Author: Kenya West

  • COVID-19: UN Predicts 300,000 Deaths In Africa From The Pandemic

    COVID-19: UN Predicts 300,000 Deaths In Africa From The Pandemic

    The COVID-19 pandemic will likely kill at least 300,000 Africans and risks pushing 29 million into extreme poverty, the U.N. Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA) said on Friday, calling for a $100 billion safety net for the continent.

    Africa’s 54 countries have so far reported fewer than 20,000 confirmed cases of the disease, just a fraction of the more than two million cases reported globally. But the World Health Organization warned on Thursday that Africa could see as many as 10 million cases in three to six months.

    “To protect and build towards our shared prosperity at least $100 billion is needed to immediately resource a health and social safety net response,” the UNECA report stated.

    UNECA is also backing a call by African finance ministers for an additional $100 billion in stimulus, which would include a halt to all external debt service.

    The agency modelled four scenarios based on the level of preventive measures introduced by African governments.

    In the total absence of such interventions, the study calculated over 1.2 billion Africans would be infected and 3.3 million would die this year. Africa has a total population of around 1.3 billion.

    Most of Africa, however, has already mandated social distancing measures, ranging from curfews and travel guidelines in some countries to full lockdowns in others.

    Yet even its best-case scenario, where governments introduce intense social distancing once a threshold of 0.2 deaths per 100,000 people per week is reached, Africa would see 122.8 million infections, 2.3 million hospitalisations and 300,000 deaths.

    Combating the disease will be complicated by the fact that 36% of Africans have no access to household washing facilities, and the continent counts just 1.8 hospital beds per 1,000 people. France, in comparison, has 5.98 beds per 1,000 people.

    Africa’s young demographic – nearly 60% of the population is below the age of 25 – should help stave off the disease. On the other hand, 56 per cent of the urban population is concentrated in overcrowded slums and many people are also vulnerable due to HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malnutrition.

    Africa imports 94% of its pharmaceuticals, the report said, noting that at least 71 countries have banned or limited exports of certain supplies deemed essential to fight the disease.

    “In a best-case scenario … $44 billion would be required for testing, personal protective equipment, and to treat all those requiring hospitalisation,” it stated.

    However, that is money Africa does not have as the crisis could also shrink the continent’s economy by up to 2.6%.

    “We estimate that between 5 million and 29 million people will be pushed below the extreme poverty line of $1.90 per day owing to the impact of COVID-19,” the report said.

    Nigeria alone will lose between $14 billion and $19.2 billion in revenues from oil exports this year. And the prices of other African commodities exports have plummeted as well.

    Lockdowns in Europe and the United States also imperil Africa’s $15 billion in annual textile and apparel exports as well as tourism, which accounts for 8.5% of Africa’s GDP.

  • Report: How Somalia Intelligence Has Been Aiding Al Shabaab Attacks In Kenya

    Report: How Somalia Intelligence Has Been Aiding Al Shabaab Attacks In Kenya

    KDF’s intelligence is following leads over a report that the Somalia’s National Intelligence and Security Agency has been conspiring with Al Shabaab militia group to coordinate attacks against Kenya.

    The report says that NISA has been working with Al Shabaab to defeat Africa Union Mission In Somalia(AMISOM) operations in an effort seem to be derailing the peace efforts that the union has been putting up.

    In what is seen as a great betrayal, the report largely quoted by Kenyan media, top NISA officials most of whom were trained by Kenya security agencies are colluding with the militia by sharing top secret information between the two countries in helping the terror group launch attacks on KDF and on Kenyans.

    al Shabaab received $1.5 million through a cheque signed by a senior NISA official by the name Abdullahi Kulane.

    A senior NISA official has been marked as the main contact guy with the militia group. He’s been tasked with providing financial assistance, handles the necessary logistics like provision of arms. He’s at the center of leaking confidential military secrets to the Shabaab.

    “There are communications between the intelligence officials and militants directing them where to hit and when.” A Kenyan official told the Standard.

    It is a great stab in the back for Kenya having been in the forefront to attain a long lasting peace for the warring country.

    “Some of these senior officers are providing highly confidential security information on Kenyan security agencies and personnel to al Shabaab to facilitate the militant group’s targeting of Kenyan security personnel…NISA also deployed some of their telecommunication jamming systems to compromise Safaricom’s networks in Mandera and other adjacent areas in a bid to facilitate Al Shabaab operations in the area,” the confidential report says.

    There has been tension in the recent past especially along the borders between Kenya and Somalia that proliferated to Mandera from the Balad Hawo and Dolow towns of Somalia.

  • The WHO Wants Governments To Crackdown On Alcohol Consumption During Covid-19 Outbreak

    The WHO Wants Governments To Crackdown On Alcohol Consumption During Covid-19 Outbreak

    The World Health Organization said that consuming alcohol raises your risk of contracting COVID-19 and will also make matters worse if you do get infected. They are asking governments around the world to limit their citizens access to alcohol for the duration of the pandemic.

    “Alcohol compromises the body’s immune system and increases the risk of adverse health outcomes,” according to the WHO’s European website. The site also note that Europe has a particularly high rate of alcohol consumption.

    One of the WHO’s concerns is that alcohol consumption can aggravate preexisting mental health conditions. It can also increase the likelihood of risk-taking behaviour and in some cases lead to violence, which is a particular concern for the countries that have brought in social distancing measures that force their populations to stay at home.

    The WHO also set out to clear up the “dangerous myth that consuming high-strength alcohol can kill” the coronavirus, publishing a fact sheet to disprove it. They say that alcohol contributes to about 3 million death annually and that those numbers are likely to increase with the pandemic ramping up consumption.

    “Therefore, people should minimize their alcohol consumption at any time, and particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic,” the website said.

    Conversely, in the United States, people are buying in bulk. Alcohol sales have gone up 22 percent for the week ending March 28 when compared to the same week a year ago. There has also been an increase of Americans drinking at home.

    WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus spoke about ways to limit stress and anxiety during quarantine last month. “It’s normal to feel stressed, confused and scared during a crisis. Talking to people you know and trust can help,” said Tedros. “And try not to read or watch too much news if it makes you anxious. Get your information from reliable sources once or twice a day.”

    “During this difficult time, it’s important to continue looking after your physical and mental health. This will not only help you in the long term, it will also help you fight COVID-19 if you get it,” said Tedros.

  • Bill And Melinda Gates Commits Additional $150M To Help Fight Covid-19 After Trump Pulled Out WHO Funding

    Bill And Melinda Gates Commits Additional $150M To Help Fight Covid-19 After Trump Pulled Out WHO Funding

    The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation on Wednesday rolled out a series of expanded measures including an additional 150 million U.S. dollars to combat COVID-19 globally.

    According to the announcement, the added funds will finance the development of diagnostics, therapeutics, and vaccines, as well as new efforts to provide partners in Africa and South Asia with resources to scale their COVID-19 detection, treatment, and isolation efforts, the announcement said.

    Furthermore, the foundation will also leverage a portion of its 2.5 billion Strategic Investment Fund, which uses a suite of financial tools to address market failures and incentivize private enterprise to develop affordable and accessible health products, the foundation said.

    In announcing the funding, the foundation called on world leaders to unite in a global response to COVID-19 to ensure equitable access to diagnostics, treatments, and vaccines.

    “We have a responsibility to meet this global crisis with global solidarity,” said Gates Foundation co-chair Melinda Gates.

    “The world community must understand that so long as COVID-19 is somewhere, we need to act as if it were everywhere. Beating this pandemic will require an unprecedented level of international funding and cooperation,” said foundation Co-chair Bill Gates.

    The foundation identified four priority areas for investment including accelerating virus detection, protecting the most vulnerable, minimizing social and economic impact and developing products for a sustained response, and cooperating with national governments and international organizations such as the World Health Organization and the United Nations Children’s Fund.

    The newly announced funding builds on the 100 million dollars the foundation has committed to date to support the global response.

  • Report: Kenya’s Tea Sector Is Undermined By The Predatory Behavior Of KTDA And It’s Subsidiaries

    Report: Kenya’s Tea Sector Is Undermined By The Predatory Behavior Of KTDA And It’s Subsidiaries

    The long-awaited tea reforms in the tea industry have started taking shape with the government outlining the various regulatory and administrative reforms it intends to undertake in the sector. They include the audit and tracing of deductions of money belong to smallholder tea growers over the last 10 years, evaluation of the management of the KTDA holding and reserve accounts, evaluate and document losses occasioned by the pooled management of farmers’ earning by KTDA including cash held banks and monies held and/or lost to banks in distress, assess the application and use of public and farmers assets by KTDA.

