Author: jamaapoa
•Wednesday, May 30, 2007
" Following the recent events arising out of some failed sections of roads under rehabilitation in Mombasa town and the subsequent public debate on roads related issues, the ministry would like to clarify some issues related to the ongoing works in Mombasa.

... The failed section of works under rehabilitation in Mombasa which were less than 2% of the works carried out were as a result of overheated bitumen which made the bituminous mixes become brittle hence disintegrated under loading and ingression of water.

The ministry engineers had already instructed the contractors on 4th May 2007 to remove these defective works even before their failure was apparent to the public ...

... The ministry has always endevoured to ensure that good quality work, meeting the required standards and specifications, is carried out without any compromise

... Incidentally, immediately after the illegal arrest and prior to the matter being raised in Parliament, I had personally written to the permanent secretary, secretary to the cabinet and head of public service expressing my concern about the unprocedural behaviour of the government spokesman. I have not received a response on the matter to date. What conclusion would anyone arrive at when a senior officer from that office carries out illegal action and the chief administrator of that office refuses to respond to my concerns?

... It is perplexing to note that some journalists are stating that the illegal arrest of contractors and engineers is a small matter hence implying that I should not have complained the way I did. The arrest was illegal and was ordered by unauthorized person. The person who ordered the arrest is a journalist and is therefore not surprising to see him being protected by some of his professional colleagues... rather than insults being directed to me from people like Gitau Warigi, who clearly had not done any homework on the matter.

... in conclusion, I would like to assure the members of public that the ministry will strenuously ensure that all works undertaken meet the highest standards of workmanship..."

signed
Simeon Nyachae
Minister of Roads and Public Works
Daily Nation 28.05.2007

The culprits had to come up with a "clarification"

"...Dhanjal Brothers Limited notifies...the portion of the works carried out so far for the rehabilitation of the World Cross Country Championship in Mombasa in March 2007 are still intact and have not suffered any premature damage or deterioration... Any unwarranted arrest and detentiaon was illegal and improper."

Daily Nation 30.05.2007

In the Sunday Nation of 27.05.2007 this is how Gitau Warigi 'insulted' Nyachae;

"Dr. Alfred Mutua lands in Mombasa, then poses theatrically along a potholed road, orders the arrest of several contractors and government engineers, then all hell break lose.

It's not right ... ordering the police to arrest whomever he doesn't like. I am not even sure the sanctimonous Mr Simeon Nyachae ... has the authority to do that...

Mr Nyachae's reaction has been particularly disappointing and has only confirmed the highly intemperate nature of the man...

Does he honestly realize how funny he sounds when he threatens to resign from the cabinet because of somebody like Dr Mutua? Why doesn't he go ahead and do so anyway? Frankly, this was the kind of simple misunderstanding that could have been resolved without Mr. Nyachae having to throw a tantrum. It is beneath him, especially when the object is Dr Mutua.

Mr Nyachae's subsequent attempt to link the Magarini by-election is too bizarre and far-fetched to be taken seriously. "

Dr Alfred Mutua, the Government Spokesman had issued a statement regarding the shoddy road works on 18.05.2007
" It is disheartening to see that Government efforts to beautify Mombasa and to improve its infrastructure have been let down by shoddy construction of the roads in the city.

The Government is spending over 400 million shillings to rehabilitate the roads in Mombasa. Therefore, it is totally unacceptable that barely two months after construction of some roads, potholes have reappeared."
Author: jamaapoa
•Friday, May 25, 2007
Abraham Maslow in his classic theory of human motivation, observed that as human beings meet their basic needs, they seek to satisfy successive 'higher needs' that occupy a set hierarchy. What that means, in simple terms, is that people are never satisfied. We are always seeking a higher 'high'. Quite hopeless if you ask me.

It is for the same reason that management gurus tell us that money is a poor motivator. In extrapolation, there is nothing that beats the disillusionment of success. After a trivia challenge at Longonot, you get psyched to conquer Mt Kenya. As soon as you are at the Batian peak you desire the Mt. Kilimanjaro challenge. This continues until you get to the peak of Mt. Everest. This may go on until you realise that you want more than the world can give.


