Author: Agencies

  • Revealed: Wealth Of Presidential Escort Officer Linked To Poaching

    Revealed: Wealth Of Presidential Escort Officer Linked To Poaching

    A maisonette nearing completion and an apartment under construction in Syokimau are among properties owned by a Presidential Escort Unit officer arrested on claims of poaching.

    The officer, who was reportedly arrested in Kitengela with ivory worth Sh2.8 million, is said to have a lavish lifestyle including driving a luxury land rover that is the envy of his colleagues.

    Police say he was arrested alongside two colleagues and a businessman ferrying four elephant tusks at a petrol station in Kitengela on Sunday.

    A plot in the area where the properties are located is said to fetch between Sh8 and Sh10 million, according to those familiar with land prices in the area.

    The construction of the two houses has gobbled up more millions.

    Informed sources say the officer has made a mark for himself among his colleagues at the Presidential Escort Unit headquarters at High Ridge in Nairobi.

    His colleagues wondered how he financed his expensive lifestyle despite being on a salary of a constable.

    Last Sunday, officers from the Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) were informed that four people were transporting ivory from Athi-River to an unknown destination in Kajiado county.

    The KWS officers alongside officers from Kitengela Police station stormed the petrol station in Kitengela and arrested the occupants of the car.

    According to a police report seen by Nation.Africa, five elephant tusks weighing approximately 28 kilograms of ivory with a street value of Sh2.8 million were found inside the car.

    Two Ceska pistols with 30 bullets were also seized. The four suspects were taken to Kitengela police station.

    Upon identification, it emerged three were police officers including the one attached to the Presidential Escort Unit as a driver.

    The other two are AP officers attached to the Security of Government Buildings (SGB) unit at Uhuru camp and the Critical Infrastructure Protection Unit (CIPU) headquarters in Athi River.

    The fourth suspect is a relative of a Mlolongo businessman who is suspected to have links to poaching and other illegal dealings.

    Investigators at Kitengela handed over the suspects and the exhibits to KWS officers from Langata who opened an investigation.

    The suspects, according to the police report, have been locked up at the Langata Police Station awaiting arraignment in court.

    Sources familiar with the KWS investigation say the suspects are believed to be part of a network of criminals dealing with ivory within East Africa.

    It has also emerged that during the investigations, the names of some high profile individuals within government including an MP have come up.

    An investigator familiar with the matter on Wednesday said the probe has revealed numerous calls between the three police officers, the businessman and their associates.

    These calls, the investigator said, are long and frequent.

    The frequency of the calls had increased in the last two months. Some of the calls have been traced to neighboring countries such as Tanzania and DRC, further giving the investigators possible clues as to the extent of the criminal network.

    At the KWS headquarters, investigators are conducting a forensic analysis to establish the origin of the seized ivory.

    “We suspect that this consignment may have originated from DRC,” said an official who spoke on condition of anonymity.

    National Police Service spokesperson Resila Onyango confirmed the arrest of the suspects but declined to comment further.

    “We have them,” said Dr Onyango.

    The arrests of the three police officers adds to the growing list of police officers linked to recent crime.

    Last week, eight police officers were arrested after they were linked to various offences ranging from robbery with violence to extortion.

    Four of the officers were being probed for the theft of Sh2.2 million stolen from an official of Rophine International School in Utawala.

    The four officers- three attached to the Directorate of Criminal Investigations (DCI) at Kasarani Police Station and one Ruai Police Station- were found together with a prime suspect in the robbery and in possession of Sh473,000 which they were unable to account for.

  • ‪MPs Approve The Finance Bill 2024 For The Second Reading; How They Voted‬

    ‪MPs Approve The Finance Bill 2024 For The Second Reading; How They Voted‬

    Finance Bill 2024 sails through the second stage after a majority of MPs vote in support (204 voted yes, 115 no, none abstained); the bill moves to the committee stage.

    How MPs voted:

