want more of our people in key positions in Government. This region has been marginalised for a long time and we won’t allow neo-colonialism," he adds.

KENYA TIMES


Mwakwere assures Govt won’t revoke concession

Story by: George Kebasso

Updated on: Wednesday, August 20, 2008

THE Government has ruled out the possibility of cancelling the concessioning of the Kenya-Uganda railway to Rift Valley Railways (RVR).But Transport minister Chirau Ali Mwakwere has acknowledged that there is need to evaluate RVR’s performance to ensure it meets the concession agreement.The minister said this yesterday during the launch of his ministry’s Rapid Results Initiative at a ceremony held the Cooperative College of Kenya in Nairobi’s Karen suburb.


He said there are clauses in the concession agreement that specify remedial steps in the event a party fails to meet its part of the bargain and which should be adhered to.Said he: “We know there is a big problem but that does not mean that nothing can be done. We must support RVR’s operations if it has to stay afloat in the industry.”

He said cancelling the concession agreement is not the Government’s priority, but the governments of Kenya and Uganda would look into the teething problems that hamper operations of the rail transport operator, adding that solving the problems will make the rail transport efficient.“As countries in the region we have to accept that we made mistakes and acknowledge that there is a serious problem with RVR. We need to put our eyes on RVR to fix the problem,” he said.

The minister assured that the two governments would move to rescue the company from its current problems, noting: “We have been in touch with the stakeholders involved to ensure that the correction is done. We want to ensure an efficient Rail system in the region for all to reap its benefits.” The Ugandan government has in the past two months accused RVR of failing to honour the concession, with Ugandan Works and Transport minister accusing RVR of poor performance.

John Nasasira admitted that even lay people knew long ago the company was not performing to expectations. He warned that unless the firm improved “substantially in the near future,” the Government would be compelled to apply the options available.The company has breached several important provisions of the concession agreement, including those pertaining to payment of confessional fees and maintenance of conceded assets. The quality of service is said to have deteriorated since RVR took over from Kenya Railways.


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KPA saga: Is it a Raila, Mwakwere showdown or walk

Story by: Abdillahi Alawy
Updated on: Sunday, August 17, 2008

There is a silver lining in the latest commotion between the Coast MPs and Prime Minister Raila Odinga. It is possible that this is a win-win situation for both sides of the debate. Unfortunately, it is obvious that the warring parties have not seen the opportunities in their argument and are increasingly bent on politicizing the issue. Apparently, a segment of the region’s MPs appears united against the PM’s recent directives that have affected the Ministry of Transport.But more loudly, the MPs are complaining about what they see as Raila’s micro-managing of a ministry headed by a Coastal.

Clearly, the Transport Minister, Hon. Chirau Ali Mwakwere, has twice become the victim of the PM’s imposing vigor in highly visible national and international appearances. The pro-Mwakwere MPs rightly complain that Raila Odinga is purposely overshadowing the Matuga MP. To the extent, the newly crowned Premier has stolen Mwakere’s limelight from Washington DC to the slippery decks of the Kenya Ports Authority (KPA); a key institution that falls under Mwakwere’s Transport Ministry.The open-air agreement between the US and Kenya, and the recent KPA saga are examples in point.

In these events Mr. Mwakwere diplomatically allowed Mr. Odinga to patronize and subsequently steal the instant blitz. I witnessed it in Washington DC and I just read about the KPA. Mwakwere has been a Transport Minister longer than Odinga has been a Prime Minister. However, according to the still-unclear pecking-order and the PM’s undefined oversight roles, the PM seemingly appears to be making all the important decisions under Mwakwere’s docket.For example, there has not been even a word from the Prime Minister on any of those many ministries that don’t have a fax number posted on the Internet; or well-defined ministerial roles clarified on the web.Additionally, an observation is due here that Raila’s involvement in the Lands Ministry is complimentary and supportive of the ministry and its minister. But, his constant intervention in the Transport Ministry is looking more like interference than nurturing.

