Author: Nicholas Kigondu

  • ATMIS medical officers undergo training on medical logistics in conflict environment

    ATMIS medical officers undergo training on medical logistics in conflict environment

    Thirteen Medical officers from the African Union Transition Mission in Somalia (ATMIS) have completed a three-day training focused on providing effective medical support in conflict zones.

    The training, backed by the United Kingdom Mission Support Team (UK-MST), aimed to equip officers with skills in planning and ensuring a sufficient supply of essential medicine and equipment during military operations and handling battlefield casualties.

    ATMIS Force Medical Officer Lt. Col. Dr. Joseph Gwande emphasized the importance of the training in enhancing medical planning and logistics within ATMIS’ tactical area of responsibility. The training, targeting newly deployed medical officers, is part of ATMIS’ efforts to decentralise services for efficient delivery in its operational areas.

    As ATMIS prepares for phase two of its Concept of Operations (CONOPS), which anticipates increased mobility and casualties, Lt. Col. Dr. Gwande stressed the need for proactive medical professionals to manage logistics effectively.

    “Medical logistics and pharmacy are extremely critical for the morale of our troops. Youplay a very pivotal role in ATMIS as it strives to achieve its mandate,” said the ATMIS Force Medical Officer during the closing ceremony on Thursday.

    Participants expressed gratitude to ATMIS for organising the training, recognising its potential to improve medical services within the mission’s areas.

    Warrant Officer Two Stephen Lodengo highlighted the training’s impact on casualty planning and rationing, while Sergeant Stephen Sifuna appreciated its timeliness and significance in advancing the mission’s objectives.

    “I will now ensure that at my point of service delivery, I have the right equipment,

    essential supplies available at the right time so that I can provide quality service to our personnel, and reduce complications and delays in the facility,” said Sifuna, a

    nurse at Level Two Hospital in Dhobley.

     

  • Two dead, eight injured in Busia road accident

    Two dead, eight injured in Busia road accident

    Two people lost their lives while eight others were injured, Friday afternoon, following a grisly road accident involving a bus and a trailer.

    The accident happened at Mundika area in Busia County after the Mombasa-bound bus, christened Tahmeed, collided head on with the trailer which was headed in the opposite direction.

    The accident involved a Tahmeed bus enroute to Mombasa and a trailer heading to Uganda.
    Photo by Selyne Wamala

    The dead included the driver of the trailer and his co-driver.

    The accident happened at Mundika area in Busia.
    Photo by Selyne Wamala

    The bus had picked the passengers in Busia with the rest set to be picked from different terminuses on its way to its destination.

    Emergency teams responded to the incident promptly with their efforts hampered by strong flames that were consuming the ill-fated bus that exploded on impact.

    Rescue teams received accolades for their quick response to save lives.
    Photo by Selyne Wamala

    Busia county secretary Oscar Juma commended the rescue team for their quick response to save lives.

    Confirming the incident, Busia County referral hospital acting medical superintendent Dr.Emmah Namulala said the eight survivors received from the accident scene are now stable.

               

  • Song steps down as Cameroon head coach

    Song steps down as Cameroon head coach

    Rigobert Song has left his job as Cameroon head coach.

    On Wednesday, Cameroonian football federation [Fecafoot] President Samuel Eto’o made the announcement of the decision to part ways with Song, a move which was further confirmed by a letter from the Ministry of Sports – dated February 28th – which indicated the non-renewal of his contract.

    Song, who was Eto’o’s former international team-mate, was appointed as Cameroon boss in February 2022, helping the Indomitable Lions to a dramatic play-off victory over Algeria in extra time to qualify for the Qatar World Cup.

    Cameroon would get dumped out of the competition in the group stage, despite a surprise victory over Brazil in their final game.

    The Indomitable Lions would qualify for the Africa Cup of Nations, but would be bundled out by eventual runners-up Nigeria in the last 16.

    The former Liverpool and West Ham defender won 6 out of the 23 games that he managed for the national side.

    Fecafoot are yet to decide on Song’s successor, a decision that has solely been handed to President Paul Biya, after reports emerged that Etoo had been meddling in the affairs of the national team such as tactics and selection.

    The former Barcelona, Inter Milan and Chelsea striker will not have a hand in the successor’s selection, and has come under fire since the Indomitable Lion’s poor performance at the AFCON tournament where the team narrowly survived exit in the group stages only to be knocked out in the next phase.

