everyone knows u r a jaluo buddy, how is ua big black nose ? anyway.............stop the mollestation..
Sodomy is real in Kisumu
Updated Monday, March 14th 2016 09:46am
AUTHOR
Okun Oliech
They are usually dirty, they eat bad food, they wear torn clothes, and are usually smelly. We call them chokoraas , while foreigners call them streets children. We never want to associate with them in any way. When important people come to the country we carry them like bags of potatoes and hide them because they bring shame. How shameful of us to treat street children without dignity and respect. For Christ sake these young people are human beings. When they cry out loud we turn a blind eye and a deaf ear to them. No one knows what young male street children go through every single night. While you sleep in your king size bed, a young male street child is being sodomized by an older male street child.
On Friday evening, a young male street child (age 12) approached me near Tumaini shopping Centre in Kisumu. He looked weak and wasn’t walking properly. I could tell something was wrong. He borrowed 10 shillings so that he could go buy mandazis but I was reluctant at first. The young boy instantly broke into tears. I promised to give him 200 shillings if he told me what was bothering him and it is at that moment he decided to speak out.
A sombre mood engulfed me as tears rolled down my cheeks when the young man emotionally shared his experience about the sexual abuse he had suffered at the hands of older male street children on a daily basis. He narrated that young street boys hardly sleep at night because they are repeatedly sodomized by older male street children.
“Every night we the young male street children are usually assembled at night and older and strong male street children sodomize us. They threaten to kill us if we dare speak or scream. It is usually so painful and sometimes I wish I was dead. No one is usually there to help us. Sometimes people pass by and only turn a blind eye to us. To them we are not humans”
These older male street children use no protection hence putting the lives of these young male street children in danger. They risk being infected with HIV and other STDs.
➧ See Also: The public considers street children a nuisance
“When we go to the hospital or police station we are usually chased away because they say we are dirty and we don’t belong there. This news sent shivers down my spine since I found it rather absurd that security personnel who are supposed to be the custodians of the law and order, actually send these children away when they report.
I am standing up for the plight of street children in Kenya whose stories remain untold because no one actually bothers to listen to them. They totally have no one to fight for them, no one to help them seek medical services when they are defiled, sodomised and raped.
I therefore call upon the national government, county government of Kisumu and other stakeholders to come to the rescue of young street children of Kisumu . There should be more recreational facilities in areas where we have too many street children. Lack of recreational facilities has contributed to ‘streetism’ among children because they have nothing to keep them busy.
MORE FROM OKUN OLIECH
You poor Tanzanian...what a peanuty brain you have...come cross the border up north so we TINCTURE YOUR LITTLE BEANY BRAIN WITH SOME SENSE...THE STREET BEGGARS IN KENYA ARE FROM TANZANIA...U CAN FIND THEM AS FAR AS NYERI AND MERU..thats a fact...What world do u live in? you expect your TANZANIAN BEGGARS LITTERED ALL OVER KENYAN TOWNS AND THIER KIDS TO BE CLEAN?Want a taste of some famous Luos,Kisiis,Kikuyus etc ? check the list below
FAMOUS KENYANS WHO HAVE MADE A MARK IN THE WORLD
David Otunga
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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David Otunga
Otunga in 2014
Born David Daniel Otunga
(1980-04-07) April 7, 1980 (age 36)
Elgin, Illinois,
United States[1]
Residence Chicago,
Illinois,
United States[1]
Alma mater
Occupation
Years active
- 2007–present (actor)
- 2009–present (wrestler)
- 2015-2016 (pre-show host)
- 2016-present (commentator)
Partner(s) Jennifer Hudson
(2008–present; engaged)
Children David Otunga Jr. (born 2009)
Website www.davidotunga.com
Professional wrestling career
Ring name(s) David Otunga[2]
Dawson Alexander
[3]
Billed height 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
[4]
Billed weight 229 lb (104 kg)
[4]
Billed from Hollywood, California[4]
Trained by Tom Prichard[3]
Norman Smiley[3]
Debut 2009
[3]
David Daniel Otunga Sr.[3] (born April 7, 1980) is an American
professional wrestler,
lawyer and
actor currently signed with
WWE, as a
commentator on the
SmackDown brand. He is a two-time
WWE Tag Team Champion, having one reign each with
Michael McGillicutty and
John Cena.
[5] He was the runner-up on the first season of
NXT.
[4] Otunga was also the last original member of
The Nexus and
The New Nexus.
Contents
[
hide]
Early life[edit]
Otunga was born in Elgin, Illinois, to a
Kenyan Luo father, Moses, and a European American mother, Billie, both of whom are educators.