The current debate centres on whether or not the top KPA post should be reserved for Coastal natives. The Mwakwere’s cohorts are peddling the idea that KPA should be led by a Mijikenda.Note the clarification here: not any Coastal but a Mijikenda for the post at KPA; because that has been the past trend. Surprisingly, MP Danson Mungatana does not see that all the Coastal people who have previously held the KPA job were exclusively from the Mijikendas group; pre and post Mwakwere. It is beside the point here, but the names of previous Coastal KPA bosses are, Mturi, Mkalla, Mumba, Mwaruwa etc. Mungatana is a non-Mijikenda, but this time, for some reasons, he is ready to sing along with the Mijikenda leader, Mr. Mwakwere.The four names listed above and the current KPA boss all come from one tribal group, albeit a family that has primarily occupied the Transport Minister’s as his defined agenda of promoting the Coastal people— also noting that this is in line with the national leadership process of awarding key jobs to the close-ones. Raila is right to state that the KPA post should be a nationwide competitive position to be filled by the most qualified Kenyan. The MPs are also right to insist that a Mijikenda should be heading the KPA.

More importantly Mwakwere is right in that he is being pushed around by a Prime Minister who has an overzealous addiction to Mwakwere’s performance at Transport. Raila is right in that Kenya should not have public positions that are reserved for a certain group of people. Mwakwere should be supported for refusing to be micromanaged or upstaged in roles that are clearly his. Likewise, the Coast MPs are right in standing with their colleague but also highlighting a Coastal dilemma of long-term isolation that may be addressed via clear affirmative processes. aalawy@gmail.com
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Raila cracks the whip

Story by: Lumiti Khabuchi &
Kipng’eno Cheruiyot



HEADS ROLL: KPA boss Mwaruwa fired as PM warns non-performers



PRIME Minister Raila Odinga has put on notice non-performing public officials. He particularly took issue with the transport sector, saying it has deteriorated to unacceptable levels and directed that concerted efforts be made to turn it around. And in what was seen as a thinly veiled attack on Transport Minister Chirau Ali Mwakwere, the Prime Minister expressed exasperation over the collapse of rules that had streamlined and brought sanity to the public transport sector under former holder of the docket John Michuki.
The government, said Raila, will no longer tolerate public officers and departments whose inefficiency constitute an impediment to doing business and general growth and development of the country.The PM accused non-performing officials of frustrating the work of the private sector aimed at spurring development.
And as a warning to non-performing executives of state corporations, Raila announced the replacement of Kenya Port Authority managing director Abdallah Mwaruwa with James Mulewa who has been the manager in charge of reforms at the port.Raila said while the government had entrusted the realisation of the Vision 2030 in the hands of the private sector, its role as the regulator of business activities had fallen short of expectation and therefore the need for a paradigm shift.
He was speaking during the launch of the first ever government/ private sector round table at which players in the private sector highlighted key bottlenecks towards doing business in the country.The drawbacks that range from a harsh taxation regime to massive corruption among public officials, insecurity and infrastructure challenges that have made doing business costly and stood in the way of new investments in the country.
Raila said with the formation of the grand coalition government, manifestos of coalition partners were harmonized and structured towards the realization of the revised Vision 2030 . He said only close coordination between the government and the private sector could make the ambitious vision a reality."Our immediate goal of achieving a ten percent rate of growth will not be reached if conduct business as usual. That level of growth can only be provided by a revitalized private sector working in fullest cooperation with the government," said the PM.
The event brought together senior government officials among them the two deputy prime ministers Musalia Mudavadi of Local government and Uhuru Kenyatta of Trade. Also present were cabinet misters, assistant minister, permanent secretaries, senior government officials and over 70 executives from the private sector.Raila reiterated the commitment towards the realization of a 24-hour economy as a way of generating resource..
Reacting to a complain of unnecessary red tape and bureaucracy in acquisition of licenses, the prime minister said the government was working towards an overhaul of the existing licensing regime with a view of realizing a one stop licensing centre. The private sector had decried the slow nature of licensing offices in the country, sometimes multiplicity of particular licenses, corruption and the rebirth of licenses that were recently scrapped further heightening the cost of doing business.
Energy was cited as the greatest hurdle in doing business in the country. This in part has to do with its insufficiency and high costs that have been occasioned by the fluctuation in the world oil prices. Towards this end, the private sector called for the exploration of diverse and non traditional sources such as bio-fuels and thermal, wind and solar generated power."But we must not build only small plants of 50 megawatts each, when there are huge economies of scale that larger plants could provide. Indeed we will shortly undertake a feasibility study to determine whether the generation of nuclear power is a viable option for us," said Raila.
In the recent months, the country’s transport sector has reeled under criticism over failure to address serious challenges ranging from unnecessary delays caused by roadblocks, which in most case are used as extortion points on major highways and piling up of containers at the port of Mombasa. The poor state of roads for long stretches and Rift Valley Railways has also been unable to move goods further frustrating trade within the country and in the region.
It is the attendant outcry from the regional economies over delayed supplies that must have prompted the axing of top most port and rail management officials. On Monday, the government announced the replacement of the managing director of the cash strapped Rift Valley Railways (RVR) Mr. Roy Puffet.
There is a planned meeting to In addition, the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA) will be expanded towards Athi River to boost capacity in an ambitious plan between the government and the Japanese government. The two partners have given Sh5 billion and sh15 billion respectively towards the project.
The PM said the coalition government would create a seamless relationship between public and private sectors to ensure they play a complementary role towards the realization of the vision targets.The Prime minister said the government is ready for the ICT revolution with the expected completion of the fibre optic cable that will connect Kenya with the United Arab Emirates and the world to bridge the digital divide currently existing on the continent.
Uhuru said his ministry is in the process of implementing the first ever private sector development strategy that will make country an investment hub through reduction of business costs. The National Business Agenda launched by Raila yesterday is summed up in an eleven-point manual dubbed ‘realizing the potential of the private sector in Kenya’ read on their behalf by the Kenya Private Sector Alliance (KEPSA) CEO Betty Maina.