In the Maslow's need hierarchy theory, I am always surprised that sex is a basic need. I thought it can always wait until later as per all the campaigns that have been drummed into my rebellious head. 'True love waits', 'Nimechill', 'SeINO (Say No) Sex is not Oxygen' , 'No Ringing No Dinging' and such. In the wikipedia article, excretion is also listed as a basic physiological need. Nairobi city council should know that and give the men who like watering their flower beds a break?

At the peak of the pyramid is the self-actualization level. This is where one's full potential is exercised after all other needs are satisfied. Very few get to this level and none get past this unless they burst out of their mortal shells. I see it as a godly state, the satisfaction of being beyond most human problems. At this stage people get consumed by a desire to live a legacy, to be respected, revered and to some extent worshipped by other human beings. It is a culmination of all that is vain and a push to transcend negative karma. There is a shared notion that service to humanity, Mother Teresa style, is the best and most content way to be self-actualized.

These are the thoughts that ran through my mind as I read Esther Passaris' two-page newspaper advert of her new found vocation. Despite her controversial fight to maintain a monopoly in street lighting, her intentions in poverty eradication are good and her cause need to be supported. Hopefully this is not a public sympathy whipping gimmick.

Nobel laureate professor Wangari Maathai
literally ran up the Maslow pyramid. She is well maintaining her success in everything environmental currently through her one billion trees campaign mainly sponsored by UNEP. The campaign has received overwhelming support from all over the world barely six months after its launch. The target is to plant at least one billion trees worldwide in 2007. She is a good example of how to have a purpose and passion in life.

In the same note, Kenyan papers have been running full page ads by a foundation called Mohamed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum Foundation a youth-funding foundation aimed at building a new generation of qualified world class leaders in the region in all sectors: government, private and civil society.

But as my professor used to say, there is no free lunch. All these people seek a return, a reward for their efforts. Not necessarily monetary. It could be fame, self-redemption or a lasting legacy. At its highest is a better after-life for those who believe in one.
Author: jamaapoa
•Monday, May 21, 2007
I have been receiving numerous insistent calls from a former classmate. We haven't met for years. He wanted us to meet urgently. When I get such calls I always insist on the agenda since I am suspicious of old mates who have found this urgency to contact me to do business.

It is worse when the meeting venue proposed is in downtown Nairobi and the caller has no specific job other than being in 'juakali' somewhere in Kirinyaga road. After ignoring the meeting requests for some months, I got another call last week from a former schoolmate, same school as the other one too. He is also in 'jua kali' . On more questioning these two former pals look like they work together in the whatever that they do.

Last weekend I travelled to the village and chanced to attend a funeral of a young guy who "died mysteriously" in Nairobi. He was rumoured to be in the hawking business though his means and lifestyle suggested some regular flow of golden eggs.

That is where I learnt that, there is a group of my former mates that have ganged up into a gang that extorts money by hook or crook. The young guy who died, according to the villagers, was a member of that gang whose presumed members were also present in the ceremony. I had a hard time letting myself off their hook during the burial. What I consider a 'chilling' though veiled message was delivered "Umekataa kututafutia kazi, sawa tu, tutajitafutia". The villagers, in whispers, have this well kept suspicion that the said gang also belongs to the dreaded cult that is spreading terror within Nairobi and its environs.

Another pal later told me in addition to the reported kidnappings of children for ransom by the dreaded Mungiki sect, there is more. Gainfully employed persons are being blackmailed to be extorted monetary. Businessmen were roped in ages ago.

A pal whom you haven't heard from for years, and is a sect member initiates contact with you. Jobless and living poorly, he starts by borrowing small amounts here and there. This builds to you giving him money for survival with no borrowing intent. Within this time, they get to know where you live, work, where you hang out and your close pals. This graduates to blackmail where every month you are expected to 'cough out' something to them. Dare you report or fail to give them money, they know where your old folks or loved ones are, a fact they keep reminding you. Obviously, they don't intend to one day call on them to say hello if you give them up or fail to meet their demands.

As reported in the press, those who have dared to report to the police about children kidnapping are "well" advised by the police to comply to be at peace. This sect means "business" and are oathed to it!


As for the nagging calls, I had to change my number, though I know its just a matter of time before they catch up. He could be genuine about the meeting but I don't want to take chances. I am extremely paranoid.