[1][6] He is the youngest of three children.
[1] Otunga graduated from
Larkin High School in 1998, with a perfect 4.0 GPA.
[7] Otunga earned a
bachelor's degree in psychology from the
University of Illinois.
[7] Following his graduation, he moved to
New York City, where he became a laboratory manager in
Columbia University's
Cognitive Neuroscience Center.
[7] He later graduated from
Harvard Law School, passing Illinois'
bar exam.
[1][8] Following his graduation, he joined the
Sidley Austin law firm.
[1]
Acting career[edit]
In 2007, after his niece submitted his audition tape, Otunga was chosen to be a contestant on
I Love New York 2 and given the nickname "Punk".
[7] He became one of the final three contestants in the competition, before being eliminated on the series' penultimate episode. Otunga has since starred in the 2013 thriller film
The Call.
[9] Otunga made a guest appearance as himself in the 109th episode of
General Hospital.
[10]
2-JAMES ATEBE-Former room mate to the Former CANADIAN PRIME MINISTER
James Atebe
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James Atebe
Mayor of Mission, British Columbia
In office
December 1, 2005 – December 1, 2011
Preceded by Abe Neufeld
Succeeded by Ted Adlem
Member of the Mission Council
In office
December 1, 1999 – December 1, 2005
James Atebe is past Mayor of
Mission, British Columbia,
Canada,
[1] a municipality east of
Vancouver in the
British Columbia region known as the
Fraser Valley. A native of Ekerenyo, a village in the
North Mugirango Constituency of
Kenya, he was first elected mayor in 2005, after serving as a member of the city council for six years. Atebe was easily re-elected in 2008 over Matt Johnson, his opponent, who received less than 20% of the vote
[1] after almost being acclaimed as mayor of Mission.
[2] However, in the 2011 municipal election, Atebe was defeated by opponent Ted Adlem, who captured 50% of the vote.
[3]
Atebe was a roommate of Canadian
Prime Minister Stephen Harper in
Calgary.
[4] In 2009,
Canadian Immigrant magazine named James Atebe as "one of Canada's Top 25 immigrants" at the Citizenship and Immigration office in Vancouver.
[5]
References[edit
3-Opanyi Nasiali& Abdul Mohammed
Monday, June 17, 2013
Kenyan Natives Make Mayors in Britain & California
This past weeks two Kenyan natives, Opanyi Nasiali and Abdul Mohammed have taken office as mayors in the United States and United Kingdom respectively.
Opanyi Nasiali
The 67-year old, descendant of Maragoli, was voted by his fellow Claremont Council Members as mayor in March, becoming the first black resident and Kenyan native to be mayor of a town of nearly 35,000 people.
Mr. Nasiali went to Chavakali High School in Vihiga County. After completing high school, he later got a checker job, where he supervised people who moved cargo from ships to the warehouses at the port of Mombasa. At the age of 23, he landed a job at Parliament where he and 11 others transcribed the proceedings for members of National Assembly.
He later traveled to US to study urban planning at Cal State University Northridge. He completed his Bachelor in Urban Studies and went on to receive his Masters in Urban Planning and Public Administration.
Abdul Mohammed
Eldoret-born British Kenyan, Councillor Abdul Mohammed was announced at the Council Assembly replacing the outgoing Mayor Althea Smith.
Councillor Mohamed was the Deputy Mayor last year and will hold the office of the Mayor in 2013-2014.
The career engineer's authority spans over south-east London borough of Southwark, the largest authorities in the UK with a population of 283,000.
Mohammed went to African Inland Mission School in Kapsowar before attending Alliance High School.
He attended the University of Nairobi before leaving for Britain and graduating from Leeds University where he trained with the former National Coal Board as a mining engineer.
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4
Zain Verjee
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Zain Verjee
Born Zain Verjee
(1974-02-11) February 11, 1974 (age 42)
Kenya
Occupation Journalist
Notable credit(s) CNN International's World One, Zain Verjee Group
Religion Ism'aili Muslim
Website zainverjeegroup.com akomanet.com
Zain Verjee (born February 11, 1974) is journalist who was born and raised in Kenya. Verjee now runs her own Africa focused production company, and is passionate about capturing the new narrative of Africa from authentically African voices. Zain is currently building aKoma, a storytelling and content platform for Africa. aKoma is in a private beta and is looking to launch in 2016. The aKoma team is building a base of content creators at www.akomanet.com. She spent 14 years at CNN as an anchor and correspondent, living in Atlanta, Washington DC and London. Prior to leaving CNN in April 2014, Verjee was the anchor of CNN International's European daytime program "World One". She worked as a newsreader for The Situation Room, as a State Department correspondent, and as a co-anchor of CNN International's Your World Today with Jim Clancy.