    1. Hon. Samuel Chepkonga – YES
    2. Hon. Benjamin Kipkirui – YES
    3. Hon. Marianne Kitany – YES
    4. Hon. Samuel Atandi – NO
    5. Hon. John Walter Owino – NO
    6. Hon. Irene Njoki – ABSENT
    7. Hon. Abdi Shurie – ABSENT
    8. Hon. Florence Jematia – YES
    9. Hon. Joshua Kandie – YES
    10. Hon. Kipkoros Makilap – YES
    11. Hon. Charles Kamuren – YES
    12. Hon. Koech Nelson – YES
    13. Hon. Barongo Nolphason – NO
    14. Hon. Alpha Miruka – YES
    15. Hon. Linet Chepkorir – YES
    16. Hon. Richard Cheruiyot – YES
    17. Hon. Yegon Richard – YES
    18. Hon. Gideon Ochanda – YES
    19. Hon. Osero Patrick Kibagendi – NO
    20. Hon. Raphael Wanjala – NO
    21. Hon. Jack Wamboka – NO
    22. Hon. Catherine Wambilianga – YES
    23. Hon. Yakub Adow – ABSENT
    24. Hon. Komingoi Kibet – YES
    24. Hon. Catherine Omanyo – NO
    25. Hon. Tindi Mwale – NO
    26. Hon. Oyula Joseph – NO
    27. Hon. Rindikiri Mugambi – YES
    28. Hon. Kirima Nguchine – YES
    29. Hon. Omar Shimbwa Mwinyi – NO
    30. Hon. Victor Koech – YES
    31. Hon. Patrick Simiyu – NO
    32. Hon. Byego Paul Kibichii – YES
    33. Hon. Patrick Ntwiga – YES
    34. Hon. Farah Maalim – YES
    35. Hon. Beatrice Elachi – NO ‘
    36. Hon. John Kiarie – YES
    37. Hon. Musa Sirma – YES
    38. Hon Adan Keynan – YES
    39. Hon. Jeptoo Caroline Ngelechei – YES
    40. Hon. Mejjadonk Benjamin – ABSENT
    41. Hon. Babu Owino – NO
    42. Hon. James Gakuya – ABSENT
    43. Hon. Julius Mawathe – NO
    44. Hon. Mark Mwenje – NO
    45. Hon. Lelemengit Josses – YES
    46. Hon. Omboko Milemba – YES
    47. Hon. Johana Ngeno – YES
    48. Hon. Robert Pukose – YES
    49. Hon. Yakub Farah – YES
    50. Hon. Oundo Ojiambo – NO
    51. Hon. Hiribae Said – ABSENT
    52. Hon. Tungule Charo Kazungu – YES
    53. Hon. Udgoon Siyyad – NO
    54. Hon. Baro Dekow – YES
    55. Hon. Guyo Ali Wario – YES
    56. Hon. Edward Wakili – YES
    57. Hon. Kururia Njoroge – YES
    58. Hon. Gabriel Kagombe – YES
    59. Hon. Elisha Odhiambo – NO
    60. Hon. Robert Gichimu – YES
    61. Hon. Martha Wangari – YES
    62. Hon. Gathoni Wamuchomba – NO
    63. Hon. Gimose Gumini – YES
    64. Hon. Joyce Bensuda – NO
    65. Hon. George Kaluma – NO
    66. Hon. Karithi Kiili – YES
    67. Hon. Julius Taitumu – YES
    68. Hon. John Paul Mwirigi – YES
    69. Hon. Ali Abdi Ali – YES
    70. Hon. Bernard Shinali – YES
    71. Hon. Mumina Bonaya – YES
    72. Hon. Lomwaa Joseph Samal – ABSENT
    73. Hon. Tubi Mohamed (UNWELL and communicated with Speaker)
    74. Hon. Bady Bady Twalib – NO
    75. Hon. George Koimburi – NO
    76. Hon. Wamacukuru James – YES
    77. Hon Eve Obara – NO
    78. Hon. Kalasinga Majimbo – NO
    79. Hon. Titus Lotee – YES
    80. Hon. Joseph Kimilu – NO
    81. Hon Leah Sankaire – YES
    82. Hon. Memusi Kanchory – YES
    83. Hon. Kakuta Maimai – NO
    84. Hon. Onesmus Ngogoyo – YES
    85. Hon. Sakimba Parashina – NO
    86. Hon. Sunkuiya George – YES
    87. Hon. Elsie Muhanda – NO
    88. Hon. Paul Katana – NO
    89. Hon. Yussuf Hassan – NO
    90. Hon. Chege Njuguna – YES
    91. Hon. John Makali – YES
    92. Hon. Peter Irungu – YES
    93. Hon Fabian Kyule – YES
    94. Hon. Moroto Samuel – YES
    95. Hon. Oscar Sudi – YES
    96. Hon. Adipo Okuome – NO
    97. Hon. Ronald Karauri – YES
    98. Hon. Charles Were – NO
    99. Hon. Robert Mbui – NO
    100. Hon. Adams Kipsanai – YES
    101. Hon. Gideon Kimaiyo – YES
    102. Hon. Beatrice Kemei – YES
    103. Hon. Julius Ruto – YES
    104. Hon. Christopher Aseka – YES
    105. Hon. John Kawanjiku – YES
    106. Hon. Waithaka John – YES
    107. Hon Wamuratha Wanjiku – YES
    108. Hon. Peter Orero – NO
    109. Hon. Jessica Mbalu – NO
    110. Hon Mwengi Mutuse – YES
    111. Hon. Njoroge Wainaina – YES
    112. Hon. Joseph Munyoro – YES
    114. Hon. Ndindi Nyoro – YES
    115. Hon. Kimani Ichung’wah – YES
    116. Hon. Julius Sunkuli – NO
    117. Hon. Gertrude Mbeyu – NO
    118. Hon. Owen Baya – YES
    119. Hon. Ken Chonga – NO
    120. Hon Nzambia Kithua – NO
    121. Hon. Didmus Barasa – YES
    122. Hon. Kakai Bisau – NO
    123. Hon. Gonzi Rai – YES
    124. Hon. Kwenya Thuku – YES
    125. Hon. Wanjiku Muhia – YES
    126. Hon. Cherorot Joseph – YES
    127. Hon. Hillary Kosgei – YES
    128. Hon. Jane Maina Njeri – ABSENT

