Nakuru Teems With Child Beggars From Neighbouring Countries

Child beggars suspected to have been trafficked from neighbouring states have swamped streets of Nakuru town months after they were repatriated back to their respective countries. County Children’s Coordinator Ms Alice Wanyonyi says the magnanimity of Kenyans was now being exploited by criminals seeking to rake in money from the centuries-old habit that today has morphed into organized crime. Ms Wanyonyi notes that the children have been repatriated several times in the recent past but always find their way back in unclear circumstances. Ms Wanyonyi states that through a multi-agency approach involving the National Police Service, the Judiciary and Immigration department the Children’s Department was doing its best to end the menace. ‘As a department we have intensified anti- child trafficking advocacy campaigns. We are working with other relevant state and non state actors to combat child trafficking through prevention, protection, and prosecution,’ she points out. The minors, all with various forms of disabilities are either placed at strategic places along various streets or driven in wheelchairs soliciting for alms from traders and pedestrians. The child beggars, are poorly dressed by their handlers, subjecting them to vagaries of harsh weather. Ms Wanyonyi indicates that those behind the syndicate could be exploiting the loophole of the tedious process of taking back the minors to their country of origin. ‘To send them home, they have to be arrested and taken to court as children in need of care and protection. Then the court in liaison with children and probation departments may issue repatriation orders to the Officer Commanding Nakuru Police Station (OCS) who will house the children in the cells until necessary arrangements are made to transport them either to their respective countries’ border crossing points,’ she explains. She says the cost of repatriating them is borne by the police department. Director of Public Prosecutions Noordin Haji has since pledged to widen the directorate’s focus to human trafficking in the East African region. ‘Our focus, I must admit, has been on the Northern corridor along the Kenyan border with Ethiopia, South Sudan and less on Uganda and Tanzania. I will see to it that this scope also gets covered adequately, he said. Before embarking on the long journey, police must first establish a link with their colleagues in neighbouring states to receive the repatriated children at the boundaries of the countries. Most of these child beggars in Nakuru have settled down in begging communes, renting adjacent houses in the informal settlements in Nakuru and its environs. The beggars, according to Mr Joab Odinga who operates a tea kiosk along Oginga Odinga Road, are brought to the streets every morning and distributed to different locations. Our numerous efforts to unearth some of the beggars’ minders hit a dead end. When we inquired from 7-year-old Juma on who had brought him to Kenyatta Avenue, he suddenly went quiet, turned his wheelchair the opposite direction and resorted to stoic silence effectively ending our interview. The lad, who appeared nervous, eventually offered to give us back the Sh50 note that we had earlier given him and ‘allow him room’ to continue minding his business. Most of the disabled children who are dropped on the streets in the morning and picked in the evenings by their ‘minders’ are daily exposed to hunger, and denied education and proper healthcare. Some of the wheelchair bound minors we encountered are mentally challenged. ‘It is a business by some people because the money these beggars are soliciting is not theirs. We also have very few local disabled children in the racket. The County government in collaboration with the County Commissioner’s office and National Police Service has been rounding them up and presenting them to authorities for repatriation but they sneak back to the town,’ Ms Wanyonyi states. Ms Aadila, 16 who operates outside the Nakuru Jamia Mosque was brought into the country in July 2022 via Namanga border by two men who duped her that begging business was lucrative in Kenya. ‘They said that I would be getting a minimum of Sh25,000 every month just by begging on the streets. According to the plan, I was to be put up in a shelter for disabled people. The shelter turned out to be a dingy semi apartment structure with several single rooms where I had to pay rent from begging on the streets,’ she says. Ms Aadila adds that in some cases child beggars are subjected to physical violence if they fail to achieve their daily collection targets. Former Municipal Council of Nakuru civic leader Mr William Ating’a notes that about seven years ago, Kenyan towns and cities were virtually free of disabled beggars. ‘Kenyans and their government had, over the years, taken proactive steps to integrate persons with disability (PWDs) into the society through education, vocational training and economic empowerment,’ notes Mr Ating’a. He explains that this culminated in the launch of the Cash Transfer for Persons with Severe Disabilities (PWSD) programme, formation of the National Council for Persons with Disability (NCPWD) and establishment of the Access to Government Procurement Opportunities (Agpo) initiative. Under Agpo, at least 30 per cent of government procurement is set aside for youth, women and PWDs to open business opportunities for these vulnerable groups. The former councillor adds ‘We are aware of the East Africa Community integration plan and Kenya’s presidential declaration that we ease movement and trade across our borders. The challenge is; these disabled people cannot be isolated in the policy. It becomes very hard to enact our own policies. It is a hard scenario. Kenya has embraced pan-Africanism, allowing visa-free travel into the country, this must not be mistaken to giving a carte blanche to cross-border criminal gangs to exploit and abuse the disabled,’ Ms Zainabu, who is based at Oginga Odinga road, is another 12 year old from a neighbouring country brought into Kenya on promises of hitting a jackpot. She says she was full of hope for better livelihood when she left home for the streets of Nakuru town. She reminisces ‘I came to Kenya after three women and a man promised us that we would be getting a monthly stipend for the disabled from the Kenyan government. They wrote down our names. At least that is what I can remember. We came as a group of about 30 people who were crippled and had different physical challenges,’ ‘We never got the money. They used us and dumped us after getting rich,’ she tearfully recounts. According to another source, Cyrus Musera the beggars are always under deft surveillance by guides who bring them early in the morning, offer them meals and wheel the beggars back into the begging communes in the evenings. Musera, who is a newspaper vendor along Geoffrey Kamau Way, said the guides constantly move the beggars from one point to another during the day. ‘They wheel them to strategic locations as early as 6 o’clock in the morning. The guides mostly young men aged between 12 and 17 year are tasked by the bosses to bring beggars food later in the day, relocate the beggars from place to place during different times of the day and take them somewhere to rest when the sun sets before returning them to streets in the evening,’ says Musera. The newspaper vendor reveals that the bosses, some of who have as many as 20 beggars under their wraps scattered in various parts of the town, make routine inspection of their ‘subjects’ at least thrice a day to ‘check on work progress’ and pick cash collections already made.