    Peter Munya the Cabinet Secretary Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock, Fisheries and Cooperatives outlined the proposed reforms when he launched the revised draft of tea regulations. The CS says the regulations are submitted for public consultations for a period of fourteen (14) days from today. The regulations shall be available on the websites of both the Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock, Fisheries and Cooperatives and the Agriculture and Food Authority (AFA). A hotline has also been provided at AFA for purposes of providing any clarifications. The Ministry shall only be receiving written Memorandums from members of the public due to inability to hold any public gatherings in the wake of Ministry of Health guidelines on social distancing among other measures in the management of COVID-19 pandemic.

    Munya says the good performance of the tea sector is a central public policy issue because approximately 70% of tea production in the country is undertaken by small scale tea farmers. The challenges facing the tea sector, if not addressed he says have the potential to recreate the problems faced by the coffee sector over two decades ago that led to neglect and/or abandonment of coffee bushes by farmers and the prevailing low coffee production in the country. He adds that the real threats to smallholder tea farming and the macro-economy have therefore created an urgent need for proportionate Government intervention in the sector in the manner more particularly advocated in the Presidential Directive issued on 14th January 2020 to overhaul the sector.

    During the launch, CS Munya identified the problems that need to be addressed in the sector some which he says need urgent intervention once the regulations come into effect. “The Government has therefore contextualized the challenges facing the tea sector and more particularly the tea farmers into three broad categories namely a dysfunctional tea auction system; control and predatory behaviour of Kenya Tea Development Authority (KTDA) and its subsidiaries in the tea value chain; and low and unstable tea prices,” says Munya. “Moreover, the tea sector is undermined by the manipulation and predatory behaviour of KTDA and its subsidiaries on the value chain. KTDA which supplies over 60% of the tea traded at the auction has consistently used its market power, dominance and influence to undermine the auction, curtail price discovery and exploit the vulnerabilities of smallholder tea growers,” he adds.

    On the tea auction, Munya says it is “a dysfunctional and inefficient tea auction system characterized by lack of transparency, accountability and competition; and prone to manipulation, capture, insider trading and cartelization by value chain players leading to ineffective price discovery, low prices and poor earnings to tea farmers. The structural character of the tea auction in Mombasa in terms management, governance and decision making processes is that it is a club where all value chain players, that have a direct commercial interest in the outcome of the auction process run the auction. This is a serious conflict of interest that predisposes the auction process to capture by vested interests, insider trading, price-fixing and other malpractices.

    On the issue of prices, the CS says tea farmers have been plagued by a twin problem of low prices and price volatility. He says while the low prices have eroded direct earnings by tea growers, tea price volatility has led to unstable cash flow for tea farmers.

    Regulatory Interventions

    To address these challenges, Munya says the following regulatory remedies have been proposed for implementation immediately these regulations come into effect:

    • All teas produced in Kenya for the export market in shall within two (2) months after coming into effect of these regulations be sold exclusively through the auction process.
    • Henceforth, sale by private treaty commonly known as Direct Sales Overseas is outlawed
    • Any teas that are not sold during a particular auction shall be re-listed for sale during the subsequent auction;
    • All registered tea auction organizers shall establish an electronic trading platform for tea auction. However, a tea auction organizer existing before the commencement of these regulations shall establish and migrate tea trading to an electronic trading platform within two (2) months from the commencement date of the regulations;
    • All tea buyers shall henceforth submit to the Regulatory Authority (AFA) a performance bond in the form of a bank guarantee equivalent to 10% of the estimated value of the tea they intend to buy to underwrite commercial risks associated with buyers who fail and/or refuse to pay in full for the tea bids they win at the auction;
    • All buyers shall pay in full for all teas they win at the auction before they take custody and lift the tea for export
    • All factory Limited Companies (Tea Factories) shall henceforth register and enlist with the Authority and auction organizer to participate at the tea auction directly;
    • A registered tea broker shall offer brokerage services to a maximum of fifteen (15) factory limited companies. Brokers that are already in operation shall continue with their business uninterrupted until the tenure of their registration is due for renewal;
    • All monies from the sale of tea at the auction shall be remitted directly to Factory Limited Accounts within fourteen (14) days from the auction date less only the agreed commission for tea brokers;
    • Factory Limited Companies shall within thirty (30) days from receipt of proceeds from sale of tea pay tea growers at least 50% of the payment for green leaf delivered every month;
    • The balance due to tea growers shall be paid by the factory limited companies within the financial or calendar year as shall be agreed with the growers

    In order to address the challenges associated with the lopsided nature of the existing management agreement framework with Factory Limited Companies, the following regulatory interventions are proposed:

    • Any management agency agreement with a factory limited company shall be for a tenure not exceeding 5 years;
    • The remuneration for any management service shall not exceed two per cent 2% of the value of tea sold per year;
    • Company secretary services shall be excluded from the services offered by management service providers;
    • Factory Limited Companies shall either recruit in-house company secretaries or outsource the service
    • A director or affiliate of a management service provider shall not serve as a director or have a direct commercial relationship with a factory limited company they serve

    Short to Medium Term Policy and Administrative Interventions

    To address other systemic challenges facing the tea sector, the Government proposes to engage professional consultants with the necessary experience in the tea industry to provide technical advice on further necessary policy and administrative reforms to improve efficiency and productivity in the value chain. In particular, the following interventions are proposed in this respect:

    • Undertake a technical study to define a clear migration path and governance framework from the current tea auction structure to an efficient, competitive and responsive Commodities Exchange for tea. In particular, the study will provide technical advice on the governance framework to deal the inherent weakness of the current auction system that includes predisposition to conflict of interest, capture by vested interests, insider trading, dominance in the auction market and ineffective price discovery system.
    • Undertake a study to evaluate the impact of KTDA commercial behaviour on the entire value including and more particularly the earnings to smallholder tea growers. In particular, the study would undertake a historic audit and tracing of deductions of money belong to smallholder tea growers over the last 10 years, evaluate the management of the KTDA holding and reserve accounts, evaluate and document losses occasioned by the pooled management of farmers’ earning by KTDA including cash held banks and monies held and/or lost to banks in distress, assess the application and use of public and farmers assets by KTDA, evaluate the risks associated with the sale of tea by private treaty by KTDA and losses that farmers have incurred due to this arrangement; evaluate the extent of application of farmers’ resources in the initial and on-going capitalization of KTDA subsidiaries and value of these subsidiaries to the tea growers among other considerations.
    • Undertake a study on the setup, resourcing and management of a price stabilization fund for tea growers and develop a framework for implementation of a sustainable Minimum Guaranteed Return (MGR) for tea farmers; and
    • Establishment of a steering committee to oversee, monitor and evaluate implement these policy, regulatory and administrative reforms and report to the cabinet secretary.

    This article originally appeared on kilimo

  • 12 Chiefs Run For Dear Life As Armed Brewer Turns On Them

    12 Chiefs Run For Dear Life As Armed Brewer Turns On Them

    Drama unfolded on Tuesday in Bomet when the ‘hunter literally turned the hunted’ as 12 chiefs, who had raided a chang’aa den, were forced to run for dear life from an armed brewer.

    The episode happened at Kwenik- ap- Ilet village in Ndarawetta Location where area Chief Zephaniah Koech had sought reinforcement from his colleagues to arrest a notorious brewer.

    Matters turned dramatic as the chiefs, who were reinforced by Nyumba Kumi members, busted the brewer who was serving his patrons with the liquor to quench their thirst following the closure of bars and restaurants as a precaution to enforce social distancing to combat covid-19.

    Witnesses said the cornered brewer emerged from his hut armed with a bow and arrows which forced the entire lot of administrators to scamper for safety into nearby tea bushes.
    The local village elder could not escape fast enough and was injured in the melee. It took reinforcement from the police to arrest the brewer who had held the administrators under siege for three hours.

    Police were nonetheless forced to engage in running battles as the machete-wielding brewer would not back down that easily.

    The brewer was however later overwhelmed and was nabbed as he attempted to cross a river.

