Posted by jerrynguwa on March 19, 2008
Picture this: “It is Sunday afternoon and you are relaxing with a friend in your fenced compound, than you decide to visit your backyard and check on growing vegetables. The thing you expect the least is human presence but that what happens when you reach the side corner of the house towards the garden. Shocked? You have not seen it all; the man is accompanied by two other well built fellows and a couple of dogs. Not forgetting that their carrying machetes. The men instruct the dogs to attack you and your buddy. Swiftly you draw your licensed pistol and shoot the dogs and ask your assailants to surrender, none pays attention. In their attempt to flee your shoot one in the buttocks to immobilize him so that you could get enough information on the cartel that always loot your poultry. They guy you shot is bleeding profusely. You then decide to take him to hospital with your own health cover card. You also call the police to investigate and take fresh evidence on the ground. The man taken to hospital dies of a hemorrhage. What you thought was legitimate defense turns to be a murder case and you are the first suspect. The whole world comes down to your city; the entire media community has your story running as headline. You are a murderer; you have killed someone who was to kill you if given a chance and all these inside your fenced compound.”
This is what happened to one TOM CHOLMOMDELEY a descendant of Lord Delamere(one of the first British to set foot in Kenya and invest. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_Cholmondeley,_3rd_Baron_Delamere ). For Tom events happened in his expensive Soysambu Ranch in presence of his friend a Kenyan rally champion Carl TUNDO.
Yesterday I had a heated debate with some of my colleagues on the issue after a daily paper published a photo showing a poacher with game meat from the ranch surrounded by Kenya Wildlife Service officers. The guy that Tom shot was first a Kenyan but also a poacher who lived his public life as stone man Robert Njoya 37. That day was the 10th May 2006 at his Soysambu Ranch.
The debate was on how the case has been handled. I’m personnaly disappointed with the way the Kenyan system is comporting itself. Worst, other poachers came even to testify in court after they asked protection. As an intellectual, Christian and also human, I ask the Kenyan government to release TOM with immediate effect. On of my buddy yesterday went ahead and said that Robert Njoya is a Kenyan and no foreigner should kill a Kenyan for whatsoever reason. I almost fainted when I heard such hypotheses.
Where are our brains? Is it a sin to be a foreigner? Is it normal for a bandit to strike and kill me in my house and not me immobilizing in my premises? What is the judicial system trying to prove to us? Is this case going beyond the events that occurred in the Delamere Ranch? I’m sure that time will tell us.
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Posted by jerrynguwa on February 4, 2008
Jerry Nguwa
After what we have witnessed during this post election period in Kenya, I think THE MEDIA MUST ALSO BE HELD RESPONSIBLE FOR THE CHAOS IN KENYA
I am not a big name in the media world, I have never been hired as an editor in a big media house and I have never won any award in the media field. But I believe that I have the capability of telling when a media house is bias because of its house policy or a ownership factor that makes it become a rota agency.
Sometimes back toward the end of the year 2007, I was one among the short listed applicant retained for the position of media expert assistant with the European Union’s Election Observation mission EU/EOM in Kenya. I can recall that on the 15th of November at 10h30’ I presented myself for a test to the International Organisation for Migration head office – IOM- where EU/EOM was operating. I presume you are wondering why I have to write about all this.
The reason why I’m writing this is because among the three test questions asked to me, two were clearly foreseen the current situation here in Kenya. I wish I could remember the exact formulation of the questions and the exposé I did. Unfortunately I can’t. I only remember that one of the questions was to talk on the fairness of news reporting in Kenya and the second was about the clashes in kuresoi.
As I mentioned earlier, I am just an unidentified small fish in the media ocean but I can judge the media and particularly in Kenya where I am based. As you know, the media is a helpful tool and also a dangerous one if not well managed. Many can remember the destruction power of the media that lit the flame of hatred in Rwanda in 1994.