THE STANDARD


Kibaki to meet Coast MPs

By Caroline Mango
August, 28, 2008

President Kibaki has booked a date with all Coast MPs at State House, Mombasa.The meeting comes a day after Prime Minister Raila Odinga met the legislators and outlined his plan for the region.Kibaki told Transport minister and Matuga MP Chirau Mwakwere that he would like to meet the leaders in a follow-up meeting.On the agenda are issues they listed when they met the President a month ago in Nairobi.Mwakwere has informed the MPs about the meeting.

They are expected to hold discussions on Friday afternoon, after the Head of State receives athletes who arrived in the country on Wednesday.Assistant minister and Kinango MP Gonzi Rai said on Thursday expectations by the MPs would largely dwell on feedback by the President on matters raised at their last meeting, at his Harambee House office.Kibaki is expected to brief them on steps his Government has taken so far to solve issues top on the agenda.They include land, water, human-wildlife conflict and appointments to key positions.

They also expect him to state his stand on the appointment of Coast residents to parastatals in the region, including the Port of Mombasa and other key Government positions.East African Community Minister Amason Kingi said their expectations would be that the President would outline the GovernmentÕs strategy in solving thorny issues like land.ÒLargely, we will expect more from him because we handed over our demands on issues we felt had not been resolved in the region for a long time.

Land is top on the list,Ó said Kingi.The MPs are also demanding the immediate re-constitution of the Mombasa Water Board, a deadlock they said had delayed funds to repair the Mzima Springs, a major water source for Mombasa and its environs.

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Coast MPs to report Raila to the President

Published on 25/08/200
8By Caroline Mango

Discontent against Prime Minister Raila Odinga will be on the rise in the next few days as Coast MPs take their accusations against him before President Kibaki this week.MPs are waiting to register their anger over what they term undue interference by the Prime Minister in the region.Key among the issues they will be accusing Raila of is his stand that the new Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) boss be hired competitively, regardless of his ethnicity.

Their discontent against Raila will be coming soon after another disquiet by MPs from the South Rift region who expressed their displeasure at the decision to evict their people from the Mau forest.MPs Hassan Joho (Kisauni), Gedion Mung’aro (Malindi), Danson Mungatana, Kazungu Kambi (Kaloleni), Gonzi Rai (Kinango), Dan Mwazo (Voi) and Benedict Fondo (Bahari), are leading the protest and are expected to present their demands to Kibaki when he visits Mombasa starting Tuesday.Although a section of critics are branding the MPs tribalists, the legislators have vowed to press on with their demands under the Coast Parliamentary Group (CPG) forum.They are said to have drawn up a list of people from the Coast whom they believe are qualified for the job, to be presented to both Kibaki and Raila.

Vice chairman of the CPG, Gedion Mung’aro who is also the Malindi MP, says the issue "is not negotiable and that the President must appoint a Coastal to the position.""We are the ones who passed a vote of no confidence on (former MD Abdallah) Mwarua because we do not support failures. We also know that the Coast region has competent people who can fill that position and that is why the issue is no longer negotiable.