    The culprit is expected to be arraigned in court to answer to various charges.

  • Masinde Muliro University Starts Production Of Anti-Covid-19 Chemicals

    Masinde Muliro University Starts Production Of Anti-Covid-19 Chemicals

    The Department of Pure and Applied Chemistry at Masinde Muliro University of Science and Technology has started production of hand washing soap, sanitisers, chlorine and disinfectants to boost the fight against Coronavirus in Kakamega County.

    The University’s Acting Vice Chancellor (VC) Prof. Solomon Shibairo said they are using the chemistry laboratory to produce over 1,000 litres of the various chemical solutions that would then be given to the county government for distribution to the residents.

    Prof Shibairo is however appealing to well-wishers to chip in to enable the university purchase reagents saying the institution has the capacity of producing over 2,000 litres of the solutions a day.

    The don highlighted the importance of devising homegrown solutions in combating the Covid-19 pandemic adding external assistance is at the moment unreliable.
    The VC added that the institution is collaborating with the county government to train health workers and training of trainers (TOTs) to ensure that the pandemic is contained.

    “We have formed a Covid-19 rapid response team consisting of teachers, students and other staff which is working closely with the county government to enhance surveillance and response across the county,” he stated.

    The university’s head of the Covid-19 response team, who doubles up as the Dean School of Nursing midwifery, Prof John Okoth said some of the institution’s facilities would be used as isolation centers.

    He also disclosed that a plan is underway to set aside a Covid-19 patients-only hospital to separate the suspected Coronavirus cases from the rest of patients.

  • KPA Staff Threatens To Paralyze Ports Operations As Covid-19 Infections Soars

    KPA Staff Threatens To Paralyze Ports Operations As Covid-19 Infections Soars

    Panic has gripped the Port of Mombasa following increased positive cases of Covid-19 at the Kilindini Harbour.

    The East Africa largest port has so far reported seven positive convid-19 cases out of a total of 38 in Mombasa County.

    Now the giant Dock Workers Union has threatened to disrupt operations at the port should the Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) fail to introduce further measures to protect workers against the deadly virus.

    The Union General Secretary, Simon Sang, claimed that KPA management has implemented only 30 per cent of the directives issued by the Ministry of Health to curb the spread of the novel coronavirus.

    The disease whose latest statistics shows that Kenya has 225 confirmed cases has already claimed two lives of KPA employees, while two other staff and three contracted cleaners working at the facility have been confirmed positive.

    “Workers are at risk. So far, the port alone accounts for over 30 per cent of the coronavirus cases in Mombasa County,” said Sang, while briefing the media, Wednesday.

    Sang want the management to introduce new measures to protect the workers and other port users.

    He lamented that social distancing at the port has not been fully adhered to, saying this must be addressed urgently.

    However, the acting KPA Managing Director (MD), Rashid Salim, defended the Authority, saying a raft of measures have been put in place to control the spread of the virus.

    Among them he said, is the introduction of on-line cargo documentation processes to facilitate customers to clear cargo electronically and decongest human traffic within the Port.

    Salim who was recently appointed acting MD after the resignation of Daniel Manduku said the Authority has put up 107 hand washing points with antiseptic soap and placed sanitiser dispensers at various areas.

    He noted that staff are also provided with face masks and that screen notices have been placed at all entries.

    “Fumigation has also been carried out, especially in offices occupied by staff found to be positive or suspected to have contracted the virus and plans are underway to extend this to cover the entire port,” said Salim.

    He also revealed surgical gowns have been acquired for clinical staff and those with close interaction with vessels such as pilots, security officers among others.

    There is fear that the number of positive Convid-19 cases at the port of Mombasa might rise significantly after the mass testing which is expected soon.

    However, Salim assured staff, local and international port users that no efforts shall be spared to ensure the port remains a safe working environment.

  • Siaya’s Covid-19 Victim Family Sues To Have His Body Exhumed And Accorded Decent Burial

    Siaya incident continues to take turns given the many questions that surrounds it. The family from the onset has been at loggerheads with the government over the manners in which the burial was held.

    The late KPA worker had passed away last Friday and later on found to have been as a result of Covid19. He would later be hurriedly buried on Sunday morning as the family was making a coffin to beat the deadline as outlined by the government.

    He was buried in a body bag in a shallow dug grave. The manner in which this was conducted ignited fire amongst many Kenyans and their leaders who said it was done without dignity to human life.

    Siaya Senator Orengo had instituted a legal team made of LSK Chairman Nelson Havi to look into the matter. It has now been confirmed that the son and of Siaya Covid-19 victim James Oyugi Onyango have sued to exhume body they’re also demand autopsy and decent burial.

    The family has reiterated that they were never involved in the burial arrangements and neither was there an autopsy done on the body to determine the real cause of his death.

  • Kilifi DG Saburi Finally Released From Jail

    Kilifi DG Saburi Finally Released From Jail

    Having spent more than 15 days behind bars, the Kilifi Deputy Governor Gideon Saburi is finally a free man after Mombasa court released him on a Sh200,000 cash bail or alternative of Sh500,000 bond

    The court directed him to self quarantine for 14 days, deposit all his travel documents and have no interaction with witnesses in the case.

    His lawyer Kithii has argued that there wasn’t any compelling reason to keep holding him given that he wasn’t at a flight risk. Kenya has since cancelled all international flights as a measure of curbing the transmission of the deadly Covid19 virus.

    Saburi is accused of breaching Section 28 (a) of the Public Health Act, which states that: “Any person who while suffering from any infectious disease, willfully exposes himself without proper precautions against spreading the said disease in any street, public place, shop, inn or public conveyance, or enters any public conveyance without previously notifying the owner, conductor or driver thereof that he is so suffering, shall be guilty of an offence and liable to a fine not exceeding thirty thousand shillings or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding three years or to both.”

    Through his lawyer, Saburi has denied ever having tested positive for the Covid19. However, according to the Prosecution, he was tested positive by KEMRI and later on negative according to medical documents tabled by his lawyer.

  • Muslims Issue Covid-19 Burial Protocol For Faithfuls

    Muslims Issue Covid-19 Burial Protocol For Faithfuls

    The National Muslim Covid-19 Response Team has initiated procedures of handling bodies of victims who die of coronavirus, and how their funeral prayers and burial should be conducted.

    Chairman of the Response Team, Prof. Muhammad Karama, said the team has also put in place a team of volunteers in Nairobi, Mombasa, Eldoret, Nakuru and Bungoma handle cases if victims who die from the virus.
    “The volunteers with appropriate personal protection equipment will provide assistance in the handling of the deceased cases and ensure that the bodies of Muslims are wrapped in white sheets and placed in a biodegradable sealed body bags before being transported to the burial areas,” said Prof. Karama.

    Speaking at a press briefing at the Jamia Mosque in Nairobi, Monday, attended and addressed by Imams, scholars and Muslim medical professionals, he said Muslims who die of COVID-19 will not be subjected to the ritual washing procedures in order to prevent infection and spread of the disease.

    “We appeal to Muslims throughout the country to adhere to the government directive to prevent the spread of Covid-19, and to avoid the ritual of washing of bodies of victims confirmed to have died of coronavirus,” said Karama.

    “In the event of a death caused by the virus, either at the hospital or at home, a team from the National Muslim Covid-19 Response Committee will be at hand to provide the necessary assistance regarding the handling of the bodies, transportation and burial procedures,” he said.

    Karama also called on Muslims to report all home deaths through the toll free number 719 for government assessment before the identified teams engage in the burial procedures.

    At the same time, Prof. Karama announced that a team of psychiatrists and psychologists has been put in place to provide counseling and psycho-social support to the families of the deceased.

    The Chairman is also coordinating with scholars and Imams in Mombasa while the Supreme Council of Kenya Muslims will play a coordinating role in ensuring that the information is cascaded to the counties.

    He said the response team is sensitizing the Muslim community in the country about the coronavirus pandemic, with emphasis on adherence to all precautionary measures put in place by the government in containing and fighting Covid-19.

    Karama added that various committees have been put in place to facilitate preparedness and management of the effects of the pandemic, and their role will include body handling, janazah (burial) welfare and resource mobilization, home based care, and psycho-socio support.

    The Chairman also urged the government to provide special consideration to Muslims to feed the less fortunate during the forthcoming holy month of Ramadhan which is due in less than two weeks.

