Friday 18 November 2011

Turmoil in Machakos School

Return of turmoil at 
Machakos School
By Nitram Iedn

MACHAKOS School was temporarily closed town forcing the more than 200 KCSE candidates to take their papers from outside the school.
It is probably the first time in the history of the school founded in 1950 that an examination class is send home during examinations.
 The closure also affected over 600 students in Forms One to Three who had to go home and report after the Form Four Class had left, underlining some rare loathing that is yet to be analyzed and categorized
The candidates were ordered out of the school after a meeting chaired by Machakos DEO Mr.Richard Midambo following disturbances that saw windowpanes at the Assembly Hall broken by riotous boys whose grievances were not understandable, an act the hints at raw carnage in school.
 Police recovered a toy pistol, machetes and rubber whips from the fourth formers.
 Midambo said the rest of the students in forms One, Two and Three were sent home until  last batch of the candidates with sit for their last paper and leave the school.
 The return of turmoil to Machakos School is an imperfection to a peaceful stint enjoyed at the School.It is an incident that took many by surprise, given that the School enjoyed a peaceful year since the posting of Mr Masaku Muiya as Chief Principal to lead the institution.
 After the turmoil begun, the Form Four boys were escorted back to the school under tight security to go and sit for the remaining examination paper the next day.
 Acting OCPD P.N.Wambugu confirmed the toy pistol and the whips were found in a bag inside the dinning hall after smoking the students out.
“It is difficult to establish the owner of the bag now but we have launched investigations into the incident”,he said.
 “There were no grievances from the form four students. They only wanted to protect the bad things they intended to do”,he said.
 Eye witnesses said some of the form four students were spotted in Machakos town during the day and were heard singing solidarity songs in readiness for mayhem. Nevertheless, hundreds of students from the other classes streamed out of the school that evening to avoid being harmed by the Form Fours.
 They spend the night in unknown places in Machakos Town where they were seen loitering, dressed in school uniform, T- Shirts, some carrying books in their hands.
 Sources indicated that the decision to send the boys home and scatter the form fours was reached at the advise of the District Security Committee after it analysed evidence and arsenal found with the Form Four class,  “ They seem to have a mission unaccomplished and we will not avail them the opportunity to cause mayhem in the school” said a security source.
It is also clear that the security team assessed the situation and concluded they could not guarantee security for the students given the prevailing circumstances.
 The form four students spent the night in the cold outside the local DCs offices  under armed guard after the police herded them there following the aborted riots.

During the night incident, the fourth formers broke glass widows using machetes and sticks, forcing the police to move a in and arrested them.

The discovery of a toy pistol, rubber whips and the machetes and an assortment of crude weapons remained a mystery to the school community, security agents and the towns residents, stressing that a criminal assault was on the cards.

Mr Muiya said a section of the form four candidates sneaked into the school and stole books belonging to other students.

The DC said posters advertising a “leaver” disco at a club in the show ground were recovered in the school. Police are investigating the origin of a text short message send to the Principal during the skirmishes.

“The white man cannot afford to erode our culture, the traditions of Machakos school must be kept pure. Military training is good for their future”, read the message sent to The Anchor by Mr Muiya. There was no immediate interpretation of the message, but there is no pretence that a perverted mind engineered the text. It seems the message was generated after the school administration remained firm that any form of hooliganism would not be tolerated. The School has had a history of annual lawless that was stopped last year after the posting of Mr Muiya

It is possible that the perverts were referring to this past lawlessness as the school’s ‘culture’ since the Form Four Class has endured riots since they were in Form I, four years ago.”It has been the school’s culture for the departing students to either beat up their juniors or cause damage on the school infrastructure as a departure signal” said a source that refused to be named. Reports indicate that the students planned to ‘discipline’ their juniors and destroy property before leaving.

Mr Muiya says one of his tasks in the school is to rid the 1950 institution of this negative attitude of destruction and instill a sense of positive thinking, that the students must leave the institution better than they found it since it has a long tradition of producing leaders.


Kitui's Mineral wealth

Kitui County's range of 
mineral wealth is unveiled
 By Boniface Mulu

A policy consultant for the Kenyan government, Mr. Peter Temi Mutia, has said that it has been established that the Kitui County has one of the biggest quantities of mineral deposits in the world.

