Fiery lawyer Miguna Miguna has, for the first
time, openly blamed Nasa leader Raila Odinga for
allegedly failing to
help him return to Kenya.
In a
statement from Dubai, where he was deported, Dr Miguna on Saturday also
accused Mr Odinga of dining with his (the lawyer's) oppressors.
EFFORTS
“Raila
Odinga cannot and should not be enjoying Easter abroad and dining with
the tyrants when the person who swore him in as the people’s president
is being “murdered” by those who stole his election and who have killed
and maimed his supporters,” he said.
Although
the former prime minister has not commented publicly on Dr Miguna’s
deportation to Dubai, he tried to rescue him at the Jomo Kenyatta
International Airport on Monday evening in vain.
Reports
indicate Mr Odinga left to the airport after his mediation efforts,
including a frantic call to President Kenyatta, hit a brick wall.
The government, sources say, insisted that Mr Miguna surrender his Canadian passport before being allowed into the country.
The
Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) leader, who has since agreed to work
with President Kenyatta for sake of national healing and unity, also
briefly attended a High Court session on Dr Miguna's citizenship case.
Dr Miguna called on his supporters to demand action from Mr Odinga, saying his suffering was as a result of swearing him in.
HEALTH
He also called on his supporters to stage demos and push the government to respect court orders and allow him back home.
“Mobilise
large groups of people to demonstrate, make noise and demand that my
birthright, constitutional and legal rights be respected and upheld,” he
said.
“Court orders be obeyed; my Kenyan passport be returned or a new one issued; my security and safety be safeguarded.”
His and National Resistance Movement (NRM) supporters, he said, should liberate him from the United Arab Emirates (UAE).
"I
need to be liberated from Dubai, given a safe and secure passage and
entry into my country of birth, Kenya without any further delay," he
said.
"A Kenyan born citizen cannot
be denied entry into his country of birth. I have never renounced my
citizenship. The courts have upheld and recognized my citizenship."
The deportee pleaded for urgent medical attention, claiming the chemicals he was injected are taking a toll on his health.
DOCTOR
“I must see a doctor or physician and have thorough toxicology tests done,” he said.
“The
illegitimate tyrants in Nairobi injected poison, disease causing agents
and other fatally debilitating chemicals in my body.”
The
lawyer was kicked out of Kenya on Wednesday evening after a 72-hour
standoff at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport in Nairobi.
The impasse was precipitated by his refusal to sign immigration papers and have his Canadian passport stamped.
First
deported to Canada in February, Dr Miguna claims Kenyan and Canadian
citizenship, but the government says he renounced his Kenyan birth right
when he acquired his Canadian passport.
The
High Court in Nairobi has ordered the government to facilitate his
return from Toronto to take part in his citizenship case after the Court
of Appeal rejected State's request to have the orders suspended.
The
Department of Immigration had on Tuesday issued application papers to
Miguna to enable him start the process of enabling him regain his Kenyan
citizenship as ordered by the courts, and to also facilitate his entry
into the country after he refused to produce the Canadian passport he
had used to travel back to Kenya.
DRAMA
But
when the application documents were delivered to him in the presence of
the Consular Officer of the Canadian High Commission to Kenya, Ms Fiona
Jarvis, Dr Miguna refused to fill in the relevant details and sign the
forms.
Instead, he tore the official documents and was denied entry.
The
Kenya National Commission on Human Rights (KNCHR), which has been
following up on the Miguna case because of a court order and will be
filing a report in court, on Thursday said it was disappointed by some
of the lawyer’s decisions.
“I was
disappointed with Dr Miguna because the court order had allowed him to
use his Canadian passport to gain entry into the country,” said KNCHR
chairperson Kagwiria Mbogori.
“I had
expected him at least to use it to gain entry into the country, and his
refusal boggled us. There were some missteps on both sides.”
Critics of the Sh98
billion plan claim this might not take place given the cost of
production
By Jacob Ngetich | Published Sat, March 31st 2018 at 00:00, Updated
March 30th 2018 at 20:05 GMT +3
SHARE THIS ARTICLE
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President Uhuru Kenyatta
President Uhuru Kenyatta has put up a spirited effort to implement the
‘Big Four’ agenda to shape his legacy, as questions emerge as to whether
it is attainable.
The Jubilee administration hopes to come up with legislation and
strategies to finance the five-year plan aimed at turning around the
country’s economy through manufacturing, affordable housing, healthcare
and food security.