    129. Hon. Joseph Gitari – YES
    130. Hon. Bedzimba Rashid – NO
    131. Hon. Donya Doris – ABSENT
    132. Hon. Ruth Odinga – NO
    133. Hon. Oron Joshua – NO
    134. Hon. Shakeel Shabbir – ABSENT
    135. Hon. Rozaah Buyu – NO
    136. Hon. Irene Kasalu – NO
    137. Hon. Makali Mulu – NO
    138. Hon. Nimrod Mbai – YES
    139. Hon. Mboni Mwalika – NO
    140. Hon. Rachael Nyamai – YES
    141. Hon. Edith Nyenze – NO
    142. Hon. Japheth Nyakundi – YES
    143. Hon. Kibagendi Anthony – NO
    144. Hon. Clive Gisairo – NO
    145. Hon. Yegon Richard – YES
    146. Hon. Alfred Mutai – YES
    147. Hon. Joseph Tonui – YES
    148. Hon. Kitayama Maisori – YES
    149. Hon. Mathias Robi – YES
    150. Hon. Fatuma Masito – NO
    151. Hon Ferdinand Wanyonyi – YES
    152. Hon. Abdulrahman Mohamed – NO
    153. Hon Mohamed Hussein Abdekadir – YES
    154. Hon. Jane Kagiri – YES
    155. Hon. Mwangi Kiunjuri – YES
    156. Hon. Sarah Korere – YES
    157. Hon. Stephen Wachira Karani – YES
    158. Hon. Joseph Lekuton – YES
    159. Hon. Muthoni Marubu – YES
    160. Hon. Ruweida Obo – YES
    161. Hon. Stanley Muthama – YES
    162. Hon. Phelix Odiwuor (Jalang’o) – NO
    163. Hon. Kahangara Joseph – YES
    164. Hon. Mishi Mboko – NO
    165. Hon. Innocent Mugabe – NO
    166. Hon. John Chege Kiragu – YES
    167. Hon. Protus Akuja – YES
    168. Hon. Dick Maungu – NO
    169. Hon, Nabii Nabwera – NO
    170. Hon. Chiforomodo Mangale – YES
    171. Hon. Titus Khamala – NO
    172. Hon. Kareke Mbiuki – YES
    173. Hon. Joyce Kamene – NO
    174. Hon. Caleb Mule – YES
    175. Hon. George Aladwa – NO
    176. Hon. Suzanne Kiamba – NO
    177. Hon. Rose Mumo – NO
    178. Hon. Malulu Injendi – YES
    179. Hon. Amina Mnyazi – NO
    180. Hon. Sheikh Bashir Abdullahi – YES
    181. Hon. Umul kher Kassim – YES
    182. Hon. Husseinweytan Mohamed – NO
    183. Hon. Abdul Haro Ibrahim – YES
    184. Hon. Yusuf Adan Haji – YES
    185. Hon. John Mukunji – NO
    186. Hon. Wamaua Njoroge – YES
    187. Hon. David Bowen – YES
    188. Hon. Kipchumba Toroitich – YES
    189. Hon. Naomi Waqo – YES
    190. Hon. Joshua Mwaliyo – ABSENT
    191. Hon. Geoffrey Odanga – NO

    192. Hon. Anthony Oluoch – NO
    193. Hon. Eric Mwangi Kahugu – YES
    194. Hon. Kassim Sawa – YES
    195. Hon. Peter OScar Nabulindo – YES
    196. Hon. Stephen Mule – NO
    197. Hon. Geoffrey Kariuki – YES
    198. Hon. Bernard Muriuki – YES
    199. Hon. Erastus Kivasu – NO

    200. Hon. Elizabeth Kailemia – YES
    201. Hon. Fatuma Zainab – NO
    202. Hon. Kiborek Reuben – YES
    203. Hon. Bartoo Phyllis – YES
    204. Hon. Kuria Kimani – YES
    205. Hon. Zamzam Mohamed – NO
    206. Hon. Abraham Kirwa – YES
    207. Hon. Feisal Bader – YES
    208. Hon. Fred Kapondi – YES
    209. Hon. K’oyoo James – NO
    210. Hon. Kaguchia John – YES
    211. Hon. Salasya Peter – NO
    212. Hon. Johnson Naicca – YES
    213. Hon. Betty Maina – YES
    214. Hon. Machele Mohamed – NO
    215. Hon. Musyoka Vincent – YES
    216. Hon. Mary Maingi – YES
    217. Hon. Gideon Mulyungi – NO
    218. Hon. Paul Nzengu – NO
    219. Hon. Charles Nguna – NO
    220. Hon. Esther Passaris – NO
    221. Hon. Jayne Kihara – YES
    222. Hon. Liza Chelule – YES
    223. Hon. David Gikaria – YES
    224. Hon. Samuel Arama – YES
    225. Hon. Godfrey Mulanya – NO
    226. Hon. Cynthia Muge – YES
    227. Hon. Bernard Kitur – ABSENT
    228. Hon. Rebecca Tonkei – YES
    229. Hon. Aramat Lemanken – YES
    230. Hon. Gabriel Tongoyo – YES
    231. Hon. Emmanuel Wangwe – YES
    232. Hon. George Gachagua – YES
    233. Hon. Martin Peters Owino – NO
    233. Hon. GK Kariuki – YES
    234. Hon. Charity Kathambi – YES
    235. Hon. Guyo Adhe – YES
    236. Hon. Rahim Dawood – YES
    237. Hon Joash Nyamoko – YES
    238. Hon. Aduma Owuor – NO
    239. Hon. Mohamed Ali – ABSENT
    240. Hon. Jerusha Momanyi – YES
    241. Hon. Faith Gitau – YES
    242. Hon Jared Okelo – NO
    243. Hon. Zaheer Jhanda – YES
    244. Hon. Daniel Manduku – NO
    245. Hon. Tom Mboya Odege – NO
    246. Hon. Rahab Mukami – YES
    247. Hon. Duncan Mathenge – YES
    248. Hon. Michael Muchira – YES
    249. Hon. Kiaraho David – YES

    250. Hon. Michael Wainaina – YES
    251. Hon. David Pkosing – YES
    252. Hon. Antony Kenga – NO
    253. Hon. Lilian Gogo – NO
    254. Hon. Otiende Amolo – NO
    255. Hon. Kibet Jebor – YES
    256. Hon. Paul Abuor – NO
    257. Hon. Mwafrika Kamande – YES
    258. Hon. TJ Kajwang – NO

    259. Hon. Simon Kingara – YES
    260. Hon. Eric Karemba – YES
    261. Hon. Sloya Clement – ABSENT
    262. Hon. Caleb Amisi – NO
    263. Hon. Dido Rasso – YES
    264. Hon. Pauline Lenguris – YES
    265. Hon. Lekumontare Jackson – YES
    266. Hon. Letipila Dominic – YES