Back to Kenya, after what I observed during the campaign season and the post elections period, I can allow myself to say that all media houses are bias. This sounds better than ROTA agencies (formal or informal). I’m afraid that the laying down of my arguments won’t be possible in this column but I am ready to prove it to whoever would doubt. Putting all media houses in one box seems a bit rude, but what would you say of a television presenter clearly showing his/her sides on live transmission? Did he/she jump the house policy and went ahead for more than 48 hours. What about historical televisions series and political actor’s biographies that went ahead and dug up some old issues. Even foreign broadcasters received in Kenya were trying to influence voter’s preferences a few days before the election exercise.
Now that the situation is becoming untenable, so many things are happening. The media is broadcasting advertorial peace messages and gospel lyrics to calm down the citizen spirit. News anchor are reciting peace appeals, church leaders are investing themselves thoroughly in attempts to bring Kenyans to reason.
Honestly, I see nothing wrong with all these initiatives that deserve praises but where were all these good ideas when the fire was being lit? One should know that after you have set your house into fire, trying or putting it off does not restore your house to the original state. The same should apply to the Kenyan situation where several people have lost their lives and properties.
I think that apart of blaming politician about the current chaos, and complain about the roughness with which we were ousted out of the KICC(Kenya International Conference Centre) where the ECK(Electoral Commission of Kenya)media centre was, the Kenyan media community should accept it’s part of responsibility and blame so that it focuses to the future in dignity.
I might be wrong in my judgment, I think sometimes but just looking at a large growing number of listener tuned to foreign broadcasters gives me confidence.
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Posted by jerrynguwa on February 4, 2008
Kenya: Creation of new countries?

In this column, I once said that politicians are not enemies, they only differ in their opinions. I also wrote about ethnic hatred in Kenya and the following days I was congratulated with insulting mails and abusive telephone messages. If I was wrong, where are we now?
In school I used to be the darling of about half of the students in my class. This was influenced by my proficiency in subjects like Latin, philosophy, geography and history and of course general knowledge. The latter made me famous because I could answer any question about African countries and their president even when taking a nap.
Nowadays, I think I’m the dumbest ever of my generation. I don’t know how many countries are in Africa. I no longer know presidents names the way I used to.
This doesn’t mean that I am losing my mind or regressing. Lack of update for my memory is the main problem. But how am I supposed to do it when countries are created every now and then and presidents thrown out on a daily basis? On top of these all, when I learn that some guys have declared their compound a country, economical giants of this world are divided. Some recognize it and others not. So I decided not to bother myself anymore.
With the current situation in Kenya, I foresee eight newly created African countries unless something is done. I might look foolish, heartless, cruel etc. but that the sad truth. When former Kenyan president Daniel Toroitich Arap Moi stepped down with no blood pouring in 2002, I said this is an example to follow. When Professor Wangari Maathai received the Nobel peace prize in 2004, I called Kenya the pride of the region. Then 2007 came, we saw what we saw, we heard what we heard and it is not going to stop there today. It is with us till we change business.
The reason why I say that ethnic hatred is here to stay is not that I’m enjoying the current situation in Kenya. But because I say openly what people want and do not want to say. Many would think that General elections were the cause to the current situation. Believe me you are dead wrong. Petrol was already poured on Kenya, only fire remained to be put. Unfortunately a passer by littered a cigarette’s filter (elections) that had fire.
I’m not a Kenyan but I live and work in Kenya, I understand the Kenyan society and I have seen these elections outcome coming with or without elections. I heard and overheard hatred speeches and conversation, I witnessed thorough discrimination. This is the reason why I am saying that Kenya is heading to balkanization if nothing is done. It was ironical to see politicians who are the cause to all of these, shaking hands, hugging and laughing together on the opening day of parliament.
The Kenyan constitution says that for a candidate to be declared winner to the presidential race, one needs to get at least 25 percent of votes in the eight provinces. I believe that it is an act of Kenyan unity. But now that Kenyan opted to be voting only for theirs, what will happen to that constitutional recommendation? Kenyans, why do you want to throw your civility out the window for politician’s selfish interests? If you decide to vote all your ethnic men what is it going to happen? Who will ever lead Kenyans?
If none of the presidential candidate manages to gain votes from other regions, who will rule who? That were Kenya will give change its stability to eight unstable enemy countries in one region. To avoid this to happen, you should know that you don’t elect people for them to serve only you (province) but the all country.