ALSO READ: Cabinet approves Africa free trade treaty for ratification
The government is expecting in excess of Sh80 billion by June this year
from the manufacturing sector and according to the plan, by that time,
there should also be at least 86,000 jobs created.
The government seems to have come up with the formula aimed at seeing
the country’s manufacturing sector grow by 11 per cent in the next five
years.
According to the plan, by the time the country will be holding its next
general election in 2022, manufacturing should be contributing 20 per
cent of the country’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
The current contribution of nine per cent staggers around Sh600 billion
on a GDP of Sh7 trillion as at 2016.
Avoid fake news! Subscribe to the Standard SMS service and receive
factual, verified breaking news as it happens. Text the word 'NEWS' to
22840
Kenya Association of Manufacturers chief executive Phyllis Wakiaga says
the manufacturing sector, for example, has a goal to increase its
contribution to the GDP from the current 9.2 per cent to 15 per cent by
2022.
“In order to do this with the entire economy growing simultaneously it
means that the sector should plan to grow at over 20 per cent or more
per year. Now this is not an impossible feat to achieve, however it is
quite ambitious given that the current growth rate per year is not even
close to double digits,” she says.
The highest registered growth rate was in 2010 at 5.8 per cent while the
lowest was in 2012 at 0.6 per cent. Last year, the average growth rate
was 2.2 per cent.
“So while it is not inconceivable to want to grow the industry at this
rate, it means a re-calibration of business-as-usual and a deliberate
campaign to foster political will, as well as cohesion among
policy-making agencies and institutions of government towards this
goal,” she said.
ALSO READ: Commonwealth Games: President Uhuru Kenyatta orders
federations to take good care of players ahead of club games
At least eight areas have been singled out by the government as the
major drivers of this growth. These include Information and
Communication Technology (ICT), fish processing, textile, agro
processing, and leather and construction materials.
Critics of the Sh98 billion plan claim this might not take place given
the cost of production and lack of materials locally.
Cotu Secretary General Francis Atwoli tells the Saturday Standard that
the rising cost of fuel and the current economy is likely to jeopardise
the plan. Most companies have also reduced the number of employees in a
bid to remain in the market.
“More than 100,000 employees in the private sector lost their jobs
between August and November last year. How will it be possible to create
jobs when such a big number of people are laid off within a period of
four months?” Atwoli said.
Out of the 86,000 jobs to be created by June, 10 are in apparel, 50,000
cotton, 20,000 agro-processing and 2,000 in construction.
AMBITIOUS
Describing the plan as ambitious, economist Kwame Owino says for it to
be attained, manufacturing probably needs to grow faster than any other
sector.
ALSO READ: NASA-Jubilee talks coming: Nyong’o
“And that has never happened. But we are not saying it cannot happen. We
just need more investment,” says Owino.
He says there is need to expand other sectors, such as agro processing,
so that this goal can be made a reality.
“Right now our economy is growing by an average of five per cent and
manufacturing contributes a tenth. We actually need to boost this to may
be a fifth,” he says.
He says it narrows down to the actual plan the government has in mind on
which exact areas it seeks to invest in, such as industrial parks or
special economic zones.
On housing, the government expects to build 500,000 social housing units
and 800,000 affordable units by 2023 at a cost of Sh2.6 trillion.
Affordable housing may be one of the easiest catchphrases to throw
around for a population that has inhibitive mortgage rates and some of
the widest housing deficits despite a construction boom.
On average this puts the cost of each unit at Sh2.6 million each, which
will be constructed by private equity firms who will presumably charge a
markup.
This means that on average, a unit will be sold at over Sh3 million
despite the government offering free land to the investors, a cost that
is out of reach for a majority of Kenyans.
As President Kenyatta set his sights on his priority to ensure all
Kenyans have access to affordable housing he must come up with more
concrete plans to make really cheap houses and very fast.
ALSO READ: Environmentalists now oppose controversial bill
To achieve his targets, the President needs to see private partners put
up an estimated 200,000 units each year, yet in the first quarter, there
are no concrete projects online.
The task is even harder given that it will not be financed on the budget
as members of the National Assembly Budget and Appropriation Committee
noted that the agenda is not well-articulated in the Budget Policy
Statement (BPS) and the focus appears to be on targets and outputs only.
While the decision to go into public-private partnership is commendable
given the burden on the country’s resources, PPP projects have not
necessarily taken off due to legal and structural challenges.