     

     

     

  • One arrested as police intensify hunt for criminals targeting motorists

    One arrested as police intensify hunt for criminals targeting motorists

    Police in Nakuru are holding one suspect in connection with a spate of robberies targeting motorists in the region and its environs.

    DCI detectives supported by officers from the crime research and intelligence bureau and operation action team nabbed Joseph Ndung’u Waweru in Kiamunyeki area following intelligence leads.

    The suspect is said to be part of a five man gang that attacked Ms Nelly Cherop Kosgei on Valentine’s Day in neighboring Naivasha. The gang members are said to have accosted their victim at her house and held her hostage from 9PM to 2 am.

    According to a police report at the Naivasha police station, the victim was at her house with her two children and the house help, when five men, four of whom were dressed in jungle uniforms, stormed into the house while armed with crude weapons.

    After subduing the family with threats to kill if they raised alarm, they ransacked the house for valuables before disappearing with two TV sets, two laptops, a JBL sound bar and four mobile phones. The gang then loaded the valuables in the complainant’s motor vehicle and sped off.

    According to police, Waweru was arrested in possession of the vehicle stolen from Cherop fitted with fake registration plates.

    Also recovered from the suspect were six sim cards, a pair of jungle green trousers, pliers, 14 steel tyre nuts, aerosol paint spray, a brown folded carton for carrying extra car registration plates and foreign currencies of different denominations.

     

     

  • Under 20 rugby coach Bawichre announces 64-man squad for Barthes cup

    Under 20 rugby coach Bawichre announces 64-man squad for Barthes cup

    National rugby under 20 coach Simon Jawichre has named his provisional 64-man squad to spearhead the 2024 Barthes Cup in Harare, Zimbabwe from April 20th – 28th.

    The criterion of selection was taken into account during the trials held by the Kenya 15s Program management at the RFUEA grounds last month.

    14 of the players included in the squad were part of the team last year, 12 featured in both the Barthes U20 tournament and the World Rugby U20 tournament in April and July respectively, while the other two were included in the squad, but failed to make the final cut.

    The team is expected to have three training sessions –one on Sunday and two later in the month- after which the team is expected to be whittled down to 40 squad members.

    Simbas Coach Jerome Paarwater is expected to attend the training sessions, as per the new 15s rugby structure with the hopes of forging a formidable 30-man squad by mid-March.

    His experience will be key in the team’s growth process, with their sights set on Zimbabwe, who on paper are a daunting test to the young side.

     PROVISIONAL SQUAD

    Tight Head Props; Hafidh Mohamed, Darren Oluoch, Mike Muriithi, GeylordNgasi.

    Hookers; Joseph Gitoi, Owen Ayieko, Dennis Ochieng, Brian Shile, SospeterRofino, Jeremy Odhiambo

    Loose Head Props; Erick Juma, Wycliffe Ogutu, Dillan Ouma, Dennis Kisingu, AdenyaNyandusi

    Locks; Leon Onduso, AldrineAndajeAndycoleOmollo, Eugene Etale, Nathan Tsindoli, Edmond Omondi, Eddy Otieno, Hillary Rooney, John Asega, Kelvin Okwanyo

    Backrows; Maxwell Kipsang, BiphonMbaka, Mark Muraya, Willy Tino, Jeremy Namiti, IddoKuta, Justine Lunale.

    Scrumhalves; Patrick Wainaina, RoymarkMuruti, Obed Aberi, Charles Maina, Brian Mwendwa Mike Wamalwa.

     

  • Authorities in Vihiga County intensify crackdown on illicit brews

    Authorities in Vihiga County intensify crackdown on illicit brews

    National government administration officers in Vihiga County have launched an operation targeting illicit brews in the wake of concern over increased uptake of third generation brews in the region.

    County Commissioner Felix Watakila says the government remains committed to eradicating the vice with law enforcement teams relentless in their pursuit of those perpetuating the dangerous trade.

    “We are not a drinking nation, and people cannot wake up and spend the entire day in chang’aa dens as if they have nothing to do.” he asserted,

    Over 2,000 liters of chang’aa, 450 brooms of bhang, 110 rolls of bhang, and 10 kilos of bhang seeds have been recovered during the ongoing operation while 10 cartons of contraband cigarettes have also been destroyed.

    The government will unveil a comprehensive strategy involving multi-agency and multi-stakeholder collaboration aiming to address the menace and prevent the proliferation of illicit substances.

  • One in eight people are now living with obesity

    One in eight people are now living with obesity

    A report authored by medical journal Lancet has revealed that over 1 billion people in the world are now living with obesity.