    267. Hon. Naisula Lesuuda – NO
    268. Hon. James Nyikal – NO
    269. Hon. Fredrick Ikana – YES
    270. Hon. Christine Ombaka – NO
    271. Hon. Peter Lochakapong – YES
    272. Hon. Justice Kemei – YES
    273. Hon. John WalkWaluke – YES
    274. Hon. Francis Sigei – YES
    275. Hon. Shadrack Mwiti – ABSENT
    276. Hon. Silvanus Osoro – YES
    277. Hon. David Kiplagat – YES
    278. Hon. Amos Mwago – NO
    279. Hon. Millie Odhiambo – NO
    280. Hon. Caroli Omondi – YES
    281. Hon. Samuel Gachobe – YES
    282. Hon. Junet Mohamed – NO

    283. Hon. Francis Masara – NO
    284. Hon. Amina Dika – YES
    285. Hon. Bare Hussein Abdi – YES
    286. Hon. John Bwire – YES
    287. Hon. Oku Kaunya – NO
    288. Hon. Mary Emaase – YES
    289. Hon. Geoffrey Wandeto – ABSENT
    290. Hon. George Murugara – YES
    291. Hon. Susan Ngugi – ABSENT

    292. Hon. Alice Ng’ang’a – YES
    293. Hon. William Kamket – YES
    294. Hon. Mpuru Aburi – YES
    295. Hon. John Mutunga – YES
    296. Hon. Julius Melly – YES
    297. Hon John Chikati – YES
    298. Hon. Lilian Siyoi – YES
    299. Hon. Janet Sitienei – YES

    300. Hon. Cecilia Ngitit – ABSENT
    301. Hon. Joseph Namuar – YES
    302. Hon. Paul Ekuom Nabuin – NO
    303. Hon John Ariko – NO
    304. Hon. Daniel Nanok – YES
    305. Hon. Gladys Shollei – YES
    306. Hon. David Ochieng – NO
    307. Hon. James Wandayi – NO
    308. Hon. Mark Nyamita – NO
    309. Hon Ernest Kivai Kagesi – YES
    310. Hon. Beatrice Adagala – YES
    311. Hon. Adow Mohamed – YES
    312. Hon. Farah Yusuf Mohamed – NO
    313. Hon. Martin Pepela – YES
    314. Hon. Abdi Daudi Mohamed – ABSENT
    315. Hon. Daniel Wanyama – YES
    316. Hon. Stephen Mogaka – NO

    317. Hon. Rael Chepkemoi – YES
    318. Hon. Timothy Wanyonyi – NO
    319. Hon. Mwakuwona Danson – NO
    320. Hon. Basil Robert – NO
    321. Hon. Abdisirat Khalif – YES
    322. Hon. Sabina Chege – ABSENT
    323. Hon. Joseph Hamisi – YES

    324. Hon. Harun Suleka – YES
    325. Hon. Ikiara Dorothy – YES
    326. Hon. Iraya Joseph – YES
    327. Hon. Kosgei Joseph – ABSENT
    328. Hon. Irene Mayaka – NO
    329. Hon. Umul kher Harun – NO
    330. Hon. Teresia Wanjiru Mwangi – ABSENT
    331. Hon. John Mbadi – NO
    332. Hon. Talib Abubakar Ahmed – YES

    The Bill now proceeds to the Committee of the Whole stage where amendments to the text of the Bill are proposed and independent clauses of the Bill are voted on and any new additions made.
    This is a crucial stage as MPs can vote down clauses of the Bill, or vote to keep them or amend them.

  • Travis Scott Arrested In Miami Beach For Disorderly Intoxication

    Travis Scott Arrested In Miami Beach For Disorderly Intoxication

    Hip hop star Travis Scott was arrested on disorderly intoxication and trespassing charges on Thursday in Miami Beach, Florida, NBC News reported, citing jail records.

    Scott, whose real name is Jacques Bermon Webster, 33, was jailed at about 4:30 a.m., the news network reported.

    Scott was taken into custody at about 1:15 a.m. local time after police responded to a call regarding a fight on a yacht, according to NBC News.

    Officers said when they arrived they found Scott on a dock, yelling at the passengers on the yacht, according to NBC News, citing an affidavit.

    Officers could sense “a strong smell of alcohol coming from the defendant’s breath,” NBC reported, citing the affidavit.

    Scott agreed with officers to leave the dock, but returned minutes later to the scene where he was arrested, officers said in the affidavit.

  • Worldcoin To Resume Kenya Operations After Police Drop Investigation

    Worldcoin To Resume Kenya Operations After Police Drop Investigation

    Kenyan police have dropped an investigation into allegations that Worldcoin had illegally collected and transferred users’ personal data, according to a police document, paving the way for the cryptocurrency project to resume its operations.

    Authorities suspended Worldcoin in August last year, following privacy objections over its scanning of users’ irises in exchange for a digital ID to create a new “identity and financial network”.

    Worldcoin is being rolled out by Tools for Humanity, a company co-founded by OpenAI CEO Sam Altman. Its website says it has signed up 5.7 million users across more than 160 countries.

    “Upon review of the file, the Director of Public Prosecutions … directed that the file be closed with no further police action,” Kenya’s Directorate of Criminal Investigations (DCI) wrote in a June 14 letter to Coulson Harney, a law firm representing Worldcoin.
    Worldcoin will resume registration of users across Kenya soon, said Thomas Scott, chief legal officer at Tools for Humanity, in a statement.

    “We are grateful for the DCI’s fair investigation and for the Director of Public Prosecutions’ determination to close the matter,” Scott said.

  • Reject Finance Bill: Gen-Z The New Face Of Kenya’s Protests

    Reject Finance Bill: Gen-Z The New Face Of Kenya’s Protests

    A bold and new generation of young Kenyan protesters has emerged on the streets forcing the government to back down on some of a slew of unpopular tax proposals.