Kenyans, you are great farmers and I would ask you to continue with that noble business but this time round, I ask you to cultivate LOVE, PEACE and UNITY for a better tomorrow.
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Posted by jerrynguwa on February 4, 2008
Kenya exiles’ fate during post-election chaos

KENYA: EXILED FATE’S ON THE POST ELECTIONS CHAOS
It is 6 am, I’m driving to the UNHCR offices in Westlands Nairobi. The weather is very called despite the fact that it is January. The reason why I am out at this right moment is because I want to witness what I have been told. Amid reception of rumors saying that exiled people in Kenya are among victims, I have never taken it seriously till I came face to face with Mama Tantine.
Mama Tantine is a refugee from the Democratic Republic of Congo, when hell broke loose in the eastern part of the DRC; she sought refuge in Rwanda where she spent more than 6 years. Having not yet felt secure in Rwanda, she decided to move to Kenya, the place that used to be called “The most stable Country in Africa” by then.
Mama Tantine is mother to seven, the eldest son is hospitalized for quiet a while in a Nairobi public hospital, the second born is a lady(Tantine) that has just given birth, the rest are under 15 years, her husband a former Congolese military officer has already left to our ancestral lands.
She used to live in an area called Kangemi – GICHAGI (a kikuyu name that means village). Since she can’t or simply, she is not allowed to work in Kenya, Mama Tantine lives with her family in a house that the UNHCR pays sometimes if Great lake solidarities group do not do so. Gichagi is the only place the woman can afford to live.
But yesterday something happened, local vigilantes groups turned militia asked everybody who is not theirs to leave the area in 12 hours. Regardless of your nationality of course! Those with relatives outside the area did not hesitate to leave the place so did mama Tantine and her family. But the only relative that Mama Tantine has is the UNHCR and this relative does not have houses to accommodate her. The woman in her forties and her grandchild who is just two months old spent the chilly night of Nairobi at the UNHCR’s gate.
When I met Mama Tantine, tears came out of my eyes but I was not crying. I still tell to myself that it was just the effect of the wind in the morning. On return from running my daily errands, I managed to steal some fifteen minutes from my schedule to see her. She was busy cooking super for her family and she got a neighbor of Somali origins who seems not to like the presence of a voice recorder.
I have just realized that the little things that we take for granted are blessings as I read in today’s paper. Please visit these people at the UNHCR’s gate.
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Posted by jerrynguwa on January 29, 2008
On the 26th December 2007, Kenyans went to cast their votes in large numbers for the sake of bringing a change to their lifestyles. Last year general elections were the most important that Kenyans have witnessed from their accession to independence. Apart of what have just been said, we would also add that the turnout to last year elections was the most important ever.
It is important to say that the world has significantly changed compared to 1992 when the first elections were held after introduction of multiparty. One of the sectors that top the list is the communication sector. Well constructed roads, availability of air transport at a fair price, introduction of mobile communication and high speed internet etc. All of these have played a major role to boost the number of voters. Nevertheless, the print and electronic media have also made the last general elections what it is.
Elected to power or not, politicians must be grateful to the media for the coverage given to them. It revolts to hear politicians showing lack of respect towards the media with disobliging statement that the media will broadcast and publish.
Back to the Kenyan political scene; during the campaign period both the opposition and the government were reproaching certain media outlets of being bias towards them in front of media personnel who took the statements to newsroom and later published.
I do not really care about who has risen to power. I only have issues with those abusing the media.
On the same note, the TAITA (in the Coast region) super District Commissioner in the name of His Excellency, Eminence, Honorable KANG’ETHE THUKU went on to exercise one of duty by evicting one of our colleagues RENSON MNYAMWEZI of the Standard Group (second largest distributing daily) from a district development committee meeting on allegation that the journalist’s paper has always been biased against the government since it came to power in 2003. He allegedly said: “We cannot allow you in this meeting since your coverage is biased against the government. I can not allow one against the government to sit in a meeting that I am chairing”. WAO!! WHAT A SUPER MAN? Why at the first place do you invite the media to your meetings? I do not care about the house policies of media houses in Kenya. Because we can’t force people to believe in what we think is right. Informing people is a very expensive enterprise that requires very good business skills to run and also information need to be balanced. We can’t all be leaning on one side for the sake of satisfying people like KANG’ETHE. This incident comes barely two weeks after His Excellency, Eminence, Honorable D.C KANG’ETHE ordered immediate arrest of the same MNYAMWEZI that He accuses of having written a story that allegedly fuel ethnicity animosity in his district. Thanks God his attempt failed because he could not produce evidence.