    The study conducted in 2022, indicate that obesity among adults has more than doubled since 1990, and has quadrupled among children and adolescents (5 to 19 years of age).

    The data also show that 43% of adults were overweight in 2022 with countries recording the highest combined rates of underweight and obesity in 2022 being island nations in the Pacific and the Caribbean and those in the Middle East and North Africa.

    The study also shows that even though the rates of under nutrition have dropped, it is still a public health challenge in many places, particularly in South-East Asia and sub-Saharan Africa.

    Malnutrition, in all its forms, includes under nutrition (wasting, stunting, and underweight), inadequate vitamins or minerals, overweight and obesity. Under nutrition is responsible for half of the deaths of children under 5 and obesity can cause non-communicable diseases such as cardiovascular diseases, diabetes and some cancers.

    “This new study highlights the importance of preventing and managing obesity from early life to adulthood, through diet, physical activity, and adequate care, as needed,” said Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General.

    “Getting back on track to meet the global targets for curbing obesity will take the work of governments and communities, supported by evidence-based policies from WHO and national public health agencies. Importantly, it requires the cooperation of the private sector, which must be accountable for the health impacts of their products”. Added Tedros.

    Obesity is a complex chronic disease with WHO member states adopting the WHO Acceleration plan to stop obesity, which supports country-level action through 2030 at the World Health Assembly in 2022.

    “There are significant challenges in implementing policies aimed at ensuring affordable access to healthy diets for all and creating environments that promote physical activity and overall healthy lifestyles for everyone,” stated Dr Francesco Branca, Director of WHO’s Nutrition and Food Safety Department and one of the co-authors of the study.

    To date, 31 governments are now leading the way to curb the obesity epidemic by implementing the plan whose core interventions include; actions to support healthy practices from day 1, including breastfeeding promotion, protection and support, regulations on the harmful marketing of food and beverages to children, school food and nutrition policies, including initiatives to regulate the sales of products high in fats, sugars and salt in proximity of schools.

    Others are; fiscal and pricing policies to promote healthy diets, nutrition labeling policies, public education and awareness campaigns for healthy diets and exercise, standards for physical activity in schools and integration of obesity prevention and management services into primary health care.

  • Leaders call for scale-up in implementing One Health approach

    Leaders call for scale-up in implementing One Health approach

    Health experts say adopting a One Health approach that recognizes the health of people, offers promising solutions for addressing unprecedented challenges.

    Speaking in Nairobi at the Second Quadripartite Executive Annual Meeting WHO’s Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said the initiative seeks to improve the health of humans, animals, plants, and the environment, while contributing to sustainable development.

    “There is need for sustained political will to ensure One Health principles are embedded in national and international policies. Implementation in countries; resource mobilization; science and evidence; and political will. These are the four priorities that we must pursue together in the year ahead,” observed Tedros.

    Leaders of the four organizations of the Quadripartite collaboration on One Health, the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, the UN Environment Programme, the World Health Organization, and the World Organisation for Animal Health, have been working together to advance the One Health approach worldwide.

    In the meeting, the organizations reaffirmed their commitment to further enhance the plan’s policy impact and mobilize sustainable resources to support One Health implementation at all levels.

    The one health joint plan of action launched in 2022 is designed to integrate systems and capacity to collectively better prevent, predict, detect, and respond to health threats.

    According to WHO, the newly launched one health joint plan of action implementation is a cornerstone of the global efforts, providing practical guidance for translating One Health theory into action.

    “The ultimate goal and value of our One Health collaboration lie in effecting positive changes at the country level,” said Dr Amina Benyahia, Head WHO One Health Initiative.

    One Health is an approach to designing and implementing programmes, policies, legislation and research in which multiple sectors communicate and work together to achieve better public health outcomes. The One Health approach is critical to addressing health threats in the animal-human-environment interface.

  • Gor Mahia slapped with transfer ban over former player’s debt

    Gor Mahia slapped with transfer ban over former player’s debt

    The world football governing body; FIFA has imposed a transfer ban on Kenya Premier League champions Gor Mahia, after the club failed to honor a debt owed to Malian goalkeeper Adama Keita.

    The Zurich-based body, brought the decision to light on Wednesday, stating that K’Ogalo failed to meet the regulations set, with the player who featured for the club in 2021 having initially been awarded 4.4 million shillings by the Disputes Resolution Chamber as compensation following a contractual breach.

    Earlier in the year, the chamber directed Gor Mahia to pay Keita- consequently- instructing the Football Kenya Federation to slap Gor with a local A payment plan which was drafted by legal representatives of both parties in March last year. It stipulates that Gor would pay US$ 15,272 in penalties if they failed to clear the debt by April 30 2023.