It’s a demand that must be met," he says.Mung’aro, an ODM MP, says Coast Province has many qualified people to fill the position at the port and other key positions in Government."We are not tribalists like some people have branded us. We have let outsiders work at the helm of the port before. We are telling the Prime Minister that the same decentralisation dream he has for this country is what we stand for," he said.Wrong perceptionWhile in Mombasa, Kibaki is expected to open the region’s Agricultural Society of Kenya (ASK) show.He will also meet area MPs as a follow-up to an earlier meeting held at his Harambee House office, Nairobi, earlier this month where issues on land, education and appointment of people from the Coast to key Government positions were discussed.

A visit by Raila to restore order at the port about two weeks ago appears to have stoked the fires of regionalism following the sacking of Mwarua.The legislators, including those allied to ODM, appear to have been ruffled by Raila’s remarks during a homecoming party for Changamwe MP Ramadhan Kajembe that the appointment be based on merit and not restricted to Coast Province. The Prime Minister said the port belongs to all Kenyans and its top management can be drawn from any part of the country.Although Mwarua’s sacking was welcomed by local MPs, the choice for a successor has become a dicey issue with legislators from the region, including Transport minister Chirau Mwakwere, snubbing Raila’s port tour.

Former KPA bosses perceived to have come from ‘outside the region’ include Mr Brown Ondego who steered the port for six years, Mr Joseph Munene who served for three months and Mr Philip Okundi who worked for nine years.But Cabinet minister Amason Kingi, a close Raila ally, says there is need for Coast MPs to seek a win-win solution. He says Coast MPs need to sit down with Raila, because there appears to be a wrong perception over his remarks and intentions."The Prime Minister’s position is that the Port of Mombasa be run by a competent person regardless of his origin and we are saying we want somebody from the region," he says."We can address the concerns of the Prime Minister on competence while at the same time ensuring that one of our own is at the helm of the Port," he adds.

Kingi says he has prevailed upon MPs to meet Raila over the matter, which he says is sending wrong signals to the grassroots.Scholars from the region say protests by the local leadership stem from historical injustices inflicted on Coast people by successive governments in managing national resources.

A Coast scholar, Prof Mohammed Hyder, says while its important for the MPs to fight for the interests of the Coastal people, they should not mix emotions with issues and compromise competence, especially in matters of management of national assets.He says, traditionally, all national assets based in various regions are managed by people from those areas but that this should not be used as an excuse to pick less qualified candidates."The Government should do more by training those in various industries to enable them rise to the occasion when they are needed to fill top positions," Hyder says.

Kisauni MP Hassan Joho, another ODM MP and a close ally of Raila, says its only fair for Coast MPs to protect the region’s interests."KPA is a national asset just like Mumias Sugar, Kenya Planters Co-corporation Union and the Lake Basin Authority. How many of those other parastatals are headed by Coast people?" posed Joho."We want more of our people in key positions in Government. This region has been marginalised for a long time and we won’t allow neo-colonialism," he adds.

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New tug of war at the Coast provides opportunity for national integration

By Abdillahi Alawy

Published on 17/08/2008

There is a silver lining to the latest altercation between Coast MPs and Prime Minister Raila Odinga. It is possible for this to be a win-win situation for both sides. Unfortunately, it is obvious the warring parties are not aware of the opportunities in their argument and are increasingly bent on politicising the issue.

Apparently, a segment of Coast MPs appear united against the PM’s recent directives, which have affected the Ministry of Transport. The MPs are complaining about what they see as Raila’s micro-managing of a ministry headed by a minister from the Coast. Transport Minister Chirau Ali Mwakwere has twice been a victim of the PM’s imposing vigour in highly visible national and international appearances.

The pro-Mwakwere MPs rightly complain Raila is purposely overshadowing the Matuga MP. They say the Premier has stolen Mwakwere’s limelight, from Washington DC to the slippery decks of the Kenya Ports Authority, a key institution that falls under Mwakwere’s docket. The open-air agreement between the US and Kenya, and the recent KPA saga are examples in point. In these events, Mwakwere diplomatically allowed the PM to patronise and subsequently steal the instant blitz. I witnessed it in Washington DC, and read the KPA incident.
Mwakwere has been Transport Minister longer than Raila has been PM. The PM’s oversight role is undefined, and he appears to be making all the important decisions under Mwakwere’s docket.