In fact, last week, the State Department of Housing & Urban
Development cancelled the tender for hiring an expert to advise on a
private-public procurement model for setting up 10,000 houses in Nairobi
and Mombasa.
BIG TASK AHEAD
The government’s initial plans are to build 1,600 units on Park Road,
1,800 units at Shauri Moyo, 5,000 units at Starehe Housing Project and
750 units at Muguga Greens and Hobley in Mombasa.
Government has a big task ahead since Kenya has not adopted technology
in terms of land ownership for registration and transfer of titles.
The fact that there is no clear regulation on who is entitled to
affordable housing is still a matter of great concern.
ALSO READ: PS nominee pledges to prioritise delivery of Uhuru agenda
Kenya has in the past witnessed the rich purchasing homes intended of
the poor and renting them out.
Housing Principal Secretary Charles Mwaura says it is possible to
achieve this pillar with the government already setting up mechanisms
for ensuring this.
“We will have qualifying criteria on who will have access to the houses
by ensuring one household for one family. Our plan will be devoid of any
human inference,” he says.
Healthcare is expensive and any Kenyan can relate to having had to
participate in a harambee to take a sick person to India or to get
specialised healthcare.
The government has been trying to change this to get more people to plan
for the eventuality that they will fall sick by getting insurance.
The National Hospital Insurance Fund (NHIF) has been taking monthly
payments pegged at about Sh150 for individuals earning up to Sh5,999,
Sh1,700 for those earning Sh100,000 and above or Sh500 for those in
self-employment.
However, only 7.5 million people are registered with NHIF, with 16.5
million beneficiaries out of which only four million are consistent in
their monthly contributions.
To get all Kenyans on board, the President said major policy and
administrative reforms would be undertaken in the medical sector.
In an interview with the Saturday Standard, Health Cabinet Secretary
Sicily Kariuki said the ministry would develop programmes designed to
expand access to healthcare and reduce the number of people impoverished
by paying for the healthcare they need.
Ms Kariuki said to make this possible, the ministry has commenced a
rigorous plan to register all Kenyans under the state social health
insurance platform by 2020.
She said the plan is to register 8.5 million people with NHIF by the end
of 2018 and another 25 million in the next one year and continue to
raise the numbers to 40 million by 2020.
Even as the national and county governments embark on this noble quest,
health remains a devolved function and there has been no laid out plan
on working with counties to ensure affordable healthcare.
The wisdom of this is in the fact that all counties do not have
homogeneous health challenges. For instance, while maternal mortality
rate may be the biggest problem for Mandera County, that is not the same
for Kiambu.
Counties like Makueni have started making affordable healthcare for all
on their own by registering all residents to their insurance programme.
The county has registered every household for Sh500 per month to meet
their deficit in ensuring affordable health for all.
SUBDIVISION OF ARABLE LAND
On agriculture, the government has put on the pipeline a number of
legislation towards improving the sector as it seeks to ensure the Big
Four agenda is successful.
Among the legislation that will soon be tabled in Parliament is one that
will make soil liming mandatory, capping on the cost of leasing land to
attract private and foreign investors and halt further subdivision of
arable land.
In his final term in office, President Kenyatta promised to ensure not
only 100 per cent food sustainability, but a surplus of about 10 million
bags.
Currently, the country produces 40 million bags of maize annually
against a demand of 52 million, but the agenda targets 67.3 million bags
by 2022, against a demand of 57 million.
Other radical legislation include laws to stimulate water harvesting, on
irrigated land for each constituency, enforcement of agriculture
regulations – crops (tea, sugar, potatoes) and caged fish farming.
The National Assembly and Senate will also be required to pass laws on
the enforcement of the Fisheries Management and Development Act and the
elimination of multiple levies and introduction of Warehouse Receipt
System Bill 2016.
Read more at: https://www.standardmedia.co.ke/business/article/2001275090/hard-questions-on-uhuru-s-big-four-as-industry-players-speak
Read more at: https://www.standardmedia.co.ke/business/article/2001275090/hard-questions-on-uhuru-s-big-four-as-industry-players-speak
Critics of the Sh98
billion plan claim this might not take place given the cost of
production
By Jacob Ngetich | Published Sat, March 31st 2018 at 00:00, Updated
March 30th 2018 at 20:05 GMT +3
SHARE THIS ARTICLE
Share on Facebook
Share on Twitter
President Uhuru Kenyatta
President Uhuru Kenyatta has put up a spirited effort to implement the
‘Big Four’ agenda to shape his legacy, as questions emerge as to whether
it is attainable.
