Author: Jared Ombui

  • A policeman killed, 3 injured in militant attack in Pakistan

    A policeman killed, 3 injured in militant attack in Pakistan

    One police officer was killed and three other police officers injured after unidentified militants opened fire on a police vehicle in Pakistan’s northwest Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, police sources said on Sunday.

    The attack occurred in the Bannu district on Saturday evening while the police personnel were conducting routine patrol duties, the sources told Xinhua.

    According to the sources, the militants ambushed the police mobile vehicle, killing one and injuring three others.
    The injured and the body of the cop were shifted to the district headquarters hospital in Bannu.

    The militants also set the police vehicle on fire and fled with three Kalashnikov rifles belonging to the police personnel, the sources added.

    Security forces cordoned off the area and launched a search operation to trace the attackers.
    No group has claimed responsibility for the attack yet.

  • Maduro says he and wife are “well, firm”

    Maduro says he and wife are “well, firm”

    Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro said Saturday in a social media post that he and his wife, Cilia Flores, are “well, firm and calm,” two days after a court hearing in New York, USA.

    In a first-person message posted on his official Telegram and X accounts, Maduro and Flores said that “now more than ever,” it is necessary to “continue consolidating the country’s peace, national unity, reconciliation, forgiveness and reunification among all.”

    “No one should deviate from the path of dialogue, coexistence and respect,” the couple said in the message, their first public statement since their capture in Caracas in January.

    On Jan. 3, U.S. military forces launched a large-scale operation against Venezuela and forcibly seized Maduro and his wife before transporting them to New York.

    On Jan. 5, Maduro made his first court appearance in New York, where he pleaded not guilty to all U.S. charges against him.

    Maduro appeared again before the same court on Thursday, where the judge denied his motion to dismiss the case.

  • Raising Thinkers, Not Test Takers: Parenting for the Age of AI

    Raising Thinkers, Not Test Takers: Parenting for the Age of AI

    The schooling model we inherited was built for the Industrial Age an era of memo pads, typewriters, and predictable careers. But we now live in the Age of Intelligence, where algorithms can memorize, calculate, and reproduce knowledge faster than any human. Yet our children still spend their days cramming definitions for exams that an AI could ace in seconds. It’s no wonder parents are beginning to fear that traditional education is training kids for a world that no longer exists.

    Schools remain fixated on grades, formulas, and report cards the currency of a system that rewards recall over reasoning. But recall no longer matters the way it once did. In 2026, it takes three seconds to ask an AI to explain Pythagoras, translate Latin, or summarize the Cold War. Why then do we still measure brilliance by who can regurgitate the most? The real crisis isn’t that AI will replace people; it’s that we keep teaching our children to behave like machines efficient, programmed, and obedient instead of cultivating what the machines can never truly possess: empathy, creativity, and judgment.

    To prepare children for the future, we must pivot from what they learn to how they learn. The essential curriculum now includes: Critical thinking – evaluating information instead of accepting it;Problem‑solving – learning to ask better questions and design better answers; Adaptability – staying calm and flexible when the world changes again, as it inevitably will; Curiosity and lifelong learning – because reinvention, not repetition, is the new survival skill; Collaboration with AI – using intelligent tools ethically and creatively rather than fearing or abusing them.

    Emerging learning models provide blueprints. Classical education trains the mind to reason and communicate, teaching students how to think, not what to think. Project‑based learning transforms classrooms into studios where learners tackle real problems instead of theoretical worksheets. Unschooling and self‑directed models trust curiosity as the engine of mastery students shape their path, while mentors guide and challenge them. Across these approaches, the goal is the same: independence, resourcefulness, and the joy of creating value rather than only recalling it.

    Of course, transforming national systems takes decades. Parents don’t have that long. AI is moving faster than public policy or standardized curricula. So the responsibility and the opportunity falls partly to us at home. Encourage experimentation. Let children build games, code stories, paint digitally, start micro‑businesses, or dismantle gadgets to see how they work. When curiosity is nurtured, discipline and skill follow naturally.

    The future belongs not to those who memorize answers, but to those who invent the questions no one else thought to ask. Our children will grow up surrounded by machines smarter than any generation before them yet also with the chance to be more human than ever. If we raise thinkers, creators, and resilient learners, they will not compete with AI; they will lead it. So let’s stop preparing kids for yesterday’s tests and start preparing them for tomorrow’s possibilities classrooms without walls, curiosity without limits, and an education that teaches them not what to know, but how to know.