    What started as anger on TikTok about a controversial finance bill has morphed into a revolt – without being organised by political parties.

    The government of President William Ruto has managed to do what generations of politicians in the East African nation have failed to do – unite huge numbers of Kenyans beyond ethnicity and party.

    On Tuesday, hundreds of trainer-wearing protesters, who feel Kenyans are already overtaxed with little to show for it, braved tear gas lobbed by police to march through the capital, Nairobi, bringing the city’s central business district to a standstill.

    Armed with their smartphones, they live-streamed the intense confrontations with officers.

    The protests, dubbed “occupy parliament”, were co-ordinated and mobilised on social media in contrast to those led and sponsored by politicians.

    Organisers encouraged fellow protesters to wear black clothes, but some still turned up in ripped jeans and stylish hairdos.

    The youthful demonstrators, popularly referred to as Gen Zs – in reference to the term generally used to describe those born during the late 1990s and early 2000s – showed up in huge numbers, vowing to ensure that their discontent did not end with just a hashtag or meme.

    “We are the Gen Zs, we were able to mobilise ourselves. We use TikTok as a space to be able to not only have young people come to protest but to educate them on the why,” protester Zaha Indimuli told journalists.

    Many of them were demonstrating for the first time and waved signs such as “Do Not Force The Taxes On Us” , while others chanted: “Ruto must go”.

    “I’m here slaving for a country I love. It is the first time I’m doing this because my parents are old and they cannot do it any more,” Ken Makilya, a 24-year-old university student, told the BBC.

    The hashtags used to pressure MPs and rally protesters were “#OccupyParliament” and “#RejectFinanceBill2024”.

    “This is my first demonstration. I hope it will be the last. I hope things change after this,” said Naserian Kasura, who opposed the proposal to tax sanitary pads.

    The protesters’ efforts to march to parliament were thwarted as police used water cannon to block them.

    “We have been arrested but don’t let them get to you please proceed to parliament,” Hanifa Farsafi, reportedly one of the organisers, posted on X, formerly Twitter.

    More than 200 young protesters were arrested but some of them were later released after lawyers went to the police stations where they had been detained.

    “I am not going, I am not co-operating, why are you arresting me?” one protester was heard saying in a viral video as she refused to board a police vehicle.

    Those who did not make it to the streets helped spread the word by sharing messages, pictures and videos on social media.

    As the protest lacked any clear leadership, the police have found it hard to target those behind it. They banned the march on a technicality though the protesters said all requirements had been met.

    And unlike previous political anti-government protests, it was not characterised by looting, destruction of property and stone-throwing.

    No political affiliations or ethnic alignments were mentioned – just a clear determination by the protesters to be heard.

    Several hours after the demonstrators had mobilised, the presidency appeared to bow to the pressure and announced that it would scrap some of the bill’s most contentious provisions, including a proposed 16% value-added tax (VAT) on bread.

    “We have listened to the view of Kenyans,” Kuria Kimani, the chairman of parliament’s finance committee, said at a press briefing attended by President Ruto and lawmakers in the ruling coalition.

    Changes to the finance bill were driven by a “need to protect Kenyans from increased cost of living”, Mr Kimani added.

    The government had earlier defended the tax hikes, which had been projected to raise $2.7bn (£2.1bn), saying they were needed to cut reliance on external borrowing.

    Other proposed taxes that have been axed include ones on cooking oil, mobile money services and on motor vehicles, which critics said would have hit the insurance industry.

    MPs are now debating the revised bill and are expected to vote on it next Tuesday.

    The opposition, which did not participate in the demonstrations, wants the withdrawal of the entire bill, terming it “punitive”.

    Another hashtag being used by the campaigners is “#unfollowRuto”, encouraging people to stop following the president on X in a bid to pressure him to drop the bill.

    They have vowed to continue with the protests in Nairobi and other cities until the bill is dropped altogether

    A few days ago, presidential adviser David Ndii had rudely dismissed online efforts that started on TikTok around two weeks ago, but following Tuesday’s show of strength he acknowledged their achievement.

    Following the publication of the draft bill, TikTokers began making video explainers that were widely shared on other platforms like WhatsApp, Facebook, Instagram and X – that would trend for days helped by pushes from Kenyan influencers.

    One tactic that has forced MPs to take notice is the list of their phone numbers that has been shared across social media with the message “SMS your MP”.

    MP Stephen Mule told local media that his phone was spammed with more than 30,000 messages from young Kenyans asking him to reject the bill. Other legislators have also complained that their phones have become practically unusable because of the number of texts they were receiving.

    Local media have also picked up the online conversations, amplifying the voices of protest and issues about the cost of living.

    Some urged veteran opposition leader Raila Odinga, who has been the face of anti-government protests for years, to stay away from Tuesday’s march.

    He obliged, posting on social media: “I’m a very proud father today! Well done to all those who bravely stood up for their rights!”

    Mutuma Mathiu, a veteran journalist, said Tuesday’s events had shifted the dynamics of Kenyan politics: “Protest politics found a new fulcrum and a new and different generation of Kenyans found their rather loud voice.”

    Popular political commentator Pauline Njoroge agreed: “They are not just brave, they are also very cool and well spoken. Today’s youth-led protest has been the most peaceful yet very successful.”

    Prof Kivutha Kibwana, a law scholar and a former county governor, urged dialogue in his post on X: “The most dangerous thing for a government to do is to declare war on its youth.”

    Dr Willy Mutunga, a former chief justice, said young people across the world had a common enemy in “their respective ruling classes, warning: “The uprising is on the horizon.”

    The government has long held fears that social media could be used to promote discord and has pushed for stricter oversight by regulators.