    Prof. Karama said Muslims have already made arrangements on how the food distribution will be conducted, saying that a team of volunteers will distribute the food directly to the homes of the beneficiaries while adhering to protocols put in place by the Ministry of Health to curb the spread of Covid-19.

    The National team thanked doctors, nurses and other medical practitioners who are at the frontline in trying to save the lives of those afflicted with COVID-19.

    National Muslim Covid-19 Response Team was formed with the aim of complementing the efforts of the government and the Ministry of Health in addressing the challenges of Covid-19 pandemic in the country.

    The Team comprises of Islamic scholars, Imams and representatives from different mosques, Muslim organizations and the Kenya Association of Muslim Medical Professionals.

  • From Calm To Confusion: How Kenya’s Covid-19 Frontman Lost His Sheen

    From Calm To Confusion: How Kenya’s Covid-19 Frontman Lost His Sheen

    By Issac Otidi Amuke

    The last few weeks have been a real baptism of fire for Mutahi Kagwe. Kenya’snewly-appointed Cabinet Secretary for Health took office two weeks before the country’s first confirmed coronaviruscase. But, as he revealed during his vetting, he anticipated what awaited him. For Kagwe, the question was when not if COVID-19 would affect Kenya. And so, when it did, the 62-year-old politician hit the ground running, taking charge of government communications in its pandemic response.

    Kagwe’s initial media briefing was on 13 March. Results from the National Influenza Centre laboratories indicated that COVID-19 had found its way into Kenya. Two days later, and with two more cases confirmed, Kagwe was joined by President Uhuru Kenyatta who addressed the nation for the first time regarding the virus. However, as infection numbers increased, Kagwe became the default face of government, steering the National Emergency Response Committee.

    Throughout his pressers, Kagwe spoke with the authoritativeness of a trusted broadcaster, giving little in terms of emotion. He quickly established camaraderie with the press, presenting himself as firm yet accessible. Many Kenyans came to associate Kagwe’s steady baritone with a sense of national reassurance, such that Kenyatta’s absences went unnoticed.

    A response unravels

    When the president did make an occasional appearance, it tended to either elicit ridicule or a lukewarm response. The goodwill for government that Kagwe had accrued started chipping away. The health secretary could talk the talk, but as the situation became more serious the government was struggling to walk the walk.

    As the public awaited the announcement of substantive measures to contain the outbreak on 23 March, for instance, Kenyatta instead used his address to reveal that the government was working with telecoms companies to provide free internet. On 26 March, when the president announced a nationwide dusk-to-dawn curfew, his seeming lack of clarity on its implementation left room for mischief. The police took his order to mean they could be a law unto themselves, going by how much violencethey meted out on workers who weren’t home by 7pm. The president later apologised for what he described as “some excesses that were conducted”.

    On 5 April, he gave an even more puzzling address. Announcing that he was stopping all traffic into or out of Nairobi, the president’s message was instead widely (mis)understood to mean he was halting all movement within the city. It took the intervention of his chief-of-staff Nzioka Waita later that day to set the record straight. As if wanting to dig himself deeper, Kenyatta followed his obtuse speech with an exclusive interview to a number of Kikuyu FM stations, as if to say he only needed to reach his home base at such a time of national reckoning. It again prompted a commotion on social media.

    On 9 April, Kenya’s deputy president William Ruto – whose relationship with the centre of power has gone frosty and who hadn’t made a single public appearance since COVID-19 hit Kenya – also got involved. He gave what has been considered an unnecessary press conference at his Nairobi residence, simply regurgitating what Kagwe and Kenyatta had already said.

    It was up to Kagwe to steady the ship, but he too started running into headwinds. Frustrated by a lack of adherence to government directives, he read the riot act to Kenyans for their alleged indiscipline. Critics complained against the state for not doing enough while expecting the earth from its citizens. Another time, Kagwe said responsibility for tackling COVID-19 lay at the feet of Kenya’s youth. This too drew anger from many who questioned what the government has done for the youth for it to now call on them.

    A few more missteps later, including complaints of the government’s poorly coordinated mandatory quarantine programme, Kagwe started declining to take questions from the press after his updates. It was burdensome to carry the weight of an entire government on one’s shoulders.

    Reassuring words, troubling actions

    Before Kagwe’s appointment, Kenyatta’s blue-eyed boy was Interior Minister Fred Matiangi, a man known for his forthrightness rather than amiability. The president’s other fixer was George Magoha, a former University of Nairobi vice-chancellor with a similar by-all-means-necessary demeanour.

    It seems that public figures like these had set the bar for government public relations so low that when Kagwe showed up and did the bare minimum, the country took notice. Their tendency towards seeming heavy-handedness perhaps also made the softer approach of Kagwe come across as affable and competent by comparison; for the early praise he garnered, he didn’t really do anything more than keep his cool and communicate clearly.

    As the coronavirus has continued to spread, however, this has counted for less and less. With cases increasing – with 216 infections, 41 recoveries, 9 deaths and an estimated 6,000 tested according to the latest figures – it has become sadly apparent how little Kagwe’s reassuring mannerisms matter.

    Especially in exceptional, uncertain and challenging times such as these, trust in the government is earned through actions not words. And unless the governments puts urgent measures in place – especially to support low-income earners and provide the health sector with the life-saving equipment and facilities they need – neither Kagwe’s nor any other minister’s star quality will mean much at all. The health secretary may have projected an aura of competence, but it is actual policy that counts.

    Isaac Otidi Amuke is a Kenyan writer and journalist.

    Original version of this article was first published on African Arguments.

  • Fresh Details Emerge From Siaya Covid19 Case

    Fresh Details Emerge From Siaya Covid19 Case

    As of Wednesday the government had traced and isolated 64 persons who had direct contacts with Mr. Oyugi who had passed away at Matibabu Hospital in Ukwala. Fear that had gripped the village is being handled with the authorities assuring that they’re on top of the game.

    A team of health officials from Nairobi was sent to Siaya. The team, which included Ministry of Health acting Director-General Patrick Amoth, visited the home of late Kenya Ports Authority employee James Oyugi Onyango.

    While the contact tracing and isolation continues, another case has tested positive from the five samples taken from the quarantine in KMTC, Siaya.

    14 additional samples had also been taken to KEMRI in Kisumu and the results expected to be announced today.

    Goverment is appealing to those who might have had contacts with the late either primarily or secondary to come out and test voluntarily in an effort to minimize the spread of the virus which poses a high risk.

    In other news, Siaya Senator James Orengo has tasted the Health CS to give answers to the cause of the death and the justification for the undignified burial that irked the nation and left the family traumatized. Oyugi was buried in a body bag in the wee hours of Sunday contrary to the acceptable cultural practices of the Luos.

    Siaya has been mapped out as an hotspot and a mass Covid19 exercise set to take place during the coming days. The second case of eruption from the KPA follows yet another in Ugunja where the priest from Rome held a mass. He had since recovered from the virus and in custody as he faces charges for putting at risk the health of the public.

  • Don’t Fall For These New Tricks Used By Conmen DCI Warns

    Don’t Fall For These New Tricks Used By Conmen DCI Warns

    Conmen are known to actively change their tricks just incase their cover is blown, they’re also known for capitalizing on any opportunity that presents itself.

    When the authorities said people should be working from home, the conmen didn’t go home and are very much alive now conning people with baits.

    The DCI is now warning members of the public that criminals are using the Covid-19 pandemic to scam them through circulation of phishing emails purpoting to sell non-existent items & messages that are accompanied by links that purport to offer free goodies like…/1

    Image

    …data bundles, money, airtime among other things.

    Mesages accompanying such links are enticingly packaged with captivating words meant to prompt potential but unsuspecting victims to click onto them with a promise of getting something declared therein. /2

    Such links have largely been found to be infected with malware that triggers mining of personal information, passwords, photos, contacts among other valuables that are subsequently used to extort, for cyber bullying, stealing of finances among other ills.

    In other instances, online shops purporting to sell sanitizers, PPE including facemasks and shields are on the rise.

    As payments for such items are being made, the public is urged to be more vigilant and discouraged from the use of Free Wi-Fi, purchase of substandard items, fraud, particularly sharing financial & personal information.