    Dr. Yusuf Muchelule is a Senior Lecturer & a Consultant

  • Air passenger limited to two power banks and no charging in flight

    Air passenger limited to two power banks and no charging in flight

    The International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), headquartered in Montreal, Canada, announced new regulations on Friday, limiting each airline passenger to a maximum of two power banks and prohibiting their recharging during flights.

    According to the new specifications for lithium battery-powered power banks, which take effect immediately, flight crew members will still be permitted to carry and use the power banks in accordance with aircraft operational requirements.
    ICAO said in a news release that its Dangerous Goods Panel provided expert advice to the organization’s standard-setting bodies. Following an assessment, independent technical experts from the ICAO Air Navigation Commission endorsed the recommendations to amend the Technical Instructions for the Safe Transport of Dangerous Goods by Air.

    The recommendations have been approved by the 36-state ICAO Council. An addendum to the technical instructions will be distributed to all 193 ICAO member states, said the organization.

  • Yemen’s Houthi group claims ballistic missile attack on Israel

    Yemen’s Houthi group claims ballistic missile attack on Israel

    Yemen’s Houthi armed forces said on Saturday that they had launched a barrage of ballistic missiles toward southern Israel.

    This marked the group’s first such attack since Israel and the United States started massive attacks on Iran a month ago.

    In a statement, the Houthi group said the operation was launched “in support of the Islamic Republic of Iran and the resistance fronts in Lebanon, Iraq, and Palestine.”

    A few hours ago, the Israel Defense Forces announced that the Israeli air defense systems successfully intercepted a missile fired from Yemen toward Israel.

    The launch from Yemen set off air defense sirens in large areas of southern Israel, sending thousands rushing to shelters, with no casualties reported.

    On Friday night, Yemen’s Houthi group warned it may intervene militarily if regional tensions keep escalating, especially if the Red Sea is used for operations against Iran.

    Houthi military spokesperson Yahya Sarea said the group is prepared to respond if additional forces join the U.S. and Israeli forces.

    On Thursday, Abdul-Malik al-Houthi, leader of the group, said his group stands ready to take military action if developments in the Middle East conflict warrant it, while reiterating strong ties with Iran.

  • Russian scientists develop robotic platform to unlock Arctic secrets

    Russian scientists develop robotic platform to unlock Arctic secrets

    Russian scientists have developed and deployed an advanced underwater robotic system, Smart Fish, to carry out high-efficiency hydrological research in the Arctic and the Far East, local media reported on Saturday.

    Smart Fish is a towed robotic platform equipped with a sealed compartment for scientific instruments, control surfaces, and specialized fairings. While being pulled by a vessel, it collects real-time hydrological data from the seabed and transmits it to operators on board.

    University officials said the system’s efficiency far surpasses traditional methods. In a 12-hour operational window, the robot can perform around 500,000 measurements, compared with roughly 60 using conventional oceanographic techniques.

    Beyond Arctic exploration, the robot has also been used for environmental monitoring near the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in the Pacific Ocean and to study king crab migrations in the Sea of Japan. Developers are now integrating machine vision and neural networks to automatically identify and count marine species.

  • Five crushed to death by train in Bangladesh

    Five crushed to death by train in Bangladesh

    Five people were crushed to death under the wheels of a train in Bangladesh’s Tangail district, some 97 km away from the capital Dhaka, on Friday night, a local police official said Saturday.

    Two others were seriously injured, said Mizanur Rahman, sub-inspector of Tangail Railway Station outpost.

    According to the official, the accident occurred around 8:30 p.m. local time on Friday when a Dhaka-bound bus ran out of fuel and stopped by the roadside.

    The driver and helper left to arrange fuel, leaving passengers waiting. Some passengers got off the bus and sat or walked along the nearby railway tracks and then a train coming from Dhaka ran over them, he said.

  • Blinking Cursor at 2 A.M.: Why Your PhD Is Closer Than You Think

    Blinking Cursor at 2 A.M.: Why Your PhD Is Closer Than You Think

    To every PhD student frozen in front of a blinking cursor at 2 a.m., hear this clearly: the problem is not you; it’s the story you’re telling yourself about what a PhD is.

    You’ve been sold the myth that your thesis must be a life defining masterpiece. It isn’t. A PhD is not your magnum opus; it is a proof of competence. It says, “I can design, execute, and write up a piece of original research without falling apart.” That’s it. The Nobel speeches, the field shaping books, the grand theories can come later. The people who finish are not the smartest in the room; they’re the ones who stop aiming for perfect and aim relentlessly for finished.