    The online collective known as Kenyans on X (XOT) is renowned for calling out issues and Kenya is among the countries with the highest TikTok usage rate worldwide.

    In March, the interior minister threatened to restrict the use of TikTok, which he accused of spreading malicious content.

    But the protesters do not intend to be cowed.

    “We are not scared, we are not moved and this is only the beginning of the revolution. We are coming, we are many and in good numbers,” said Ms Indimuli from the sidelines of Tuesday’s demonstration.

  • How Proposal Automation Can Improve Efficiency and Productivity in the Sales Process

    How Proposal Automation Can Improve Efficiency and Productivity in the Sales Process

    In today’s fast-paced business environment, efficiency and productivity have become the cornerstones for success in any sales-oriented company. The manual creation of sales proposals is not only time-consuming but prone to errors, often leading to lost opportunities. Proposal automation emerges as the game-changing tool aiming to solve these challenges by streamlining the proposal process. By integrating such technology, sales teams can deliver personalized, accurate proposals quicker than ever before. Below, we explore the multifaceted benefits of proposal automation and its profound impact on the sales cycle.

    Understanding Proposal Automation in Sales

    Proposal automation refers to the use of software to generate sales proposals, which are crucial documents used to pitch products or services to potential clients. Automating this process translates to less manual work, allowing for an improved focus on strategy and customer engagement. Sales professionals can utilize stored content libraries and templates, ensuring proposals maintain a high standard of quality and brand consistency.

    Integrating proposal automation within a sales strategy can be transformative. It allows for the seamless creation of documents, using dynamic content that can be customized depending on the client’s needs. This customization happens quickly and effectively, thereby providing a competitive edge to the sales team.

    The application of proposal automation is diverse, reaching beyond mere document generation. It covers project management aspects, approval workflows, and even analytics to track the proposal’s success. By leveraging such comprehensive tools, businesses can manage their sales funnel more effectively and ensure nothing falls through the cracks.

    Enhancing Sales Proposal Turnaround Time with Automation Tools

    One of the primary benefits of automation is the drastic reduction in turnaround time. With predefined templates and content blocks, sales teams can churn out proposals faster than ever before, responding to leads and opportunities with remarkable speed. This responsiveness can often mean the difference between winning and losing a potential deal in a competitive market.

    Speed, however, does not translate to a decline in quality. Automation tools are designed to help teams maintain professional and high-quality proposals. Since most content is pre-approved and stored within the software, there’s a lesser chance for errors and inconsistencies, which can delay the proposal process.

    Boosting Accuracy and Consistency in Sales Proposals

    Business professionals gathered around conference desk discussing proposal automation

    Accuracy is paramount in proposal development; even minor mistakes can tarnish a company’s reputation and deter potential clients. Automation software minimizes human error by using pre-set data and content blocks that ensure all information is correct and up to date. These safeguard measures protect the integrity of the proposal and the brand.

    Consistency across all documents is another critical factor in maintaining a professional brand image. A proposal automation tool ensures that each document adheres to branding guidelines with exact color schemes, logos, and fonts. Thus, each proposal reflects a cohesive and professional brand identity, irrespective of who in the team created it.

    Measuring the Impact of Automation on Sales Performance

    To assess the efficacy of a proposal automation tool, it is essential to analyze the impact on sales performance. Metrics like the rate of proposal acceptance, time spent on each proposal, and overall sales cycles are vital. With automation, these indicators often show significant improvement, reflecting the efficacy of the tools in enhancing sales processes.

    Moreover, the advanced analytics provided by automation software can offer in-depth insights into client behaviors and preferences. It can identify which parts of the proposal are most engaging or where potential clients drop off, enabling sales teams to refine their approach continuously.

    Overall, the integration of automation can significantly overhaul and improve the efficiency of the sales process. It accelerates proposal turnaround times, fortifies accuracy and consistency, and equips teams with critical insights to tweak their sales strategies for better performance. Altogether, embracing automation is not just about keeping up with the competition; it’s about setting a new standard in client engagement and sales efficacy.

  • Finance Bill 2024: The Hypocrisy Of Civil Society

    Finance Bill 2024: The Hypocrisy Of Civil Society

    The last few days have seen Kenyans on X discuss the finance bill that is set to be put to a vote in parliament tomorrow.

    Though its not clear if those opposing or supporting it have read the bill, knowing Kenyans, many are relying on the media, politicians, activists and political
    bloggers to know what the bill contains.

    In a recent facebook post, Senator Gloria Orwoba is on record chastising Kenyans, especially professionals on regurgitating propaganda on the bill without reading it. Her post was in response to bloggers and Kenyans online claiming that the bill will tax sanitary towels, something she says is untrue.

    In an attempt to oppose the passing of the bill, allegations of paid activism have been made by various X accounts challenging organizers of a protest that is meant to take place tomorrow at Parliament buildings.

    The Kenya Insights has information of alleged millions changing hands between Civil Society organizations and two key mobilizers of the protest.

    The source who sought anonymity
    alleges a meeting was held at 3pm yesterday and those present were not informed about the money.

    It is common knowledge within civil society that many protests organised have to have a budget to mobilise people from informal settlement to attend. The costs range from sh 200 to sh 500 per person. However, even after the release of the funds, the protestors who will attend tomorrows protest will not see a coin of the millions. They have been convinced to volunteer.

    The source also claims there was an attempt to physically harm one of the organisers, Boniface Mwangi in the last occupy parliament protest when a crowd he had promised money descended on him during the protest. The young men threatened to stab Boniface for not keeping his promise to pay them the ksh 500 agreed in a previous protest.