Kenyans have a reason to fear and be paranoid of this sect. Who will save us? The more force that is being exerted on the Mungiki by the police the more ruthless they are becoming. What is the winning formula to the Mungiki war? Where can Kenya get more than a million jobs to gainfully employ these youths and keep them busy from barbaric tendencies?


Author: jamaapoa
•Thursday, May 17, 2007

{JP expecting…}


I was watching ‘Promised Land’ last Sunday after channel hopping for a while and my remote landed on Citizen TV. Of late I find it hard to get a good TV programme I can watch especially when I arrive home early and feel like watching TV. On many occasions, after 9PM news, I am a ‘cabbage’; my eyes and tired mind cannot allow me to be a couch potato and watch the more interesting programmes that come after 9 o’clock news except on Mondays when I watch ‘Invasion’ on NTV. Other days, when I am not sleepy, I have to stay late trying to finish up some moonlighting project report.


Talking of Citizen, the TV station is getting more limelight than before. Citizen poached leading presenters from KTN like Catherine Kasavuli, Swaleh Mdoe and Louis Otieno in April. It also went for Ephy Hunja of NTV. Inclusion of captivating (hint: male perspective) news anchors like Kanze Dena of KBC and an “Adhiambo C” called Belinda Obura (though none beats NTV’s Penina Karibe in Male Attention Disorder-MAD) has given the station fans more variety. Citizen has surely stopped crawling and may soon be walking steady. Since the poaching, there has been good progress with upgrading the Citizen reporters from Windows 98 to Windows 2000, yet to get to XP status. Poor reporters nearly aborted the Citizen rebirth.


MaDemon: “JP you are MAD! By the way have you noticed the way Penina caresses her ring finger when presenting the weather forecast? I know you have ideas. Any expectations?”

JP: “Get behind me satan, I wonna blog”


Apart from for the dull rift valley mural / painting (not sure) backdrop and amateurish camera close-up that leaves one staring at the presenters’ skin pores, all looks bright for Citizen. Catherine Kasavuli is not as beautiful as KTN airwaves had made her and this is bad for Kasavuli die hards. It could be that Citizen buys makeup from Kirinyaga road! Nevertheless, I find it hard to miss Citizen’s prime time business news since it has a section where they interview investment professionals on NSE activity for the day. However they should cast the net wider and should not rely only on Tsavo Securities Agents and Old Mutual professionals. Before this interview section, I had nearly forgotten that share prices are also affected by such investment turns like Ex-Dividend, Cum-Div, Ex-All, Cum-All and other “ex-cums”.


MaDemon: “Now this gonna be a long post, not meeting my expectations”

{JP egotistically ignores MaDemon and continues…}


In the mentioned TV series, Rusell Greene goes to a new town with his family. They live poorly in a trailer. One day while at the beach, a small girl drowns and the man is the only one able to locate her position in the water when the search begins. He performs mouth to mouth resuscitation and the girl ‘resurrects’. The residents take this as a healing miracle and build huge expectations of the man’s ability to heal. When the town press later follows up with the stranger, he disowns the incident as a miracle. He reveals that he was able to trace the girl’s position by observing the movement of the small ripples and waves on the surface of the water. The residents however staunchly believe it is a miracle.


A woman sick with cancer is one culprit who abandons her doctor’s prescription to pursue the stranger’s prayers and a kiss-akin to the mouth to mouth resuscitation. She feels alright after the kiss and the news about her healing spreads all over building more expectations. She however deteriorates later and the paparazzi are on the miracle working newcomer in their global-custom unearthing ugly things about the family, turning the residents praise into wrath. The lady is later hospitalized and eventually dies.


The stranger and his family are blamed for misleading the public about his healing powers and accepting gifts and money in exchange for healing favours. He loses his job and the rest of the family is emotionally harassed by the town residents. All these expectations arose from an unplanned drowning saving incident and the stranger’s belief in angels, not that the stranger purposed to masquerade as a miracle worker.


MaDemon: “Oh my, the post is getting longer, get to the point JP”

{JP continues…}


I have been wondering, how we manage the expectations of others on us and our own expectations on ourselves. Can we really get away with “it is my life; I will live it the way I want”? When do we get to have courage to say no to undue expectations of others on us? I have come to realize that saying ‘No’ is not an easy thing to do.