    The way you get there isn’t with heroic eight hour writing binges. It’s with boring, almost embarrassingly small sessions. Twenty five minutes a day. Non negotiable. You don’t wait for mood, alignment of the stars, or the mystical “writing zone.” You sit down, set a timer, and move the document forward by even a few untidy paragraphs. Do that daily and six weeks from now you’re not “behind”; you’re holding a full chapter. Momentum is built, not granted.

    Help yourself by separating thinking from writing. Right now you’re trying to design the perfect argument, read three more papers, and craft the elegant sentence all at once. No wonder you feel paralysed. Have messy thinking days: mind maps, bullet lists, scribbles in notebooks. Then have output days where you simply turn those messy notes into ugly prose. Thinking is for generating; writing is for laying bricks. Don’t ask your brain to do both jobs at the same time.

    And yes, stop hiding in the literature. There comes a point when “I just need to read a bit more” is no longer scholarship; it’s sophisticated procrastination. If you’ve already read enough to drown in, you have enough to write. The gap now is not knowledge, it’s courage.

    When everything feels pointless and you’re convinced your project is trash, you’ve hit the infamous “valley of confusion.” That’s not a sign you’re failing; it’s the landmark that says you’re in the middle. The only people who never walk through that valley are the ones who quietly exit the trail.

    So don’t walk it alone. Isolation, not ignorance, is what drains most doctoral journeys. Find one person who has finished someone who can show you that what feels impossible is, in fact, ordinary in hindsight.

    In the end, the magic is painfully simple: name the chapter, open the file, write one bad sentence. That’s the doorway. Walk through it often enough and one day, almost by accident, your “not good enough” pages will stack into a thesis that is good enough to pass.

    You are closer than you think. Keep going.

    Dr. Yusuf Muchelule is a Senior Lecturer & a Consultant

  • Health Security: Why Kenya Must Invest in Science, Innovation and Equity

    Health Security: Why Kenya Must Invest in Science, Innovation and Equity

    Picture this: A disease outbreak is reported in a city located in a country in East Asia. A month later, the whole world is in panic because the disease is spreading rapidly and causing many deaths. Three months later, the disease is detected in Kenya. A raft of measures follows, leading to empty classrooms, slow markets, closed places of worship, paralyzed tourism, shortages of medical supplies, and loss of life and livelihoods.

    This is the story of COVID-19. It is also a replica of what happens when any infectious disease is not prevented, detected and controlled early and effectively. It could be any disease: Cholera, anthrax, Ebola virus disease, kala-azar… name it. A health shock quickly becomes an economic, social, and national security shock.

    Historically, discussions on health have been mostly reserved for healthcare workers and leaders in the health sector. Despite these popular and critical discussions, as a country, we haven’t fully conceptualized the linkage between health and security. Recent disease outbreaks and pandemics like COVID-19 highlight the need to view health through a different lens. The conversations must now move from the margins to the centre of national development.

    According to the World Health Organization (WHO), health security refers to the proactive and reactive activities necessary to minimize the risk and impact of events that rapidly threaten people’s health. These events typically traverse community, regional and international boundaries, and include disease outbreaks, pandemics and disasters, which always lead to health challenges.

    This conversation on health security is about the country’s ability to detect danger early, act decisively, protect lives and preserve productivity. In a world shaped by climate change, rapid urbanisation, population mobility and evolving pathogens, health security has become inseparable from economic resilience and national stability. Kenya must respond to that reality with urgency.

    This is the inspiration behind the establishment of the Kenya National Public Health Institute (KNPHI): whose mandate revolves around the coordination of the prevention, surveillance, detection, control and elimination of public health threats. It is also tasked with ensuring that evidence from routine data, research, and interventions informs policy and advances universal health coverage. Modern health threats demand an institution built for coordination, evidence and action.

    Institutions alone are not enough. Kenya still faces persistent gaps between evidence, policy and frontline implementation. Sectors usually work in silos. Useful research does not make its way to the decision-making table. Vulnerable communities remain exposed because systems are uneven across geographical areas and income levels. To protect the country, we must create stronger platforms where stakeholders can think, plan, and act together.

    Science strengthens surveillance, sharpens diagnostics, improves forecasting and helps decision-makers act before small signals become national emergencies. It allows Kenya to understand disease patterns, identify risk hotspots, evaluate interventions and invest in what works. It also helps the country move away from reactive firefighting towards prevention, preparedness and smarter public spending. Science, when respected and properly funded, is an investment in national development.