Additionally, an observation is due here that Raila’s involvement in the Lands Ministry is complimentary and supportive of the minister. But his constant intervention in the Transport Ministry looks more like interference than nurturance. The current debate centres, mainly, over whether or not the top KPA post should be reserved for someone from the Coast. Mwakwere’s cohorts are peddling the idea KPA should be led by a MijiKenda — not just anyone from the Coast.

Surprisingly, Garsen MP Danson Mungatana does not see all those who have previously held the KPA job were exclusively from the Mijikenda community.
Raila is right to state the KPA post should be a nationwide, competitive position. He is right in that Kenya should not have public positions reserved for a certain group. The MPs are also right to insist a MijiKenda should head KPA. But, more importantly, Mwakwere is right to complain of being pushed around by the PM. Mwakwere should be supported for refusing to be micromanaged or upstaged in his rightful roles.
Likewise, the Coast MPs are right in standing with their colleague, and highlighting a Coastal dilemma that should be solved, through a clear affirmative action.
Processes to elevate not only the MijiKenda, but the Coastal people and all Kenyans in general, should be put in place.

Otherwise, the question remains: Who are the Coastal people? Is it the cohort promoted by our MijiKenda elder for the lucrative public positions? Or is it all people born in the province? How about the Kambas of Shimba Hill and Kikuyus of Mpeketoni? Can marital connection qualify you to be coastal? What is the definition of a coastal? In the opinion of many, the train has not left, yet. And the coastal people can be redefined to include the rest of us Kenyans. Where is national reconciliation if we cannot define ourselves after so many opportunities from the post-election violence? Our leadership should not be bent on minor differentiations but must focus on our major similarities.

—aalawy@gmail.com
______________________
Coast MPs blame Raila over sacking of port’s boss

By Philip Mbaji and Patrick Beja
Published on 11/08/2008

The sacking of
Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) MD Abdallah Mwaruwa last week, has opened a battle between Prime Minister Raila Odinga and MPs from Coast Province.The Coast Parliamentary Group (CPG) now thinks Mwaruwa’s sacking amounts to Raila’s meddling with the Transport Ministry headed by Mr Ali Chirau Mwakwere.The MPs told Raila to stop interfering with Mwakwere’s docket.

Led by Assistant Ministers Danson Mungatana (Medical Services) and Gonzi Rai of Lands, the members claimed Raila was being misguided by a local leader to undermine Mwakwere.

Speaking during a funds-drive for Moi Kadzonzo Girls Secondary in Kaloleni, the leaders accused Raila of "stealing the show" at the Transport Ministry.

Frustrations

Kaloleni MP Kazungu Kambi said Raila and Mvita MP Najib Balala were frustrating Mwakwere’s efforts. "It is unfortunate that major announcements at the Ministry of Transport have become the preserve of the PM yet Mwakwere is still in charge," Mungatana protested.MPs Hassan Joho (Kisauni) and Gideon Mung’aro (Malindi) called for the unconditional confirmation of Mr James Mulewa as KPA managing director to replace Mwaruwa.

Joho and Kambi called on Balala, who is Tourism Minister, to ensure that the proposed Utalii College campus at the Coast became a reality. The leaders also urged Deputy Prime Minister and Local Government minister Musalia Mudavadi to revise his least of nominated councillors, alleging that some were not from the region.

Raila responds

But Raila said KPA was a national asset and must be headed by a competent team regardless of the region they came from.Addressing a thanksgiving party for Changamwe MP Ramadhan Kajembe at Amani Primary School on Sunday, Raila asked MPs from Coast Province to stop politicising the running of KPA.

"Mombasa Port is a State Corporation and national asset belonging to all Kenyans and the petty politics about it must come to an end," Raila said. He said recent changes of management at KPA followed serious operational problems, which made the country and the East African regional economies to suffer.Raila said he would tour the port today and assess congestion and other problems which have affected operations.


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Squatters invade airport land, endanger flights

By Ben Agina And Isaac Ongiri
Published on 11/08/2008

Squatters have invaded corridors that aircraft use to approach the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA).
Illegal structures are mushrooming on the land set aside for security, as a new estate, Kiangombe, comes up.
The land, measuring about 1,000 hectares, is a corridor for minor and major aircraft landing at the airport, flying at an altitude as low as 180ft above the ground.