    For door step deliveries, we warn that some may be done by criminals, who deliver products that are treated with sleep inducers &/or drugs meant to stupefy, after which victims may lose their valuables.

  • Kenyans Distance Themselves From Sonko As International Media Picks Up His Hennessy Story

    Kenyans Distance Themselves From Sonko As International Media Picks Up His Hennessy Story

    Nairobi Governor is now new to controversy, the flashy politician who was recently demoted by being stripped of his powers when the national government took over key functions of City Hall is not anywhere close to staying calm.

    Sonko like his counterparts in other counties has been putting his best feet forward to steer the supply of food and other essentials to the poor in Nairobi.

    Through his Sonko Rescue team, the governor has not only been fumigating the streets but much more. In his food package individually delivered to the many doors in the slums, Sonko has been adding something; alcohol.

    While giving the Hennessy, Sonko has cited a research report from his own head that alcohol treats Covid19.

    “We will be giving some small bottles of Hennessy in the food package which we give to our people,’ Sonko decreed. ‘I think from the research conducted by the WHO and various health organisations it has been revealed that alcohol plays a very major role in killing the coronavirus or any sort of virus.” Sonko said.

    International media has already picked up the story. UK’s publication Daily Mail has run the story giving Kenya unwarranted embarrassment.

    It goes without saying they the flamboyant had over the past years subjected Kenyans to ridicule with his bizarre nature. On alcohol for coronavirus, that’s really a pathetic excuse.

    The African Medical and Research Foundation (Amref) CEO Githinji Gitahi today rejected Sonko’s cognac offering.

    He tweeted: ‘Please completely ignore clowning of a major global pandemic taking lives and putting extreme pressure on households.

    ‘Dump this the way you would dump your used COVID-19 mask-never to be recovered.’

    Gitahi also urged Kenya’s Ministry of Health to condemn Sonko’s comments in the strongest terms.

    Sampled comments;

    Magunga; Get your facts right. Nairobi doesn’t have a governor. And this photo is from a BlueBand commercial.

    Dee: Get your facts right the governor of all counties is Hassan Joho, this is an upcoming rapper & blueband ambassador. Thank you.

    Betty: Omg this is such fake news! He is not governor of Nairobi, Nairobi has no governor it has a Mohammed Badi!

    Chege: Our embarrassement has gone international…Jesus fix this.

    Savvy: GET YOUR FACTS RIGHT! Nairobi is under Nairobi Metropolitan Services. This is an upcoming rapper called Sonkoree from Nairobiree!

    Asri: Githeria media? get your facts right, this guy isn’t a governor anymore, he is an upcoming artist and that was not Hennessey it was konyagi?

     

  • Former PS Lilian Omollo Loses Sh33M Frozen In Her Account

    Former PS Lilian Omollo Loses Sh33M Frozen In Her Account

    Lilian Muthoni Mbogo has lost a battle that she’s been fighting for ages. The former has spent a better part of her recent days in and outside the courts trying to salvage and have her money back that the court had frozen. However, for her, the wait has taken a bad turn.

    The High Court on Wednesday ordered forfeiture to the State of about Sh33 million in the bank accounts of the former Youth and Gender Principal Secretary be forfeited to the government.

    Assets Recovery Agency had asked court to freeze her account and she was tasked to explain the source of her wealth something that became a toll order. Lilian was amongst the top officials having been in the NYS II scandal where hundreds of millions stolen. She spent days in jail before the court granted her bail.

    “The respondents have millions of funds in their accounts and this court has found they are unable to show a legitimate source,” Judge Ngugi said when she was giving the orders.

    The former PS had told the court that she made the money partly from her salary as a government official and also from her husband’s as a consultant in South Sudan. She also argued that partly the money was from her cucumber farm in Rarieda. The court even sent evaluators to her farm in Siaya but were unsatisfied that it could make her the millions as she had mentioned.

    In her Equity Bank she had $67,331 under her name while another in the name LIDI Estates Ltd had $28,981.

    Another account at the same bank, also under LIDI Estates Ltd, had Sh2,297,495 while another had $8,979.

    Another account at Equity in Ms Omollo’s name had Sh1.68 million while one in the name Sahara Consultants at Diamond Trust Bank had Sh5.65 million.

    Three accounts in Ms Omollo’s children’s names had more than Sh11 million.

    Documents filed in court state that the amounts were deposited between January 2016 and March 2018.

    Additional reporting from DN.

  • Covid-19: Apple Releases Budget iPhone SE Priced At $399

    Covid-19: Apple Releases Budget iPhone SE Priced At $399

    (Reuters) – Apple Inc on Wednesday released a smaller iPhone priced at $399, cutting the starting price for the company’s smartphone line in a move to broaden its appeal to budget-conscious customers as the coronavirus hobbles the global economy.

    The lower-cost model could also attract more consumers to Apple services, a growing driver of revenue. Shares of Apple fell 1.1%, less than the 2.8% decline of the S&P 500 index.

    The iPhone SE, available April 24, is the second generation of a previous value model. It will start at $50 less than what was previously the cheapest iPhone available, the $449 iPhone 8, which will be retired. The SE comes with a 4.7-inch display and the same processor chip as Apple’s most advanced phone, the 11 Pro. The SE lacks 5G capability and Apple’s facial recognition system to unlock the device, instead relying on a fingerprint sensor similar to older models.

    The announcement comes as the United States and much of the world is reeling from the novel coronavirus, although U.S. political leaders have begun to talk about ending stay-at-home orders and restarting the economy, hoping record deaths and falling hospitalizations represent a peak.

    Every previous iPhone has been unveiled in a polished presentation in front of fans, but large events remain banned in Apple’s home base of Santa Clara County, California, where public officials ordered the first lockdowns in the United States to slow the spread of the novel coronavirus.

    Apple’s cheaper phone reflects the coronavirus-driven economic downturn and job loss.

    The cheaper phone enters a cut-throat market for value phones, especially in China, where Apple derives about 17% of sales. While the new iPhone adds features such as wireless charging and a high-end camera, it lacks connectivity for 5G, the next generation of mobile data networks. In China, rivals such as Xiaomi Corp (1810.HK) last month announced models with 5G features starting at about $425.

    With wavering hardware sales, Apple has been investing in subscription services such as its Apple TV+ streaming television service, Apple Music and iCloud. The new SE will come bundled with a one free year of the streaming television service, similar to Apple’s flagship devices released last fall.

    Apple said in January that it had 1.5 billion active installed devices and 480 million subscribers to both its own and third-party paid services, compared with 1.4 billion devices and 360 million subscribers a year earlier.

    The company also set out a goal to reach 600 million paid subscribers by the end of calendar 2020.

    The coronavirus has created a volatile start to the year. Sales in China, the first nation hit by the virus, plunged, then rebounded as the country began to reopen. Sales of 500,000 phones in February rose to 2.5 million phones in March, according to government sales data there.

    Apple will begin selling the new model online while its stores around the world are closed, except those within its greater China sales region. Apple will start taking orders for the phone on its website on Friday, with delivery of devices expected to start April 24.

    Apple gets about 31% of its sales from its elegant stores and website, with 69% coming from partners such as mobile carriers and other retailers. Apple said partners would decide whether to sell the phones in their physical stores. Many of Apple’s resellers are trying to guide customers toward online sales. Major partners such as Best Buy Inc have reduced their hours, and AT&T Inc has closed about 40% of its U.S. retail stores.

  • Is Coronavirus A Decoy For The New World Order?

    Is Coronavirus A Decoy For The New World Order?

    By David Kedode

    Praise God, you who is reading this article, I know it’s long but this should be an eye opening for us. But before we read, let’s pray: “Our Father in Heaven we thank you for this season, thank you for bringing us into this season to see the fulfilment of your word, as my readers read this article, let it inspire and open their eyes. I bless you, for it’s in Jesus name I pray, Amen.

    Today, our world is faced with an unprecedented crisis. What started out as fear over the Coronavirus has turned into a power grab by the world’s nations and organizations. In order to understand the dilemma we face, we must understand how we arrived at this point in world history.

    Before we proceed, I want to make this clear that Coronavirus is a real virus that has killed people and it’s still killing though it’s kill rate for those infected by it is 2% and that’s why we have referred to this as a manufactured crisis. It should also be noted that this is not about one nation making a power play over another, this is about globalization.