    Innovation matters just as much. Kenya has an opportunity to lead in the use of digital health tools, data platforms, genomics, artificial intelligence, public health intelligence systems and smarter laboratory networks. These tools can shorten the time between outbreak detection and response, improve coordination across counties, support border health and strengthen emergency operations. But innovation must be practical, locally relevant and tied to public value. Technology must improve access, trust, timeliness and accountability.

    Equity is the third pillar, and perhaps the most important. A health security system is only as strong as its reach into arid counties, informal settlements, border points, pastoralist communities and underserved urban populations. If rural, poor or marginalised communities are the last to receive information, testing, treatment or protection, then the whole country remains vulnerable. Kenya cannot claim preparedness if safety is reserved for those closest to services, power and infrastructure.

    The Kenya Health Security Convention 2026 is scheduled for 5th to 8th May 2026 in Mombasa under the theme “Advancing Health Security through Science, Innovation and Equity.” The convention is designed to bring together all stakeholders for a practical, solutions-focused dialogue.

    This convention is a national platform for aligning science with policy, counties with national systems, and innovation with equity. It will support universal health coverage, strengthen primary health care, improve resilience and advance broader national goals. A country that invests in health security also invests in productivity, investor confidence, educational continuity and social cohesion.

    The call before us is therefore clear. All stakeholders in public health should rally behind the Kenya Health Security Convention (KHSC 2026). Your ideas, participation, research, funding, political backing and institutional commitment will make this platform count. If we truly want a safer, fairer and more resilient nation, then let us support the KHSC 2026 as a shared national cause.


    Dr. Kamene Kimenye is a Kenyan physician and medical administrator. She has a Master’s in Public Health and a diploma in TB control and Epidemiology. She currently serves as the Acting Director General of the Kenya National Public Health Institute.

  • BlockHouse Kenya – Turning Affordable Housing into a Trustless, Paperless Reality

    BlockHouse Kenya – Turning Affordable Housing into a Trustless, Paperless Reality

    Kenya’s Affordable Housing Programme promises hundreds of thousands of new homes. Yet for many ordinary Kenyans, the biggest fear is not whether the walls will be built, but whether they will ever truly own what they pay for. Lost files, duplicate titles and opaque allocation processes have long undermined trust in public housing schemes.

    BlockHouse Kenya systems by Edison Mwendwa from Umma University enhances affordable housing story by moving the heart of the programme from metal filing cabinets to a tamper proof blockchain ledger.

    In this model, every house delivered under the Affordable Housing Programme is “minted” as a unique Non Fungible Token (NFT) –a digital title deed that cannot be forged, altered or quietly reassigned. When a unit changes hands, a smart contract automatically transfers the NFT to the buyer’s wallet, creating an indelible trail of ownership that no middleman can doctor.

    The platform mirrors Kenya’s housing governance structure. A national Super Admin on-boards regional admins, who in turn register verified beneficiaries and their units. Property owners then see their homes in a simple web dashboard, not as confusing plot numbers but as clear digital assets, each with metadata on location, valuation and status. With a click, an owner can list a house for sale or transfer it to a family member; the blockchain backend quietly handles the complexity.

    Fueling this ecosystem is HouseCoin, an ERC 20 digital token pegged to the Kenyan shilling. Registration fees, listing charges and purchase payments all happen in HouseCoin, which means every shilling’s journey from allocation to final ownership is traceable on chain. Early adopters, such as county admins and verified owners, can even be rewarded with bonus tokens for championing the system, turning transparency into an incentive rather than a burden.

    The implications for Kenya’s affordable housing are profound. First, fraud becomes dramatically harder: you cannot secretly “sell” the same NFT backed house to two different buyers. Second, transaction times collapse from months of paperwork to seconds of smart contract execution. Third, auditors, communities and oversight bodies gain a shared, real time view of allocations and transfers, cutting space for corruption and speculation.

    BlockHouse Kenya also opens doors for innovation beyond mere allocation. By integrating with the National Land Registry, NFTs could become the single source of truth for both land and structure. Mobile apps would allow informal settlement residents and rural beneficiaries to manage assets from basic smartphones. AI driven valuation and blockchain based micro mortgages could unlock new financing models for low income buyers.

    If implemented at scale, blockchain will not just digitize Kenya’s housing programme; it will rewrite its social contract. Instead of asking citizens to trust opaque systems, BlockHouse Kenya lets the code itself become the referee ensuring that every affordable house is not only built, but indisputably, transparent, verifiably and permanently owned by the Kenyan who worked for it through BETA pillars.