The Jubilee administration hopes to come up with legislation and
strategies to finance the five-year plan aimed at turning around the
country’s economy through manufacturing, affordable housing, healthcare
and food security.
ALSO READ: Cabinet approves Africa free trade treaty for ratification
The government is expecting in excess of Sh80 billion by June this year
from the manufacturing sector and according to the plan, by that time,
there should also be at least 86,000 jobs created.
The government seems to have come up with the formula aimed at seeing
the country’s manufacturing sector grow by 11 per cent in the next five
years.
According to the plan, by the time the country will be holding its next
general election in 2022, manufacturing should be contributing 20 per
cent of the country’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
The current contribution of nine per cent staggers around Sh600 billion
on a GDP of Sh7 trillion as at 2016.
Avoid fake news! Subscribe to the Standard SMS service and receive
factual, verified breaking news as it happens. Text the word 'NEWS' to
22840
Kenya Association of Manufacturers chief executive Phyllis Wakiaga says
the manufacturing sector, for example, has a goal to increase its
contribution to the GDP from the current 9.2 per cent to 15 per cent by
2022.
“In order to do this with the entire economy growing simultaneously it
means that the sector should plan to grow at over 20 per cent or more
per year. Now this is not an impossible feat to achieve, however it is
quite ambitious given that the current growth rate per year is not even
close to double digits,” she says.
The highest registered growth rate was in 2010 at 5.8 per cent while the
lowest was in 2012 at 0.6 per cent. Last year, the average growth rate
was 2.2 per cent.
“So while it is not inconceivable to want to grow the industry at this
rate, it means a re-calibration of business-as-usual and a deliberate
campaign to foster political will, as well as cohesion among
policy-making agencies and institutions of government towards this
goal,” she said.
ALSO READ: Commonwealth Games: President Uhuru Kenyatta orders
federations to take good care of players ahead of club games
At least eight areas have been singled out by the government as the
major drivers of this growth. These include Information and
Communication Technology (ICT), fish processing, textile, agro
processing, and leather and construction materials.
Critics of the Sh98 billion plan claim this might not take place given
the cost of production and lack of materials locally.
Cotu Secretary General Francis Atwoli tells the Saturday Standard that
the rising cost of fuel and the current economy is likely to jeopardise
the plan. Most companies have also reduced the number of employees in a
bid to remain in the market.
“More than 100,000 employees in the private sector lost their jobs
between August and November last year. How will it be possible to create
jobs when such a big number of people are laid off within a period of
four months?” Atwoli said.
Out of the 86,000 jobs to be created by June, 10 are in apparel, 50,000
cotton, 20,000 agro-processing and 2,000 in construction.
AMBITIOUS
Describing the plan as ambitious, economist Kwame Owino says for it to
be attained, manufacturing probably needs to grow faster than any other
sector.
ALSO READ: NASA-Jubilee talks coming: Nyong’o
“And that has never happened. But we are not saying it cannot happen. We
just need more investment,” says Owino.
He says there is need to expand other sectors, such as agro processing,
so that this goal can be made a reality.
“Right now our economy is growing by an average of five per cent and
manufacturing contributes a tenth. We actually need to boost this to may
be a fifth,” he says.
He says it narrows down to the actual plan the government has in mind on
which exact areas it seeks to invest in, such as industrial parks or
special economic zones.
On housing, the government expects to build 500,000 social housing units
and 800,000 affordable units by 2023 at a cost of Sh2.6 trillion.
Affordable housing may be one of the easiest catchphrases to throw
around for a population that has inhibitive mortgage rates and some of
the widest housing deficits despite a construction boom.
On average this puts the cost of each unit at Sh2.6 million each, which
will be constructed by private equity firms who will presumably charge a
markup.
This means that on average, a unit will be sold at over Sh3 million
despite the government offering free land to the investors, a cost that
is out of reach for a majority of Kenyans.
As President Kenyatta set his sights on his priority to ensure all
Kenyans have access to affordable housing he must come up with more
concrete plans to make really cheap houses and very fast.
ALSO READ: Environmentalists now oppose controversial bill
To achieve his targets, the President needs to see private partners put
up an estimated 200,000 units each year, yet in the first quarter, there
are no concrete projects online.