If nothing is done at this right moment, we are going to witness the worst abuses of the media history here in Kenya. Because an era of abusing journalists has started and any sane person can see that it is only one of the many Errors that politicians make.
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Posted by jerrynguwa on January 29, 2008
On the 26th December 2007, Kenyans went to cast their votes in large numbers for the sake of bringing a change to their lifestyles. Last year general elections were the most important that Kenyans have witnessed from their accession to independence. Apart of what have just been said, we would also add that the turnout to last year elections was the most important ever.
It is important to say that the world has significantly changed compared to 1992 when the first elections were held after introduction of multiparty. One of the sectors that top the list is the communication sector. Well constructed roads, availability of air transport at a fair price, introduction of mobile communication and high speed internet etc. All of these have played a major role to boost the number of voters. Nevertheless, the print and electronic media have also made the last general elections what it is.
Elected to power or not, politicians must be grateful to the media for the coverage given to them. It revolts to hear politicians showing lack of respect towards the media with disobliging statement that the media will broadcast and publish.
Back to the Kenyan political scene; during the campaign period both the opposition and the government were reproaching certain media outlets of being bias towards them in front of media personnel who took the statements to newsroom and later published.
I do not really care about who has risen to power. I only have issues with those abusing the media.
On the same note, the TAITA (in the Coast region) super District Commissioner in the name of His Excellency, Eminence, Honorable KANG’ETHE THUKU went on to exercise one of duty by evicting one of our colleagues RENSON MNYAMWEZI of the Standard Group (second largest distributing daily) from a district development committee meeting on allegation that the journalist’s paper has always been biased against the government since it came to power in 2003. He allegedly said: “We cannot allow you in this meeting since your coverage is biased against the government. I can not allow one against the government to sit in a meeting that I am chairing”. WAO!! WHAT A SUPER MAN? Why at the first place do you invite the media to your meetings? I do not care about the house policies of media houses in Kenya. Because we can’t force people to believe in what we think is right. Informing people is a very expensive enterprise that requires very good business skills to run and also information need to be balanced. We can’t all be leaning on one side for the sake of satisfying people like KANG’ETHE. This incident comes barely two weeks after His Excellency, Eminence, Honorable D.C KANG’ETHE ordered immediate arrest of the same MNYAMWEZI that He accuses of having written a story that allegedly fuel ethnicity animosity in his district. Thanks God his attempt failed because he could not produce evidence.
If nothing is done at this right moment, we are going to witness the worst abuses of the media history here in Kenya. Because an era of abusing journalists has started and any sane person can see that it is only one of the many Errors that politicians make.
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a Comment »
Posted by jerrynguwa on January 25, 2008
Posted on africanews Tuesday 15 January 2008 – 16:51
Jerry Nguwa
After what we have witnessed during this post election period in Kenya, I think THE MEDIA MUST ALSO BE HELD RESPONSIBLE FOR THE CHAOS IN KENYA
I am not a big name in the media world, I have never been hired as an editor in a big media house and I have never won any award in the media field. But I believe that I have the capability of telling when a media house is bias because of its house policy or a ownership factor that makes it become a rota agency.
Sometimes back toward the end of the year 2007, I was one among the short listed applicant retained for the position of media expert assistant with the European Union’s Election Observation mission EU/EOM in Kenya. I can recall that on the 15th of November at 10h30’ I presented myself for a test to the International Organisation for Migration head office – IOM- where EU/EOM was operating. I presume you are wondering why I have to write about all this.
The reason why I’m writing this is because among the three test questions asked to me, two were clearly foreseen the current situation here in Kenya. I wish I could remember the exact formulation of the questions and the exposé I did. Unfortunately I can’t. I only remember that one of the questions was to talk on the fairness of news reporting in Kenya and the second was about the clashes in kuresoi.