    If these allegations are true, then it points to the
    Hypocrisy of civil society. Are they perhaps still aggrieved by the loss of their preferred candidate Raila Odinga in the last election where they went to the extent of producing fake evidence that was declared null and void by the
    Supreme court?

    If true the alleged millions were handed to the key organisers, isn’t it fair to pay the poor people who will come to protest? Why take advantage of the poor who truly want to protest a bill they have been told Will oppress them for personal gain?

  • NextGen Mall In Sh120M Tax Dispute With KRA

    NextGen Mall In Sh120M Tax Dispute With KRA

    Nextgen Mall was formed to manage about 49 units at the commercial centre on Mombasa Road.

    Other than managing the mall, the company provides services and facilities for members who purchased business premises and office space from Nextgen Office Suites Ltd.

    All was well until August 2022 when the Commissioner of Domestic Taxes carried out an audit at Nextgen Mall Management Company Ltd.

    On conclusion of the audit, Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) proceeded to register the firm for VAT obligations regarding members’ contributions to common areas.

    The company was issued with an additional assessment of Sh38.5 million as income tax and Sh81.3 million as VAT.

    Nextgen objected to the assessment but KRA issued its objection decision on November 3, 2022, demanding the money.

    The company dismissed KRA’s position, saying it is not a trading firm as its main goal is to hold revisionary interest for members.

    The services include garbage collection and providing security. Nextgen added that it is also responsible for the collection of proportionate land rent and rates, services charge and others.

    KRA took the position that the services listed in the memorandum and articles of association are offered to the occupants of the mall and are thus taxable.

    Public limited company

     

    Nextgen Mall Management submitted that though registered as a public limited company, it is not meant for trading, adding that it is a members’ association.

    According to the company, KRA did not take into account the fact that members’ contributions towards common areas are determined at annual general meetings.

    The firm added that non-members do not make payment for the services and therefore, the amount cannot be treated as income.

    The company told the Tax Appeals Tribunal that it was a mistake for the commissioner to treat members’ contributions towards costs incurred on common areas as income.

    However, KRA held that the company charges fees for its business in the real estate management and should pay tax.

    According to the Commissioner for Domestic Taxes, the money received from members for costs incurred in common areas is payment for services.

    The taxman maintained that the company did not prove that its managerial services are exempted supply of services under the Value Added Tax Act.

    KRA said the company’s records indicate that it charges Sh35 per square foot for management service.

    The said services, according to KRA ought to have been declared for VAT purposes under Section 5 of the Act, necessitating the forceful registration.

    The tribunal was informed that KRA relied on the income declared in the company’s tax returns as well as the records it provided to arrive at the gross turnover and the subsequent additional corporate tax and VAT.

    The five-member Tax Appeals Tribunal chaired by Mr Eric Nyongesa Wafula said the VAT Act places the burden on the taxpayer to prove that a supply of goods or services is exempt from VAT.

    The tribunal said the company was required to prove that the assessment was erroneous.

    It said Nextgen needed to provide a plausible explanation as to why it could not provide the documents to disprove the tax claim.

    “None of these was done by the appellant. The appellant failed in its duty to prove that the respondent’s assessment was erroneous,” the tribunal said.

    It added that the list of documents demanded by the commissioner ought to have been in Nextgen’s custody.

  • Hunter Biden Found Guilty Of Lying About Drug Use To Buy Gun

    Hunter Biden Found Guilty Of Lying About Drug Use To Buy Gun

    President Joe Biden’s son Hunter Biden was convicted by a jury on Tuesday of lying about his drug use to illegally buy a gun, a verdict Democrats may seize upon to counter Donald Trump’s claim of a justice system weaponized against him.

    A jury in Wilmington, Delaware, federal court found him guilty on all three counts against him, making Hunter Biden the first child of a sitting U.S. president to be convicted of a crime.

    A verdict of the 12-member jury must be unanimous on each count.

    The trial followed the May 30 criminal convictionof Trump, the first former U.S. president to be found guilty of a felony and the Republican challenger to Joe Biden, a Democrat, in the Nov. 5 election.

    Trump, convicted on 34 felony counts of falsifying business records to cover up a sex scandal, accuses Democrats of pursuing that case and three other criminal prosecutions to prevent him from regaining power in his rematch with Joe Biden.

    Congressional Democrats have pointed to cases including the Hunter Biden prosecution as evidence that Joe Biden is not using the justice system for political or personal ends, having said last week he would not pardon his son if convicted.

    The Hunter Biden case was brought by U.S. Department of Justice Special Counsel David Weiss, a Trump appointee.

    Weiss has also charged Hunter Biden with three felony and six misdemeanor tax offenses in California, alleging he failed to pay $1.4 million in taxes between 2016 and 2019 while spending millions on drugs, escorts, exotic cars and other high-ticket items.

    Hunter Biden has pleaded not guilty to those charges. A trial is scheduled for Sept. 5 in Los Angeles.

    The Delaware trial included prosecution testimony by Hunter Biden’s ex-wife, former girlfriend and sister-in-law, who gave firsthand accounts of his spiraling addiction in the weeks before and after he bought the gun in October 2018.

    Prosecutors also showed text messages, photos and bank records that they said showed Biden was deep in the throes of addiction when he bought the gun and knowingly broke the law by answering “no” to being a drug user on a government screening form.

    Biden’s lawyers sought to show he was not using drugs when he bought the gun and did not intend to deceive because he didn’t consider himself a drug user when he filled out the form.

    The defense called Hunter Biden’s daughter, Naomi Biden, who testified that her father seemed to be doing well when she saw him shortly before and after he bought the gun.

    The sentencing guidelines for the gun-related charges against Biden are 15 to 21 months, but legal experts say defendants in similar cases often get shorter sentences and are less likely to be incarcerated if they abide by the terms of their pretrial release.