The task is even harder given that it will not be financed on the budget
as members of the National Assembly Budget and Appropriation Committee
noted that the agenda is not well-articulated in the Budget Policy
Statement (BPS) and the focus appears to be on targets and outputs only.
While the decision to go into public-private partnership is commendable
given the burden on the country’s resources, PPP projects have not
necessarily taken off due to legal and structural challenges.
In fact, last week, the State Department of Housing & Urban
Development cancelled the tender for hiring an expert to advise on a
private-public procurement model for setting up 10,000 houses in Nairobi
and Mombasa.
BIG TASK AHEAD
The government’s initial plans are to build 1,600 units on Park Road,
1,800 units at Shauri Moyo, 5,000 units at Starehe Housing Project and
750 units at Muguga Greens and Hobley in Mombasa.
Government has a big task ahead since Kenya has not adopted technology
in terms of land ownership for registration and transfer of titles.
The fact that there is no clear regulation on who is entitled to
affordable housing is still a matter of great concern.
ALSO READ: PS nominee pledges to prioritise delivery of Uhuru agenda
Kenya has in the past witnessed the rich purchasing homes intended of
the poor and renting them out.
Housing Principal Secretary Charles Mwaura says it is possible to
achieve this pillar with the government already setting up mechanisms
for ensuring this.
“We will have qualifying criteria on who will have access to the houses
by ensuring one household for one family. Our plan will be devoid of any
human inference,” he says.
Healthcare is expensive and any Kenyan can relate to having had to
participate in a harambee to take a sick person to India or to get
specialised healthcare.
The government has been trying to change this to get more people to plan
for the eventuality that they will fall sick by getting insurance.
The National Hospital Insurance Fund (NHIF) has been taking monthly
payments pegged at about Sh150 for individuals earning up to Sh5,999,
Sh1,700 for those earning Sh100,000 and above or Sh500 for those in
self-employment.
However, only 7.5 million people are registered with NHIF, with 16.5
million beneficiaries out of which only four million are consistent in
their monthly contributions.
To get all Kenyans on board, the President said major policy and
administrative reforms would be undertaken in the medical sector.
In an interview with the Saturday Standard, Health Cabinet Secretary
Sicily Kariuki said the ministry would develop programmes designed to
expand access to healthcare and reduce the number of people impoverished
by paying for the healthcare they need.
Ms Kariuki said to make this possible, the ministry has commenced a
rigorous plan to register all Kenyans under the state social health
insurance platform by 2020.
She said the plan is to register 8.5 million people with NHIF by the end
of 2018 and another 25 million in the next one year and continue to
raise the numbers to 40 million by 2020.
Even as the national and county governments embark on this noble quest,
health remains a devolved function and there has been no laid out plan
on working with counties to ensure affordable healthcare.
The wisdom of this is in the fact that all counties do not have
homogeneous health challenges. For instance, while maternal mortality
rate may be the biggest problem for Mandera County, that is not the same
for Kiambu.
Counties like Makueni have started making affordable healthcare for all
on their own by registering all residents to their insurance programme.
The county has registered every household for Sh500 per month to meet
their deficit in ensuring affordable health for all.
SUBDIVISION OF ARABLE LAND
On agriculture, the government has put on the pipeline a number of
legislation towards improving the sector as it seeks to ensure the Big
Four agenda is successful.
Among the legislation that will soon be tabled in Parliament is one that
will make soil liming mandatory, capping on the cost of leasing land to
attract private and foreign investors and halt further subdivision of
arable land.
In his final term in office, President Kenyatta promised to ensure not
only 100 per cent food sustainability, but a surplus of about 10 million
bags.
Currently, the country produces 40 million bags of maize annually
against a demand of 52 million, but the agenda targets 67.3 million bags
by 2022, against a demand of 57 million.
Other radical legislation include laws to stimulate water harvesting, on
irrigated land for each constituency, enforcement of agriculture
regulations – crops (tea, sugar, potatoes) and caged fish farming.
The National Assembly and Senate will also be required to pass laws on
the enforcement of the Fisheries Management and Development Act and the
elimination of multiple levies and introduction of Warehouse Receipt
System Bill 2016.
Read more at: https://www.standardmedia.co.ke/business/article/2001275090/hard-questions-on-uhuru-s-big-four-as-industry-players-speak
Read more at: https://www.standardmedia.co.ke/business/article/2001275090/hard-questions-on-uhuru-s-big-four-as-industry-players-speak
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