Saturday, 26 December 2015

Shabaab kills self in an aborted planned carnage in Elwak

 

By Adow Jubat

One al-Shabaab militant was killed, while several of his accomplices were injured in a plan terror attack that went weary in the incursion prone border County of Mandera, Northeastern region bordering war-strife Somalia.

The militants were planting explosives devices along a road that leads to a dam in Dabacity area, Elwak south sub-county on Saturday noon.

The Somali based militants, who are affiliated to Al-Qaeda international terror group, has on Tuesday last week attack a Mandera bound bus in the same area, where they killed two people and injured five others, after their attempts to split passengers along religious line were challenged by Muslim travelers.

Muslim passengers saved their Christian colleagues after refusing to be split along religious spectrum and also providing their clothing to them (Christians) in bid to conceal, them from being identified through their dressing codes.

Confirming the incident which occurred at noon on Saturday, the Mandera County commissioner Fredrick Shisia the assailants were planting Improvised explosive device (IED) along a road leading to Garesesala water point where security patrol along Kenya/Somali border frequently uses.

He said nomad families, who were trekking along the nearby bushes toward Elwak town so, the Shabaab insurgent in jangle uniform and wearing balaclava burying something in some portion of the road.

“A security patrol team who were doing their routine movement, were tipped off by the nomads over the presences of suspicious looking gunmen digging some parts of the road to the only dam and burying some objects” He said.

He added “Upon the patrol team led by OCPD and the officer commanding (OC) Elwak military base speeding off the incident area, the militants who were caught unawares in panic attempted to detonate the incendiaries on the oncoming security vehicles killing one of Shabaab dead instantly and injuring others”,

The Northeastern regional coordinator Amb Mohamud Saleh who also confirmed the incidents said the mutilated body of the Shabaab was taken to Elwak sub-county hospital mortuary for identification and investigations. He added that an AK47 assault rifle, which was carried the deceased which was badly dismantled under the impact of the explosion was also recovered.

Amb Saleh noted that the assailants who were caught planting the explosives on the road were about 5, but there could be possibilities that others could be watching over them in hiding.

“A part from the one who was killed, we also highly believe four of his accomplice, were also injured in the explosion since officers on pursuit of the criminals reported of seeing trail of blood”, He said.

The regional coordinator thanked the member of the public in the region for showing a lot of commitments to work with security agents by volunteering valuable information that saved lives.

“These is the second incident a swift action by the members of the local community to save lives by confronting Shabaab, I urgent them all Kenyans to be patriotic like Mandera people and ensure to working closely with security team”, He noted.

  

Friday, 25 December 2015

RESIDENTS MOURNS THE "DEATH" OF A LEGEND TREE






By Adow Jubat


                               Duuq Mawaye before it "dead". File pic


A "death" of acacia tree is in a rare occurrence being mourned by villagers in a remote area in Balambala constituency of Garissa County, Northeastern region.

The residents of Saka location about 60 kilometers from Garissa town has declared 30 days of mourning in respect of ancient tree which collapsed on Thursday , due to its had historical significance to the people in the area.

The social media was awash with “condolences” sent my mourners who were shocked by sudden "death" of gigantic tree believed to have being in existence over 320 years. The tree which was in the centre of the Saka town was known in the entire northeastern region as “Duuq mawaye” (the elders’ favorite).

According to the former area councilor and the chairman of the defunct Garissa county council Adan Yussuf Bute said residents of Saka town and its environs were shocked by the news of the falling of the tree on Thursday at around 5.30 am.

Many residents mainly mothers who used the tree shade as their stalls where they could sale their farm produces are reportedly broke into tears uncontrollably.

“People have agreed to mourn the “death” of the tree for the next 30 days starting Saturday. The mourning will be done differently from the one usually observed when someone dies, it will involve offering a respect to the tree by not using its branches for firewood”, He said.