    Gor would fail to honour the payment plan, forcing FIFA’s hand on the matter.

    Keita penned a two-year deal with Gor Mahia in August 2021, where he would feature in several matches before the wrangles started in May 2022, after which he would appeal to FIFA citing K’Ogalo’s breach of contract owing to accumulated wages spanning several months.

    He would subsequently quit the club in July 2022, with the DRC ruling in his favour in November of the same year, awarding him 4.4 million shillings in compensation, including a 5 percent interest.

    The ban would be lifted in March 2023, after Gor came up with a payment plan which saw them disburse an initial $16,000 to the player with a promise of $14,544 to be reimbursed by April 2023.

    Keita would file a case with FIFA on April 30th 2023, seeking payment of the remaining amount including accrued penalty.

     

     

     

     

  • Counties overspent on wages and benefits during first half of the year, report

    Counties overspent on wages and benefits during first half of the year, report

    A report by the controller of budget has revealed that counties incurred 98.13 billion shillings in personal emoluments between July and December 2023.

    According to the first half county budget implementation review report, the amount constitutes 68.3 percent of the total recurrent expenditure of the period under review with the rest of the 98.13 billion shillings earmarked for the recurrent vote going to operations and maintenance.

    “Overall, County Governments spent Kshs.98.13 billion on personnel emoluments, which accounted for 58.2 per cent of the total expenditure of Kshs.168.52 billion and 47.8 per cent of the realised revenue of Kshs.205.32 billion in the first half of FY 2023/24.’ Reads the report from the controller of budget, Dr. Margaret Nyakang’o.

    This, the reports says, is in contravention of regulation 25 (1) (b) of the Public Finance Management (County Governments) Regulations, 2015 which sets a limit of the county government’s expenditure on wages and benefits at 35 per cent of the county’s total revenue.

    Out of 45.59 billion shillings incurred on operations and maintenance, the County Assemblies cumulatively spent 703.62 million shillings on MCAs’ sitting allowances against an approved annual FY 2023/24 budget allocation of 2 billion translating to an absorption rate of 35.2 per cent and an increase of 62.0 per cent compared to 434.29 million shillings incurred in a similar period of FY 2022/23.

    The development expenditure during the period under review amounted to Kshs.24.81 billion translating to an absorption rate of 12.2 per cent of the annual FY 2023/24 development budget of Kshs.203.11 billion, which is an improvement from an absorption rate of 6.9 per cent realized in a similar period of FY 2022/23 when the total development expenditure was Kshs.11.66 billion.

    Narok, Bomet, Uasin Gishu, Laikipia and Marsabit Counties had the highest absorption rates of their respective approved development budgets at 52.4 per cent, 27.1 per cent, 27.0 per cent, 22.5 per cent and 21.7 per cent respectively.

    Counties that had the lowest absorption rates of their respective development budgets were Elgeyo Marakwet, Mombasa, Machakos, Nairobi City and Kisii at 3.9 per cent, 3.8 per cent, 3.5 per cent, 3.3 per cent and 2.9 per cent respectively.

    According to the report, the recurrent expenditure was 143.72 billion shillings while development expenditure was 24.81 billion representing 14.7 per cent of the total expenditure in the period under review meaning that county administrations did not achieve the minimum expenditure of 30 per cent on development programmes.

    However, the controller of budget cited some cross-cutting challenges that she says have continued to hamper effective and efficient budget execution by County governments.

    They included underperformance in their own source revenue collection at 19.95 billion shillings compared to the annual target of 80.20 billion shillings, a high level of outstanding pending bills of 156.34 billion as of 31st December 2023, delay by the National Treasury to disburse the Equitable Share of revenue raised nationally to the counties and failure by the Parliament to enact the County Governments Additional Allocations Bill, 2023.

    To address these challenges, the report is proposing that counties build the capacity of key staff involved in revenue collection and implement revenue enhancement programmes to realise the own source of revenue potential and develop their Regulations to implement the Health Facilities Improvement Financing (FIF) Act 2023.

    All County governments, the report proposes should settle eligible pending bills as a first charge on the budget in line with the law, National Treasury should ensure that the disbursement of the equitable share of revenue to county governments is in line with the approved disbursement schedule to ensure effective budget implementation while Parliament should expedite the enactment of the County Governments Additional Allocations Bill, 2023 to enable County governments access conditional grants to implement their budgets.