    As we begin this critical discussion, I want you to understand everything I will outline documents and explains coordinated global efforts. I guarantee you, as a result of the Coronavirus pandemic, our nation and world will forever change. In the very least, we will see further erosion of our freedoms and rights. In order to understand this, we must understand historical events to make sense of today.

    While the League of Nations was formed after the World War 1, it was not until the mid-1940s that globalism truly began to rear its ugly head. The League of Nations gave rise to the United Nations, and just months before, a new financial system was established, known as the Bretton Woods Agreement and Systems. This new system was designed to“promote international trade and development” and brought us the International Monetary Fund and World Bank. While Bretton Woods was dissolved, the system it established lived on.

    This is important to understand, a world crisis gave rise to a completely new global financial order that forever changed the world. Of course, these new global entities were funded by the nations of the world, with the United States providing 30% of their annual budgets.

    We should note, since the founding of these and other global organizations, there has never been another World War. Further, the main conflicts we have witnessed have been against nations that have not complied with the new financial order that was established back in the mid-1940s.

    Summary: History has proven, people will accept just about anything for a perceived peace. They will accept new financial systems and much more if they perceive the alternative will negatively affect them.

    On this date, 09/11/2001 the nation and world forever changed. That morning, terrorists hijacked airliners and crashed them into the Twin Towers in New York, or so the official story explained. This event became the catalyst for the “War on Terrorism” and the massive expansion of the U.S. Government which diminished the rights of the people.

    Americans easily conceded to new sweeping regulations all in the name of peace and safety. The other nations of the world quickly followed suit, and also eroded the rights of their own citizens as the nations quickly launched the surveillance state. This led to the infamous wiretapping program that we all came to know about, but shamefully cared little for. Why? We were told it was a necessary evil to protect our freedoms from the terrorists. Unfortunately, we willingly gave up our freedoms in the name of peace and safety, something Benjamin Franklin warned us of…They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.

    After the attacks on 9/11, the U.S. Government launched an invasion on Afghanistan rallying a nation. Shortly after, Saddam Hussein of Iraq was deemed an enemy of America and was attacked and removed from power.

    You see, Iraq and Afghanistan were not a part of the global financial order established in the 1940s. Therefore, the globalists were consolidating power around the globe and using the most awesome world power that has ever existed. American’s were being fooled while being blanketed in Patriotism of the Red, White and Blue banner.

    The War on Terror transformed into a humanitarian war, when a manufactured civil war broke out in Syria. The roots of humanitarian intervention come from globalist George Soros, and the U.S. essentially spearheaded the project. Over the years reports surfaced the U.S. was funding the “rebels” in Syria, other reports would explain there were no “rebels” in Syria, only terrorists seeking to remove Syria’s President Basher Assad from power.

    Around the same time, Libya suddenly had their own problems and Muamar Gaddafi was killed by “rebel” terrorists. Interestingly enough, Gaddafi was seeking to establish a new currency for a good portion of Africa based on gold. He was attempting to buck the globalist trend. Yes, you guessed it. Libya and Syria were not playing with the global powers established in the mid-1940s, and they had to be dealt with.

    While Syria’s Assad still clings to power, his nation is in utter chaos. Chaos that led to millions of refugees finding a new home in Europe, forever changing the continent by mixing Christians and Muslims in a massive culture clash.

    Summary: The goal all along was to remove leaders from power in nations who were not apart of the globalist agenda. In the end, these wars would simply be a stepping stone to Iran, better said, it would define Which Path to Persia

    That now brings us to the present, the current global financial crisis that has been thrust upon the world over the Coronavirus. A virus that has only killed 21,191 people globally as of this writing. To put that in perspective, every year globally 61,000 people die from seasonal flu according to the Center for Disease Control. I hope you are scratching your head, you should be. The response we are seeing from governments and organizations across the world is not proportionate to the Coronavirus threat. Despite these simple facts, less than two weeks ago the World Health Organization (founded: 1948) categorized the Coronavirus is a world Pandemic. Global financial markets instantly began to collapse. From there the mainstream media along with the nations of the world created even more panic, as if our leaders were replaced with children, (Isaiah 3:4).

    No efforts have been made to calm the public, only scare them and explain they should wash their hands to avoid being infected with the Coronavirus. The same advice Mom has been giving us since we were born.

    We have all read the headlines. Italy, France, Spain, Britain, Canada, India, Rwanda, Uganda, Senegal, SouthAfrica and now Britain have locked down their nations removing the rights of their people. All in the name of peace and safety to protect us from this “hidden enemy”.

    This has caused global financial markets to fall further. Central Banks around the world stepped in by pumping trillions of dollars into the financial system. The Coronavirus has simply been the catalyst used to move a collapse further.

    As the days grew on, so did the level of panic world governments caused. The U.S Government and world drilled phrases into our mind like “social distancing”, a line and scenario they stole from the movie “Contagion”. Globally, schools, restaurants and other businesses have been shuttered, as if it was a designed chain reaction. The U.S. Government has already passed a bailout package to save Americans from the mass panic they have created, with more bailouts on the way. In Kenya, the President yesterday gave a raft of points to secure the economy and the vulnerable. President of Kenya Address, Canada yesterday did the same thing: Canada Prime Minister.  This script is being used worldwide was it planned? More troubling.

    Summary: Yes, the Coronavirus is real, yet its 2% kill rate does not warrant locking down the world.

    There can be no doubt, we have arrived at a pivotal moment in world history, one that will forever change the course of the world.

    We could very well be experiencing a carefully choreographed soft collapse of the global financial system. This could not come at a more opportune time, like a good designed plan. The nations of the world, corporations, and people are in record debt. It would appear, everyone is being set up for a great fall, a fall that could be so great the world will need an economic reset…

    The precedent for what we now face was set in 2008, when the whole world was bailed out. Yet, Central Bankers said, there would be little they could do to save us from a future crisis, a crisis that is now unfolding.

    As we have explained, with every world catastrophe, the powers that be have presented the people with a way out. A way to save them from their troubles and misery, but it always comes with a price. The resignation of some of our rights. Yet, through history, the people have gladly accepted the solutions placed before them, as the alternative that was carefully crafted against them was much worse.

    It is only reasonable to consider, the master planners have decided the global financial system initiated 75 years ago has run its course, and they are ready for a new financial system they will have more control over. A financial system that will more closely unify the globe. We just may have an agenda unfolding against the people of the world. An agenda brought forward by Satan’s Children at the highest levels, which trickle down, and are executed by our foolish leaders.

    A word of encouragement, do not panic but prepare. This thing is yet to end. For those who want to get quick lessons on preparedness, simple living, survival, kindly visit www.trayerwilderness.com. Very helpful tips for such a time.

    So what should we Christians do in such a time: solution number one and the only one is to pray and repent of our sins. This Pandemic will only end through God’s intervention. Going back to Calvary.

    Yesterday, just going through Facebook, I saw a video prophecy and it confirmed what the spirit had put in my heart. Kindly take time and watch: VERY IMPORTANT PROPHETIC MESSAGE: WHAT IS THE LORD SAYING TO KENYA ON 24TH MARCH 2020

    My friends, please continue to reach out to God and ask Him to comfort, provide, and protect you and your family, (Philippians 1:6). Some of you may not be Christian. It is not too late to turn to God, accept Him, and He will accept you, (Romans 10:9). Be strong for your family and friends, and be prepared to answer their Biblical questions, (1 Peter 3:15). Find answers if you do not have them, we will help you through God’s Grace. Whatever it is that we face, we certainly will need God’s spiritual guidance to protect us through the storm ahead.

    Shalom and God Bless!

    David Kedode is currently working at TNR Trust as the Administrator and a part time Virtual Assistant at TrayerWilderness.com as a Virtual Assistant and also as a contributing author.

  • How the World Will Look After the Coronavirus Pandemic

    How the World Will Look After the Coronavirus Pandemic

    The pandemic will change the world forever. Foreign Policy asked 12 leading global thinkers for their predictions.

    By Foreign Policy

    Like the fall of the Berlin Wall or the collapse of Lehman Brothers, the coronavirus pandemic is a world-shattering event whose far-ranging consequences we can only begin to imagine today.

    This much is certain: Just as this disease has shattered lives, disrupted markets and exposed the competence (or lack thereof) of governments, it will lead to permanent shifts in political and economic power in ways that will become apparent only later.