When The Standard visited Kiangombe, construction was going on in earnest. Some of the squatters are suspected to be proxies of land speculators. Without questioning by GSU officers on guard, we walked for two hours freely in the huge land, which is supposed to be under 24-hour police surveillance.
As we walked, low-flying planes criss-crossed the sky, indicating the danger the residents exposed themselves to.
The barriers at the main entrance from Mombasa road have been dismantled and stolen by suspected residents of Kiangombe.
Signboards indicating ‘No stopping, no idling’ for motorists on the main road have also been removed.
Permanent and temporary structures were being built, with ‘landlords’ putting up residential and commercial structures.
"It is an idle land that is why the landless are getting themselves a piece. We are also Kenyans and must get somewhere to call home," one landlord told The Standard.

Illegal allocation

It is suspected that individuals in the aviation industry and Government were involved in the illegal allocation of plots that has seen several acres of the protected land hived off.
Transport minister Chirau Ali Mwakwere said he had noticed with disbelief the open grabbing of airport land by Kiangombe residents.
"We cannot let this happen. We are organising with the Ministry of Land to evict the encroachers," he said.
Mwakwere warned those putting up structures on the land that they were wasting time and money, as they would be thrown out.
He also warned those involved in the allocations that they would face the law.
"There is no free land for allocations inside that plot. Anyone trying to push himself there, or collecting money from the public to allocate them land there, is wasting time," the minister said.
A security officer at the site said a terrorist using an AK47 rifle could easily bring down a plane flying at 300 ft above the air path.

The officer, however, said it was difficult for the police to evict the residents because nobody had complained.
"Yes, we have seen people building homes and shops here, but it is difficult to take any action because the
Kenya Airports Authority has not complained," a policeman said. Attempts to reach the Kenya Airports Authority Managing Director George Muhoho were fruitless as his phone went unanswered.

In 2002, an
Israeli plane escaped missile attacks hurled by suspected terrorists as it took off from the Moi International Airport in Mombasa.
Police later recovered an abandoned shoulder-fired missile-launcher in the neighbourhood.
Encroachment of the airport land could jeopardise the recently signed open skies agreement between Kenya and the US.

The agreement opened opportunities for the two countries to fly directly into Kenya or the US.
India’s financial capital, Mumbai, has been battling to evict a million slum dwellers who forced themselves into airport land adjacent to Bombay International Airport. The situation has jeopardised direct flights into the city.

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MP: Kenya Railways sale bigger scandal than Goldenberg

Published on 06/08/2008

Allegations of an incapacitated company irregularly registered to take over the operations of Kenya Railways forced Prime Minister Raila Odinga to step in with an assurance. Ababu Namwamba (Bundalang’i, ODM) stoked the embers when he raised the issue of a company he claimed was put in place to concession Kenya Railways under the guise of enhancing efficiency. The MP claimed that the company, Rift Valley Railways (RVR), entered into a 25-year concession agreement with Kenya Railways with only Sh100,000 share capital.

Raila said he had convened a meeting with Ugandan and RVR officers today over the matter.
The Government will then give a comprehensive statement after two weeks.
Namwamba tabled documents giving particulars of directors and the process that brought RVR into existence to authenticate his claims.

"RVR is linked to high-ranking officials, one of whom sits at the State law Office, where he influenced irregular registration of this company," claimed Namwamba.
But Transport Minister Chirau Ali Mwakwere said everything was above board.

internal disputes

He said the ruling was about internal disputes of shareholders and should not be used as a benchmark.
Ikolomani MP Bonny Khalwale put the minister to task on why RVR was allowed to take over KR before paying the precondition fee of $3 million. Mwakwere said the money was paid 45 days after commencement of operations.

Charles Kilonzo (Yatta, ODM-K) stirred tempers when he said the 29 members sitting in the concessionaire’s board were from one community. "It pains to see what has happened to KR. RVR has been given to one community. When is the Government going to repossess the railway?" he asked.
However, Sports Assistant Minister Kabando wa Kabando and MP Mithika Linturi said it was unfair to link individuals with a community.


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POINTBLANK:

Don’t blame Mwakwere

Published on 01/08/2008


Unimpressed by critics of Transport minister Chirau Ali Mwakwere, Mr Paul Kioko has only one word to describe the actions of those who think they have the right to cast the proverbial first stone at the minister—hypocrisy.
"I have never seen any tout using force or threats to ensure passengers board an overloaded matatu. So, how do you blame Mr Mwakwere when you have willingly boarded a vehicle where you have to "kaa square" (squeeze yourself in)? he asks.
We have created this mess together, he says, and the sooner we all work towards resolving it, the better.