Source: Kenya News Agency

Japanese Ambassador Hails Kenya’s Friendship With Japan

Japanese Ambassador to Kenya, Ken Okaniwa, has hailed the longstanding bilateral friendship between Kenya and his country and hoped the same would continue, especially in the promotion of Blue-Economy activities and renewable energy. The Ambassador said Kenya and Japan had a friendship that spans close to 60 years, which he said had enabled his country to assist in building key infrastructural projects among them the Sabaki River in Kilifi County. ‘We want to promote a two-way trade and people to people exchange because of this friendship,’ Mr. Okaniwa said at the Captain Andy’s ship manufacturing factory in Watamu area of Malindi Sub- County in Kilifi County, Monday. Captain Andy’s Fishing Supply Company is one of the biggest manufacturers and exporters of deep-sea fishing and transport boats in East Africa and the local agent of Japanese Company YAMAHA Motor Corporation Limited. The envoy said for Kenya to take advantage of all the resources that she has in the sea, she needs to promote activities in the sea such as fishing and sea transportation among others. He called on Kenya to support the activities being undertaken by the boat manufacturing Company that he said had employed close to 170 locals and was contributing greatly to the local economy through job creation, Corporate Social Responsibility and tax remittances. ‘We are interested in Kenya because we have a 60-year-old friendship and cooperation. We have built Sabaki Bridge and three other bridges in Kilifi and Mombasa and we want to promote a two-way exchange of trade and also people to people exchange because of this friendship. The Ambassador had earlier toured the Krystaline Salf Manufacturing Company in Gongoni, Magarini Sub- County, where his government funded the installation of solar power facilities which the Company uses to produce salt. He said the use of solar power generated electricity would help greatly in the fight against Climate Change, as it would reduce the emission of greenhouse gases that affect the Ozone Layer. ‘Japan and Kenya have a bi-lateral agreement to generate carbon credits as a result of these carbon-absorption activities and we think that this kind of activity benefits not just the economy and the creation of jobs in Kenya, but also contribute to the fight against Climate Change,’ he said. Mr. Andy Thomas, the Director of Captain Andy’s Fishing Supply Company, said the company had been in Kenya since 1989 when it started by selling fishing equipment and has grown into one of the biggest boat manufacturers in the world. ‘We are now making eleven different models of YAMAHA boats in fibre glass and we are fitting them with about 40 different models of YAMAHA engines, so we have a wide variety of options for our customers,’ he said. The Ambassador was accompanied in the tour by Magarini Deputy County Commissioner, John Thiong’o and his Malindi counterpart, Thuo wa Ngugi.