    To help us make sense of the ground shifting beneath our feet as this crisis unfolds, Foreign Policy asked 12 leading thinkers from around the world to weigh in with their predictions for the global order after the pandemic.


    A World Less Open, Prosperous, and Free

    by Stephen M. Walt

    The pandemic will strengthen the state and reinforce nationalism. Governments of all types will adopt emergency measures to manage the crisis, and many will be loath to relinquish these new powers when the crisis is over.

    COVID-19 will also accelerate the shift in power and influence from West to East. South Korea and Singapore have responded best, and China has reacted well after its early mistakes. The response in Europe and America has been slow and haphazard by comparison, further tarnishing the aura of the Western “brand.”

    What won’t change is the fundamentally conflictive nature of world politics. Previous plagues did not end great-power rivalry nor usher in a new era of global cooperation. Previous plagues—including the influenza epidemic of 1918-1919—did not end great-power rivalry nor usher in a new era of global cooperation. Neither will COVID-19. We will see a further retreat from hyperglobalization, as citizens look to national governments to protect them and as states and firms seek to reduce future vulnerabilities.

    In short, COVID-19 will create a world that is less open, less prosperous, and less free. It did not have to be this way, but the combination of a deadly virus, inadequate planning, and incompetent leadership has placed humanity on a new and worrisome path.


    The End of Globalization as We Know It

    by Robin Niblett

    The coronavirus pandemic could be the straw that breaks the camel’s back of economic globalization. China’s growing economic and military power had already provoked a bipartisan determination in the United States to decouple China from U.S.-sourced high technology and intellectual property and try to force allies to follow suit. Increasing public and political pressure to meet carbon emissions reduction targets had already called into question many companies’ reliance on long-distance supply chains. Now, COVID-19 is forcing governments, companies, and societies to strengthen their capacity to cope with extended periods of economic self-isolation.

    The coronavirus pandemic could be the straw that breaks the camel’s back of economic globalization.

    It seems highly unlikely in this context that the world will return to the idea of mutually beneficial globalization that defined the early 21st century. And without the incentive to protect the shared gains from global economic integration, the architecture of global economic governance established in the 20th century will quickly atrophy. It will then take enormous self-discipline for political leaders to sustain international cooperation and not retreat into overt geopolitical competition.

    Proving to their citizens that they can manage the COVID-19 crisis will buy leaders some political capital. But those who fail will find it hard to resist the temptation to blame others for their failure.


    A More China-Centric Globalization

    by Kishore Mahbubani

    The COVID-19 pandemic will not fundamentally alter global economic directions. It will only accelerate a change that had already begun: a move away from U.S.-centric globalization to a more China-centric globalization.

    It will only accelerate a change that had already begun: a move away from U.S.-centric globalization to a more China-centric globalization.

    Why will this trend continue? The American population has lost faith in globalization and international trade. Free trade agreements are toxic, with or without U.S. President Donald Trump. By contrast, China has not lost faith. Why not? There are deeper historical reasons. Chinese leaders now know well that China’s century of humiliation from 1842 to 1949 was a result of its own complacency and a futile effort by its leaders to cut it off from the world. By contrast, the past few decades of economic resurgence were a result of global engagement. The Chinese people have also experienced an explosion of cultural confidence. They believe they can compete anywhere.

    Consequently, as I document in my new book, Has China Won?, the United States has two choices. If its primary goal is to maintain global primacy, it will have to engage in a zero-sum geopolitical contest, politically and economically, with China. However, if the goal of the United States is to improve the well-being of the American people—whose social condition has deteriorated—it should cooperate with China. Wiser counsel would suggest that cooperation would be the better choice. However, given the toxic U.S. political environment toward China, wiser counsel may not prevail.


    Democracies Will Come out of Their Shell

    by G. John Ikenberry

    In the short term, the crisis will give fuel to all the various camps in the Western grand strategy debate. The nationalists and anti-globalists, the China hawks, and even the liberal internationalists will all see new evidence for the urgency of their views. Given the economic damage and social collapse that is unfolding, it is hard to see anything other than a reinforcement of the movement toward nationalism, great-power rivalry, strategic decoupling, and the like.

    Just like in the 1930s and ’40s, there might also be a slower-evolving countercurrent.But just like in the 1930s and ’40s, there might also be a slower-evolving countercurrent, a sort of hardheaded internationalism similar to the one that Franklin D. Roosevelt and a few other statesmen began to articulate before and during the war. The 1930s collapse of the world economy showed how connected modern societies were and how vulnerable they were to what FDR called contagion. The United States was less threatened by other great powers than by the deep forces—and Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde character—of modernity. What FDR and other internationalists conjured was a postwar order that would rebuild an open system with new forms of protection and capacities to manage interdependence. The United States couldn’t simply hide within its borders, but to operate in an open postwar order required the building of a global infrastructure of multilateral cooperation.

    So the United States and other Western democracies might travel through this same sequence of reactions driven by a cascading sense of vulnerability; the response might be more nationalist at first, but over the longer term, the democracies will come out of their shells to find a new type of pragmatic and protective internationalism.


    Lower Profits, but More Stability

    by Shannon K. O’Neil

    COVID-19 is undermining the basic tenets of global manufacturing. Companies will now rethink and shrink the multistep, multicountry supply chains that dominate production today.

    Global supply chains were already coming under fire, both economically and politically.Global supply chains were already coming under fire—economically, due to rising Chinese labor costs, U.S. President Donald Trump’s trade war, and advances in robotics, automation, and 3D printing, as well as politically, due to real and perceived job losses, especially in mature economies. COVID-19 has now broken many of these links: Factory closings in afflicted areas have left other manufacturers—as well as hospitals, pharmacies, supermarkets, and retail stores—bereft of inventories and products.

    On the other side of the pandemic, more companies will demand to know more about where their supplies come from and will trade off efficiency for redundancy. Governments will intervene as well, forcing what they consider strategic industries to have domestic backup plans and reserves. Profitability will fall, but supply stability should rise.


    This Pandemic Can Serve a Useful Purpose

    by Shivshankar Menon

    It is early days yet, but three things seem apparent. First, the coronavirus pandemic will change our politics, both within states and between them. It is to the power of government that societies—even libertarians—have turned. Government’s relative success in overcoming the pandemic and its economic effects will exacerbate or diminish security issues and the recent polarization within societies. Either way, government is back. Experience so far shows that authoritarians or populists are no better at handling the pandemic. Indeed, the countries that responded early and successfully, such as Korea and Taiwan, have been democracies—not those run by populist or authoritarian leaders.

    This is not yet the end of an interconnected world. The pandemic itself is proof of our interdependence.

    Secondly, this is not yet the end of an interconnected world. The pandemic itself is proof of our interdependence. But in all polities, there is already a turning inward, a search for autonomy and control of one’s own fate. We are headed for a poorer, meaner, and smaller world.

    Finally, there are signs of hope and good sense. India took the initiative to convene a video conference of all South Asian leaders to craft a common regional response to the threat. If the pandemic shocks us into recognizing our real interest in cooperating multilaterally on the big global issues facing us, it will have served a useful purpose.


    American Power Will Need a New Strategy

    by Joseph S. Nye, Jr.

    In 2017, U.S. President Donald Trump announced a new national security strategy that focuses on great-power competition. COVID-19 shows this strategy to be inadequate. Even if the United States prevails as a great power, it cannot protect its security by acting alone. As Richard Danzig summarized the problem in 2018: “Twenty-first century technologies are global not just in their distribution, but also in their consequences. Pathogens, AI systems, computer viruses, and radiation that others may accidentally release could become as much our problem as theirs. Agreed reporting systems, shared controls, common contingency plans, norms, and treaties must be pursued as means of moderating our numerous mutual risks.”

    Even if the United States prevails as a great power, it cannot protect its security by acting alone.

    On transnational threats like COVID-19 and climate change, it is not enough to think of American power over other nations. The key to success is also learning the importance of power with others. Every country puts its national interest first; the important question is how broadly or narrowly this interest is defined. COVID-19 shows we are failing to adjust our strategy to this new world.