                         Residents shocked by the collapse of Duuq Mawaye milling around the shortly it fell on Thursday. Pic by Adow Jubat


The gigantic tree split miraculously split in the middle before collapsing into heap. A little boy who was with his mother who was selling milking was injured on the head, while several shops nearby were slightly damaged.

Bute, who is aspiring to reclaim his Saka ward, which he lost last generation said the “a burial” committee to ensure the fallen tree gets a deserving send off has been established. Among the tasks the committee will undertake includes arrangement to organize for offering.

The significance attached to the tree by residents of Abdiwaq community of Garissa County dates back to 1902, when the shade of the tree was used as an open hospital where casualties of the community who were injured in a tribal clash pitting them against Mohamed Zuber were treated said an 70 years elder in the town.

“Scores of people from Abdiwaq community, who sustained injuries in the fighting with Mohamed Zuber Ogaden sub-clan found in Wajir County, were treated for months under the tree. Those days there was no hospital, but the tree offered a better service that could be found in any public hospital”, He added.

Dr. Ismail Arte Rage, nutritional manager with UNICEF who is based in South Sudan and eyeing Fafi constituency in the forthcoming general polls said the tree was so popularly with local people since it was serving them many services at the same time for the last over 320 years.

“The acacia tree had big branches that cover about 18 feet square and offered very cool shade that help people to transact various businesses under it simultaneously. One side of the tree women used to sale their good, another side elders conferred on daily basis to decided on serious and important communal matters”, He explained while speaking to Frontier Leaks on phone from Juba.

Dr. Rage remembers tree as being an open air hospital, where medical outrage programs were conduct frequently. “When I read the collapse of the tree from the social media I was really shaken. I felt like I lost a close relative. I recall vividly how I was treated under that tree or sing for government dignitaries in early 1970s, when I was schoolboy”, He added.

The tree shade was also the only free open air “tent’ where government officials made important pronouncements such as the announcements of polio campaigns and hold public events.

The last national function which was held under the tree was on 12/12/15 during the Mashujaa Day. 

The tree is also historical as it is where hard political decisions were made in the last 3 centuries. One of the notably decision which was made under this tree was in the early 1960s, where the local community made anonymous declaration to support the aborted secession drive.
 
Many political declarations which were slated to be made this week under the canopy of the tree had to be cancelled as residents began their 30 days mourning of legend tree today.

Ends…


Sunday, 2 August 2015

I want to be reminded when the Somali export their camels and reward for their labours,says Jaramogi









Fellow Kenyans,

Today we are testing freedom. This is the first time most of you are attending a political meeting of your own choice. This is the first time you are being addressed by people you have always wished to see stand before you and speak. 

This is the first time you are truly happy to remember that we struggled for independence and won. For UHURU means freedom; freedom for everybody: the poor, the rich, the disabled, the women, the children, the men, EVERYBODY.

It is the freedom to come together as we are doing today, discussing the future of our national. It is the freedom to feel perfectly safe as a Kenyan anywhere you live in this Republic, perfectly confident that your government will protect you and your property. That your children and your children’s children will inherit the property you have honestly acquired in Kenya.

It is freedom to live an honest life. Speaking your mind in the Church, Mosque, press, parliament, the university, country council and even in the cabinet [without fearing for your life].

But, fellow Kenyans, ladies and gentlemen:

As we stand here today, there are many Kenyans who cannot be with us today because they do not have this freedom thirty years after UHURU was won.

Why is Kenneth Matiba not with us here today? Why is George Anyona, Edward Oyugi, Isaac Gachangu, Rumba Kinuthia, Koigi wa Wamwere, Ngotho Kariuki and many other freedom fighters not with us today?

Why are our sons and daughters still in exile? Why are brilliant people who can teach in our universities wasting their lives overseas? Why was Robert Ouko murdered? Was he murdered for speaking against corruption? Was he murdered for speaking his mind in the cabinet? For what reason was he murdered? And who murdered him?

Why was Muge murdered? Was it because he exercised his freedom to preach the word of God, to condemn sin and corruption?