5-DR SAID OSMAN
'Back to the future' medicine man turns frustration into big opportunity
By Jim Stenman, CNN
Story highlights
- Kenyan-born Said Osman is a world-renowned spinal surgeon
- Osman is the pioneer behind endoscopic spine surgery
- Osman has patents for growing artificial bones and joints
- His career goal is to produce an artificial skeleton
London (CNN)Said Osman found his life's calling after witnessing a tragic scene as a young boy that still haunts him decades later.
The pioneering Kenyan doctor was just nine years old when a girl was rushed across the border from southern Ethiopia to northern Kenya. A few years his senior, she was severely dehydrated and barely holding on.
"Everyone was trying to resuscitate her and my uncle, a local pharmacy technician, saw the horrified look on my face. I was just a terrified kid, so he took me home."
But Osman couldn't get the girl off his mind. He persuaded his uncle to let him return to the hospital a few weeks later to see the girl.
He was amazed to find she had nearly made a full recovery -- something that would inspire him to help others later in life.
Read More
"Another human being managed to bring her back to life and I should also be able to do the same if I try my best," he recalls thinking.
Though friends and family laughed off Osman's interest in medicine, his mother voiced her support.
"You know, these guys have never seen a black doctor before," she said at the time.
Looking back, Osman admits their reaction wasn't too surprising. He was, after all, living in a rural part of Kenya where nomads form most of the population.
But he refused to let that stand in the way of pursuing his dream -- a journey that has taken him far away from his ancestral home and, eventually, to the United States.
Medical milestone
Osman is currently based in Frederick, Maryland, near Washington D.C., and best known as a pioneer in endoscopic spine surgery.
Patients, who are usually required to spend days in hospital, can often walk out of his clinic just hours after surgery.
A fellow doctor from Hawaii became the world's first patient to undergo one of Osman's endoscopic spine surgeries in the mid 1990s. He had the first ever endoscopic thoracic decompression and fusion as an outpatient. A medical milestone, it was the culmination of several years of research.
I WILL TAKE A
6-DR MAINA GATONYE
Kenyan doctor serves the underprivileged in the US
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Dr Gatonye is a primary care physician and has a practice in the US where he also works among the poor./ courtesy
By Wallace Kantai
Posted Friday, June 19 2009 at 00:00
There are two views of doctors in America, especially successful, young black ones.
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They are either in the highest stratum of professional society – the ones whom everyone looks up to; the ‘buppie’ type or are members of a benevolent
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Kenyan Scientist Wins Top Scientific Prize
A Kenyan scientist, Dr Faith Osier, has been awarded one of the most prestigious prizes for African Science. The Royal Society Pfizer prize is awarded annually to a young scientist based in Africa, and recognises research scientists making innovative contributions to the biological sciences, including basic medical science.
On August 5, 2014, the Royal Society announced that the 2014 Royal Society Pfizer prize was to be awarded to KEMRI Wellcome Trust Research Programme scientist Dr Faith Osier, for her research on understanding the mechanisms of immunity to malaria infection in man. Dr Osier leads a team of young researchers at the programme to understand how children living in areas with a high malaria infection rate develop immunity to the disease. This work is important in contributing to the search for malaria vaccines.
Dr Osier was also recently awarded the prestigious African Research Leader Award from the UK Medical Research Council (MRC)/Department for International Development (DfID). She joined the programme in 1998 and immediately became intrigued in developing a better understanding of how people, children in particular, could develop immunity to malaria. Dr Osier has developed strong collaborations in this work with the Burnet Institute in Australia and the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute in the UK.
On hearing of the award, Dr Osier said, "I am delighted and excited by the Royal Society Pfizer prize award, which I see as an award to my whole research team. It is our dream to build strong science in Africa which contributes to solving Africa’s major health problems."
Professor Solomon Mpoke, Director of the Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI) said, "We congratulate Dr Osier on this outstanding achievement, which shows the strength of Kenyan science. The work of Dr Osier and a new generation of Kenyan researchers like her is critical to driving development in Kenya and the wider region."
Professor Berhanu Abegaz, Director of the African Academy of Sciences concurred with Professor Mpoke saying, "This is wonderful news. The Royal Society is one of the world’s most prestigious scientific institutions and the award of this prize is a tremendous boost to Kenyan and African science."
For more details contact:
info@kemri-wellcome.org
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