    The History of COVID-19 Will Be Written by the Victors

    by John Allen

    As it has always been, history will be written by the “victors” of the COVID-19 crisis. Every nation, and increasingly every individual, is experiencing the societal strain of this disease in new and powerful ways. Inevitably, those nations that persevere—both by virtue of their unique political and economic systems, as well as from a public health perspective—will claim success over those who experience a different, more devastating outcome. To some, this will appear as a great and definitive triumph for democracy, multilateralism, and universal health care. To others, it will showcase the clear “benefits” of decisive, authoritarian rule.To some, this will appear as a great and definitive triumph for democracy. To others, it will showcase the clear “benefits” of authoritarian rule.

    Either way, this crisis will reshuffle the international power structure in ways we can only begin to imagine. COVID-19 will continue to depress economic activity and increase tension between countries. Over the long term, the pandemic will likely significantly reduce the productive capacity of the global economy, especially if businesses close and individuals detach from the labor force. This risk of dislocation is especially great for developing nations and others with a large share of economically vulnerable workers. The international system will, in turn, come under great pressure, resulting in instability and widespread conflict within and across countries.


    A Dramatic New Stage in Global Capitalism

    by Laurie Garrett

    The fundamental shock to the world’s financial and economic system is the recognition that global supply chains and distribution networks are deeply vulnerable to disruption. The coronavirus pandemic will therefore not only have long-lasting economic effects, but lead to a more fundamental change.Globalization allowed companies to farm out manufacturing all over the world and deliver their products to markets on a just-in-time basis, bypassing the costs of warehousing. Inventories that sat on shelves for more than a few days were considered market failures. Supply had to be sourced and shipped on a carefully orchestrated, global level. COVID-19 has proven that pathogens can not only infect people but poison the entire just-in-time system.

    The coronavirus pandemic will therefore not only have long-lasting economic effects, but lead to a more fundamental change.

    Given the scale of financial market losses the world has experienced since February, companies are likely to come out of this pandemic decidedly gun-shy about the just-in-time model and about globally dispersed production. The result could be a dramatic new stage in global capitalism, in which supply chains are brought closer to home and filled with redundancies to protect against future disruption. That may cut into companies’ near-term profits but render the entire system more resilient.


    More Failed States

    by Richard N. Haass

    Permanent is not a word I am fond of, as little or nothing is, but I would think the coronavirus crisis will ​at least for a few years lead most governments ​to turn inward, focusing on what takes place within their borders rather than ​on what happens beyond them. I anticipate greater moves toward selective self-sufficiency (and, as a result, decoupling) given supply chain vulnerability; even greater opposition to large-scale immigration; and a reduced ​willingness or commitment to tackle regional or global problems (including climate change) given the perceived need to dedicate resources to rebuild at home and deal with economic consequences of the crisis​.Many countries will have difficulty recovering, with state weakness and failed states becoming even more prevalent.

    I would expect many countries will have difficulty recovering from the crisis, with state weakness and failed states becoming an even more prevalent feature of the world. The crisis will likely contribute to the ongoing deterioration of Sino-American relations and the weakening of European integration. On the positive side, we should see some modest strengthening of global public health governance. But overall, a crisis rooted in globalization will weaken rather than add to the world’s willingness and ability to deal with it.


    The United States Has Failed the Leadership Test

    by Kori Schake

    The United States will no longer be seen as an international leader.The United States will no longer be seen as an international leader because of its government’s narrow self-interest and bungling incompetence. The global effects of this pandemic could have been greatly attenuated by having international organizations provide more and earlier information, which would have given governments time to prepare and direct resources to where they’re most needed. This is something the United States could have organized, showing that while it is self-interested, it is not solely self-interested. Washington has failed the leadership test, and the world is worse off for it.


    In Every Country, We See the Power of the Human Spirit

    by Nicholas Burns

    The COVID-19 pandemic is the greatest global crisis of this century. Its depth and scale are enormous. The public health crisis threatens each of the 7.8 billion people on Earth. The financial and economic crisis could exceed in its impact the Great Recession of 2008-2009. Each crisis alone could provide a seismic shock that permanently changes the international system and balance of power as we know it.That provides hope that men and women around the world can prevail in response to this extraordinary challenge.

    To date, international collaboration has been woefully insufficient. If the United States and China, the world’s most powerful countries, cannot put aside their war of words over which of them is responsible for the crisis and lead more effectively, both countries’ credibility may be significantly diminished. If the European Union cannot provide more targeted assistance to its 500 million citizens, national governments might take back more power from Brussels in the future. In the United States, what is most at stake is the ability of the federal government to provide effective measures to stem the crisis.

    In every country, however, there are many examples of the power of the human spirit—of doctors, nurses, political leaders, and ordinary citizens demonstrating resilience, effectiveness, and leadership. That provides hope that men and women around the world can prevail in response to this extraordinary challenge.

    John Allen is president of the Brookings Institution, a retired U.S. Marine Corps four-star general, and former commander of the NATO International Security Assistance Force and U.S. Forces in Afghanistan.

    Nicholas Burns is a professor at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government, and a former under secretary for political affairs in the U.S. State Department.

    Laurie Garrett is a former senior fellow for global health at the Council on Foreign Relations and a Pulitzer Prize winning science writer.

    Richard Haass is the president of the Council on Foreign Relations and the author of The World: A Brief Introduction, to be published in May by Penguin.

    Kishore Mahbubani, a distinguished fellow at the National University of Singapore’s Asia Research Institute, is the author of Has China Won? The Chinese Challenge to American Primacy.

    Shivshankar Menon is a distinguished fellow at Brookings India, a former national security advisor to Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, and a visiting professor at Ashoka University, India.

    Robin Niblett is the director and chief executive of Chatham House.

    Joseph S. Nye Jr. is a university distinguished service professor at Harvard University and the author of Do Morals Matter? Presidents and Foreign Policy from FDR to Trump.

    Kori Schake is the deputy director general of the International Institute for Strategic Studies.

    Stephen M. Walt is the Robert and Renée Belfer professor of international relations at Harvard University.

  • Kilifi DG Presents Results To Prove He Didn’t Test Positive For Coronavirus

    Kilifi DG Presents Results To Prove He Didn’t Test Positive For Coronavirus

    As prosecution continues to buy more time to keep the Kilifi Deputy Governor Gideon Saburi in custody, the more continues to unravel.

    During a bail hearing before Mombasa Principal Magistrate Elvis Michieka on Wednesday 15th, the DG through his lawyer George Kithi insists that he has never tested positive for the Covid19.

    This came at the backdrop that initial test done by KEMRI found him positive only to turn negative when he was taken by the government to Coast Provincial General Hospital. Two subsequent tests ordered by the government also turned negative.

    The lawyer said that reports linking Saburi to COVID-19 were “crafted to tarnish my client’s reputation”.

    “Your honour, we can confirm that my client did not submit any samples to KEMRI, which diagnosed him with COVID-19. Tests conducted on my client at the Coast Provincial General Hospital (CPGH) two days later showed that he was COVID-19 negative,” said Kithi.

    “Your honour, [I know that] miracles do happen. But, on my client’s case, how would you explain this: his samples tested by KEMRI [on first occasion], indicated he was COVID-19 positive, then two days later, another test by CPGH confirms him to be coronavirus negative?” posed Kithi.

    Kithi presented before the court documents to exonerating the DG from the accusations that he deliberately put the health of the public in danger by mingling despite the knowledge of his status and not quarantining as required by the law. He tabled medical results of the DG to prove that he was negative.

    “My client has never met the doctor who signed a report on his COVID-19 test outcome, which confirmed him to be positive for the virus,” said Kithi in reference to the KEMRI report.

    Saburi is accused of breaching Section 28 (a) of the Public Health Act, which states that: “Any person who while suffering from any infectious disease, willfully exposes himself without proper precautions against spreading the said disease in any street, public place, shop, inn or public conveyance, or enters any public conveyance without previously notifying the owner, conductor or driver thereof that he is so suffering, shall be guilty of an offence and liable to a fine not exceeding thirty thousand shillings or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding three years or to both.”

    Saburi will know his fate on where he’ll be released or not on Thursday.

    On Wednesday, state counsel Alloys Kemo applied to have Saburi detained for 10 more days to allow the investigation officers to complete their investigations.

    He has already spent 13 days at the Port police Station since his arrest.

    State counsel Alloys Kemo on Wednesday said the police need more time to collect evidence and record statement from key witnesses, including Kilifi governor Amason Kingi and Kilifi County Finance Chief Officer.