“You have very good grades, you will take medicine (ha ha ha, read ‘pursue medical career’); our family will do with a doctor in our midst”, I had to say no to my parents career expectations. Quite sad coz they believe that there is a lot of wasted energy in the trivia things I do to make a living. Energy that would have been used to raise our once-trodden family stakes higher in the village through referrals: “jp, so and so is sick, go see him”, “my son is a doctor at Nairobi Hospital”, “jp my eldest son studied medicine at the University of Nairobi” how about that for a family-name redeemer!


MaDemon: “JP, you got to cut this beating around the bush, it is not going to burn like Moses’ by beating around it!”

JP: “Ok, I will skip the other stories”


To manage expectations better, at the bare minimum, I keep reminding myself to;


1. Learn to say “No” to undue demands from others. This has been the hardest since I usually go extra marathons to accommodate and please other people. Too nice to say no?


2. Set realistic goals for myself and review them from time to time. Over-ambitious is not a new vocabulary, I go for the galaxies and end up landing on the moon of procrastination.


3. Perform averagely during probation periods, just enough to get a confirmation letter. In my first job, I nearly killed myself over-performing and when the confirmation letter came, thereafter, it was an anti-climax for my employer. Hence, I go for average performance and on confirmation steadily improve on my targets. I do understand that average performance is a risk in itself, but seeing the “managed satisfaction” of my employer as I grow from strength to strength later on is thrilling. I am in control.


4. Define the scope of any business consultancy I undertake, not leaving it open-ended. This calls for use of number 1 since most clients want you do their accounts, draft a quality assurance policy, buy furniture, clean the floor and serve tea while you are being paid to write a business plan to be submitted to the SME Solutions Center. By the way, the IFAC funded organization is running a business plan writing competition.


5. I am still expanding this list. I have been Googling and making debates among pals in order to get a better perspective of this topic. Is it really my life or do others have a fair pie of it? Should I just ‘float through life’ or should I expect something out of myself? If the answer is yes to these questions, then to what extent should these expectations be? How do you manage expectations?


MaDemon: “Yaani JP you had to be that lengthy just to ask that?”

JP: Yap Imagine! Number 5 is the epitome of my post, Go to hell MaDemon!”

MaDemon: “I am outta here, will be expecting you down there”



Author: jamaapoa
•Thursday, May 10, 2007
I am barely recovering from the Fifth of May 2007 Saturday morning news thunderbolt. Coincidentally, KQ flight 507 crashed on 5/07 date. A lot of questions but I will leave that to the investigators to tell us, hopefully.

The theme of death and human mortality has silently featured in my blog posts, a subtle background drive. I am sure it is a way of coping with my losses, some of which I have taken rather long to recover from. This tragedy in more ways than just being a Kenyan has put a toil on my mind and heart, I am in grief.


My sincere condolences to all those who lost their loved ones and to the KQ community. The way Kenya Airways MD, Titus Naikuni and his crisis management team have so far handled the crash despite the bottlenecks in Cameroon is laudable.


Paul the preacher once said that a time is coming when we will victoriously look at death in the eye and ask it/him/her ‘Oh death where is your victory, oh death where is your sting?’ in retrospect to the agony and heartache it caused us when we were on earth. That is a Christian viewpoint. When death strikes, anything that gives us hope and consoles our hearts that we are not as helpless as death trauma constantly reminds us, is welcome.


I also take this opportunity to express my distaste to a thread that ran on Stocks Kenya about KQ share price. While KQ will have to deal with business consequences that may arise from such a tragedy, it is unfortunate that “junk” investors would run such a thread on a Kenyan site hours after such a tragedy.


This is no different from a businessman who runs to an accident scene where his driver and delivery van are involved. He then starts concentrating on the condition and recoverability of his van unmindful of his van driver trapped inside.


Either way KQ is strong with strong business fundamentals which investors should research on or rely on qualified investment advice, not the junk tips and rumour tendencies that run on blogs and Kenyan forums. I am not in any way demonizing them, they have helped increase stock market awareness which is good for Kenya. However everyone (especially potential investors) should take what is posted on these sites with a pinch of salt.


In an UNRELATED loss, FarmGal pole sana. My thoughts and prayers are with you and the rest of your family.