As I mentioned earlier, I am just an unidentified small fish in the media ocean but I can judge the media and particularly in Kenya where I am based. As you know, the media is a helpful tool and also a dangerous one if not well managed. Many can remember the destruction power of the media that lit the flame of hatred in Rwanda in 1994.
Back to Kenya, after what I observed during the campaign season and the post elections period, I can allow myself to say that all media houses are bias. This sounds better than ROTA agencies (formal or informal). I’m afraid that the laying down of my arguments won’t be possible in this column but I am ready to prove it to whoever would doubt. Putting all media houses in one box seems a bit rude, but what would you say of a television presenter clearly showing his/her sides on live transmission? Did he/she jump the house policy and went ahead for more than 48 hours. What about historical televisions series and political actor’s biographies that went ahead and dug up some old issues. Even foreign broadcasters received in Kenya were trying to influence voter’s preferences a few days before the election exercise.
Now that the situation is becoming untenable, so many things are happening. The media is broadcasting advertorial peace messages and gospel lyrics to calm down the citizen spirit. News anchor are reciting peace appeals, church leaders are investing themselves thoroughly in attempts to bring Kenyans to reason.
Honestly, I see nothing wrong with all these initiatives that deserve praises but where were all these good ideas when the fire was being lit? One should know that after you have set your house into fire, trying or putting it off does not restore your house to the original state. The same should apply to the Kenyan situation where several people have lost their lives and properties.
I think that apart of blaming politician about the current chaos, and complain about the roughness with which we were ousted out of the KICC(Kenya International Conference Centre) where the ECK(Electoral Commission of Kenya)media centre was, the Kenyan media community should accept it’s part of responsibility and blame so that it focuses to the future in dignity.
I might be wrong in my judgment, I think sometimes but just looking at a large growing number of listener tuned to foreign broadcasters gives me confidence.
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a Comment »
Posted by jerrynguwa on January 23, 2008
Many of those interested in the Sudan crisis have diverted their attention from the happenings in the Darfur region to the arrest of Gillian Gibbons. Gillian Gibbons 54 a British national from Liverpool who went to teach natural science to children of an English school in Sudan. Some months back, Gillian asked her pupils to find a name for a teddy bear that every student had to carry home and write a short story about the experience shared with the teddy bear. Having dealt with kids she knows better than anyone in this world that to impose a denomination for something that a kid cherishes is not always the best way to go. That is the reason she asked her class of 23 aged between 6 and 7 years to vote for a name they could adopt. Twenty (23) out of 23 opted Mohammad as their favorite name and it was given to the famous teddy bear. When children started going randomly with the bear home many parents did not like the name given to the teddy bear. That is where everything started.
Omar el Bashir is under pressure from the international community that is asking him to solve problems with the South and allow the hybrid peacekeeping force in the darfur region. He first started by allowing his close ally China to bring in an engineering contingent that is preparing the ground for the rest by building roads, wells etc. His intention was to create a scandal that will delay the deployment because China cannot be the ally of the oppressor and the advocates of the oppressed. His attempt did not receive much attention as planned so he chose to play a game with British who are close ally of the United States of America. Unfortunately Gillian happened to be the victim. The kids chose the name Mohammad for the appreciation they have for the prophet. Why can’t we take it that way?
I have a lot of respect for Muslims and their religion but I think it is tolerable to have teddy bear named Mohammed by innocents kids than a grown up called Mohamed who sniffs glue, masturbate himself, steals and abuses, takes hard drugs etc. Muslims should understand that this is an other El Bashir trick to continue with atrocities in Sudan. If you think I’m wrong why is he calling a Bin Laden close ally to appear as an expert witness?
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Posted by jerrynguwa on January 23, 2008
You have probably read or heard about my litteratures work. Many of you(my readers) have also complained alot on the lack of my own blog where everything that have written and haven’t sold to anyone can be published. Your requests have not fallen on deaf ears, that is why I have decided to start this blog for the sake of honoring you.
This blog means a lot to me. I want it to become a plateform that brings together citizens from all over the world. Because not only we will be publishing political articles but all also everything that happen in our social lifes, so watch this space.
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