Source: Kenya News Agency

Religious Leaders Call For Dialogue To End Political Tension

Religious leaders from the Nyanza region have called for dialogue between President, Dr. William Ruto and Azimio leader, Raila Odinga, to end political tension in the country. National Council of Churches of Kenya (NCCK), Nyanza Regional Chairman, Bishop Prof. David Kodia, said the rivalry between the two leaders and their parties was detrimental to peace and cohesion in the country. Prof. Kodia said the rift between the two leaders was likely to disintegrate the country into chaos, urging President Ruto to take the lead and initiate dialogue to bring on fold all Kenyans, as he moves to roll out his development agenda. The ongoing demonstrations by Azimio, he said, was a pointer that the country was divided, calling for dialogue and mediation to deescalate the standoff. He cautioned the youth against being used by politicians to create tension, urging parents to refrain their children from attending political gatherings and unlawful demonstrations. Addressing the media in Kisumu, Tuesday, Prof. Kodia, further appealed to all politicians to avoid confrontational politics in public, to ensure that the gains made in uniting the nation are not eroded. ‘What we are witnessing where the country’s top leadership makes indiscriminate statements is unfortunate and must stop,’ he said. NCCK, he said, has committed to keep the church premises safe from political gatherings, calling on all peace actors to rise to the occasion and protect the nation from collapse. Prof. Kodia further urged the National Assembly and the Executive, to move with speed and lower the cost of basic commodities, to cushion Kenyans against the rising cost of living. County Governments, he added, must support the initiative through supporting Small and Micro Enterprises (SMEs) and the Jua kali, sector to help them recover. ‘We are concerned that the high cost of living combined with the effects of Covid-19 containment measures among other factors has exacerbated the country’s rising cases of mental illness and gender-based violence (GBV),’ he said.

Source: Kenya News Agency

Hospital Receives Sh10 Million Worth Of Drugs After Public Outcry

After months of agony and suffering by patients at the Thika Level 5 hospital, the facility has finally received Sh10 million worth of drugs, much to the relief of residents, patients and local leaders. The Hospital was almost becoming a shell of its former self as patients were being sent to buy drugs from private pharmacies due to shortages at the facility. While flagging-off the consignment of drugs and non-pharmaceutical supplies at the facility, yesterday, Kiambu County Executive Health Committee Member, Dr. Elias Maina, said the drugs will last for a month and that more consignment was on the way. He attributed the delay in supplies to the stringent procurement procedures at the Kenya Medical Supplies Agency (Kemsa). Dr Maina warned that any medic found sending patients to buy medicine at private facilities will be dealt with accordingly. He also warned medics found smuggling drugs from county hospitals to their private clinics, that they will not only be fired but also will face the law. Dr. Maina urged residents to be vigilant and report such thieves. ‘We are clever now and if anyone tries to steal, they will be punished,’ warned Dr Maina. This comes as Kiambu Governor, Kimani Wamatangi, has been insistent that some medics were stealing drugs from the hospitals and selling them, to private facilities or using them at their private clinics. He warned that the County Government will put CCTV cameras among other measures to nab thieves. The poor state of the hospital had caused a public outcry among Thika residents led by their MP, Alice Ng’ang’a, who had threatened to hold demonstrations to protest over poor service delivery. They complained that it had been neglected by the current County Administration despite serving the biggest population in the county.

Source: Kenya News Agency

Siaya Town Residents Urge ICT CS To Provide Them With Public Hotspots

A section of Siaya residents operating businesses within Siaya town have urged the Information Communications and The Digital Economy Cabinet Secretary, Eliud Owalo, to humbly consider Siaya when launching public Wi-Fi to different markets and public gatherings. Led by Janet Lando, a shopkeeper within Siaya town, they said that there is a greater need to provide them with Wi-Fi for easy access into internet, reminding the government that most of them engage in online transactions. ‘Other places are getting such services, why not Siaya, why have we been sidelined?’ asked Lando. This came months after Eliud Owalo, launched a public hotspot in Bondo, which is now serving only the business people from Bondo. ‘Siaya town is the heart of businesses in this County, so it is so oppressive to be denied an access to public Wi-Fi,’ said Daniel Omollo, a fishmonger, in Siaya Market. They said that President William Ruto, promised them that there will be a free hotspot at every big market. ‘We want to plunge into the digital world, we need to connect and transact through e-commerce, to boost our businesses, Mr. Owalo,’ said Daniel Oketch, Uber operator.

Source: Kenya News Agency