The Moi government should answer these questions and answer them honestly and truthfully.

We demand that all political prisoners be released. We demand that those who are in exile return home unconditionally. We demand that every Kenyan be granted the freedom to travel inside and outside the country. That nobody be denied a passport.

As we gather here, there are many Kenyans who are refugees in their own country. There are many Kenyans who have lost their homes because they dared to support a political party of their choice. Houses have been bulldozed in Ongata Rongai like they were here in MWOROTO some time ago. Homes have been burnt in the Rift valley.

For these Kenyans who have lost their homes and houses there is no UHURU, no truth in being called a KENYAN CITIZEN.


We must restore FREEDOM to our country by removing the Moi government from power.
We must restore democracy for our people by freely electing a FORD government in the next General Elections.

The Moi govemnent cannot guarantee freedom for our people.


This is a Government that uses some security officers to terrorise our people and not to protect them.
This is a Government that tells lies and lives by the lie. Without TRUTH there can be no JUSTICE; and without justice no FREEDOM and without freedom, no DEVELOPMENT.


On Corruption and Development, we have seen how political repression under the Moi regime has encouraged and protected corruption.

We have seen how this corruption has destroyed development.

We have seen how billions of Kenyan Shillings have been wasted in ill advised investment projects because of corruption and bad government policies. We can here talk of the Turkwel Dam project, the molasses plant in Kisumu, the fiasco in the Post Office, the chaos in the Kenya Airways, and the nightmare in the Treasury.

We have seen how we have become a nation heavily in debt and almost incapable of servicing our loans. We have seen how our government has lost the moral authority to speak for this country in international financial bodies because its leaders are tinted with corruption.

We have seen how our professional civil servants have been thoroughly demoralised by the corruption, incompetence, and crudeness of the Moi regime. We have seen how foreign investors have lost faith in our country.

Let us open our hearts to each other.


Let us embrace the opportunities and challenge the future together. The clergy, the lawyers, the professionals, patriotic politicians, students, peasants and workers come together in challenging political repression. The battle is not yet over. The building of democracy has just begun. This is our hour of need. We must come together TODAY not TOMORROW.

THERE IS WORK FOR US TO DO. Let us do it with FORD in a democratic and proud Kenya. I want to stand on the slopes of the Aberdares and see far away into the rolling farmland of the Rift Valley. There I will see a proud Kenyan from Nandi, Keiyo-Marakwet and Kericho basking in the sun of political freedom and economic prosperity.

I want to drive to the coast, without potholes ruining my car; and there I will meet the Taita and the Taveta, the Swahili and the Giriama, proud to speak their various languages but knowing that they are all Kenyans with equal rights and opportunities in our sovereign Republic.

I want to climb Mount Elgon and see the Luo and the Abaluhia working in their sugar plantations, and knowing that they will be well rewarded for their sweat.

I want to come back to the slopes of Mount Kenya and drink fresh coffee from Kikuyu land knowing that our peasants are respected for the hard work they do. I want to see prosperous cooperative societies and a people who grow rich from their labours.

I want to be reminded that when the Akamba grow their cotton, the Gusii harvest their tea, the Masaai sell their cattle and the Somali export their camels they will ALL get a just reward for their labours. I want to know that every Kenyan enjoys justice and freedom in our motherland.

I want to come back to Nairobi, and meet businessmen from all communities. I do not want to hear that one is condemned for being industrious because he is of different colour or race. All I want to know is that he is a Kenyan and he is working for the success of Kenya.

I want him or her to ensure that our industries work at full capacity, feeding our people, giving them something to wear and providing them with housing. I want to know that our workers receive fair treatment and just wages, that they have trade unions free of state control.

I want to see professional associations enjoy the freedom we fought for.

I want to reassure myself that I will no longer say there is NOT YET UHURU for any Kenyan after FORD form the next government.


That is the Kenya I want. That is the Kenya we all want. That is the Kenya a FORD government will give you.”