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KONZA Ranch flexed its muscles, forcing the National Environment Management Authority(NEMA) into action towards the subdivision of the ranch.

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Battle for Coal: Who will benefit in Kitui?

Battle lines drawn over
Coal mining in Mui Basin
By Martin Masai
 
OVER 30,000 families face displacement in the Mui basin as the rush for 400 million tones of Coal in the Kitui County begins.

Syokimau demolitions: Exposing the rot

Syokimau demolitions: Mavoko land woes... 

Exposed!
 
By Anchor Reporters


The demolitions of hundreds of homes at Syokimau area of Athi River District in Machakos County  could just be a tip of the iceberg in the region, The Anchor reveals
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Now you can read about the issues that define life in Lower Eastern Province- the area covered by the three Counties of Kitui, Makueni and Machakos.

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Opening New Frontiers
in Kenya's Journalism


Now you can read about the issues that define life in Lower Eastern Province- the area covered by the three Counties of Kitui, Makueni and Machakos.

The Anchor Oct 2011: Ngilu- Kalonzo duels

Mrs Ngilu at Ndovoini Borehole in Kangundo
Ngilu, Kalonzo hold swords aloft
By Nguma Kitone


Water and Irrigation minister Charity Ngilu has told her enemies to brace for a bruising political battle with her in future.  “I want to tell those fighting me politically to be prepared because I will soon take them head on’, cautioned the Kitui Central MP.

The Anchor october 2011: Machakos Liquor Court

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MACHAKOS  District Liquor Licensing  Court announced a rejection of 196 bar license applications out of the 406 gazetted ones.

The Anchor October 2011: Kanziku Residents seek to restrain firms


Kitui residents
fight cement firms

Residents of Kanziku/ Mathima location in Mutumo district,Kitui County have moved to court to stop several mining companies from prospecting in the area.

Lawyers Onesmus Makau and Bigambo Abucheri represented the petitioners who also want the Respondents restrained from evicting them from the land in question. The petitioners sought interim orders from the High Court in Machakos stopping  the respondents and government agencies from  demolishing, transferring or in anyway alienating the suit premises pending the hearing and determination of the petition.

But judge Kihara Karanja declined to grant the prayed orders arguing there was no sufficient evidence to proof claims of harassment and intended forceful eviction of the petitioners by the respondents.

Judge Kihara gave the petitioner’s led lawyer Makau the option and liberty of seeking for more evidence to support the claims.

The respondents include Athi River Mining,Devki Cement and Steel Industry,East African Portland Cement Company,Criss Cross Company Limited and Bamburi Cement Company Limited.

Others are Ministry of Mining and Natural Resources, the Attorney General,National Environment and Management Authority,Kitui County Council and the Chief for Mathima Location.In their application,the lawyers for the petitioners claimed respondents one to five as listed above had threatened to evict their clients form their land.

They argued the petitioners will be rendered landless, homeless and would suffer gross violation of their inalienable human rights.In his affidavit, Solomon Malyunga said the residents of the affected areas will be greatly prejudiced and stand to suffer irreparable loss and damages if the five cement companies proceeded with the mining activities and enforcing their eviction notices.As the court matter rolled out. residents of the coal-rich Mui basin in Kitui county were laying tough conditions they want coal industry investors to meet before commencing mining.

This is part of positioning themselves to engage positively within the 500 square Kilometer coal belt nominated the Mui Mines and Minerals Company Limited to negotiate with ministry of Energy and would-be investors.During a coal delegates meeting held at the Mathuki Secondary School in Mui division of the Mwingi East district, Malili Ranch lawyer Erick Kyalo Mutua was named to represent the Mui Coal Basin Community. He is mandated to negotiate, make inquiries and communicate on behalf of the coal-belt community.The belt has an estimated 400 million tons of coal deposits and straddles Kitui and Mwingi districts. At the meeting, the community demanded that the ministry of Energy recognizes the community as an indispensable stakeholder in coal mining business. The meeting chaired by retired Assistant Commissioner of Police Charles Mukungi resolved that it must be involved in every step of the way in the planning and execution of the mining process. It remains to be seen how the lobby with engage the investors in vies of the many cases that are yet to be resolved in court. The meeting also demanded that the coal extraction factory be set up within the Mui basin and offer 90 per cent of jobs to locals. They insisted that the community should be entitled to 80 per cent of the royalties derived from the mineral resource.


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