  • KUCCPS Opens Portal For KMTC Applications

    KUCCPS Opens Portal For KMTC Applications

    Students seeking to pursue Kenya Medical Training College (KMTC) programmes can now send their applications to the Kenya Universities and Colleges Central Placement Service (KUCCPS) portal.

    KUCCPS has officially opened its portal for the September 2024 intake application.

    The opportunity is available for Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education (KCSE) holders from 2014 to 2023, as well as previous applicants who were unsuccessful.

    The application deadline is June 21, 2024.

    Eligible candidates have been advised to access the KUCCPS Student’s Portal via students.kuccps.net or the KUCCPS website www.kuccps.ac.ke.

    How to apply

    To apply, students need to log in using their KCSE Index Number, KCSE year, and Password, which is either their Birth Certificate Number or KCPE Index Number. After logging in, they should navigate to “KMTC Programmes” to view available courses and their minimum requirements.

    “Applicants will only be able to apply for courses where they meet minimum requirements,” the Placement Service added.

    They are to download the detailed PDF document for reference, and select their preferred courses by entering the Programme Codes in order of priority. They then click “KMTC Application” and “Apply Now” to submit the application.

    The application process includes a payment of Sh1,500, with instructions provided upon submission.

    However, unsuccessful applicants from the last KMTC application need not pay again but should use the previous Payment Reference Code to apply.

    For payment, candidates should click the “Click Here to Pay” link, follow the eCitizen payment instructions, use Business Number 222222 and the Payment Reference Code for M-Pesa payments, complete the payment using the M-PESA menu on their phone, and enter the eCitizen Payment Reference Code to finalize the application submission.

    “Go back to the application window and use the eCitizen Payment Reference Code to submit your application. (The same Ref. Code will be required for any subsequent changes to your application; hence, you are advised to retain it.) Do not use M-Pesa transaction code,” the placement service said.

    The placement service said successful submissions will be confirmed by a message on the dashboard. Applicants have been encouraged to frequently check the KUCCPS portal for further details and updates.

  • President Ruto And Uhuru Hold Phone Call Over His Pension

    President Ruto And Uhuru Hold Phone Call Over His Pension

    President William Ruto has formed a team to address concerns raised by retired president Uhuru Kenyatta over his office and staff establishment.

    According to State House Spokesperson Hussein Mohamed, this follows talks between the two leaders.

    “This morning, President William Ruto had a conversation with his predecessor in office, the 4th President, President Uhuru Kenyatta, regarding concerns about facilitating the functioning of the retired President’s office,” he stated.

    “President Ruto has consequently constituted a team, led by the Head of Public Service, to immediately address all the issues raised, including the location of the retired President’s office and the attendant staff establishment.”

    The decision was made during a cabinet meeting where Head of Public Service Felix Koskei was tasked to head the team that will also look at entire requirement package allocated to Kenyatta.

    Government spokesperson Isaac Mwaura had stated that procurement regulations will not be flouted to pay for a private office leased by the former President after he rejected the one located in Nyari, Nairobi.

    This is after the Director of Communications Kanze Dena expressed concerns over the government’s failure to meet the constitutional requirements for the retired head of state.

    Kenyatta’s office further revealed that the former president has never received the full budget allocation as required by law, forcing him to fund ongoing challenges, forcing him to finance essentials like office space among others.

    Despite an allocation of Sh655 million, Kenyatta’s office said only Sh28 million was released this fiscal year, raising concerns about budget disbursement to the former president.

  • Malawi VP’s Plane Found With No Survivors

    Malawi VP’s Plane Found With No Survivors

    The wreck of a plane carrying Malawi’s vice-president has been found with no survivors, President Lazarus Chakwera has said.

    Saulos Chilima and nine others were flying within the country on Monday morning when their aircraft disappeared from airport radars.

    The plane, a military aircraft, was flying in bad weather.

    Soldiers had been searching Chikangawa Forest overnight and into the morning in an effort to find the plane.

    In a news briefing on Tuesday, President Chakwera said the Malawi Defence Force commander informed him that the search and rescue operation has been completed and the plane was found.

    Mr Chakwera said he was “deeply saddened and sorry” to inform Malawians of the terrible tragedy.

    He said the rescue team found the aircraft completely destroyed.

    The vice-president and president come from different parties but the two teamed up to form an alliance during the 2020 elections.

    Mr Chakwera paid tribute to Dr Chilima, describing him as “a good man”, “devoted father” and “formidable VP”.

    “I consider it one of the great honours of my life to have had him as a deputy and as a counsellor,” he added.

    Dr Chilima, 51, was on his way to represent the government at the burial of former government minister Ralph Kasambara, who died four days ago.

    Former First Lady Shanil Dzimbiri was also on the flight, which took off from the capital, Lilongwe, on Monday morning.

    It was meant to land at the airport in the northern city of Mzuzu, but was turned back because of poor visibility.

    The military is transporting the remains of Dr Chiima and the other victims to Lilongwe, the president said, adding that funeral arrangements will be announced in due course.

    Dr Chilima had been vice-president of Malawi since 2014.

    He was widely loved in Malawi, particularly among the youth, AFP news agency reports.

    However, Dr Chilima was arrested and charged in 2022 on allegations that he accepted money in exchange for awarding government contracts.

    He denied any wrongdoing.

    Last month, the court dropped the charges, giving no reasons for the decision.

    Dr Chilima is married with two children.

  • Houthis In Yemen In Talks To Supply Weapons To Al Shabaab, US Intelligence Reveals

    Houthis In Yemen In Talks To Supply Weapons To Al Shabaab, US Intelligence Reveals

    (CNN)US intelligence has learned of discussions between Houthis in Yemen to provide weapons to the Somali militant group al-Shabaab, in what three American officials described to CNN as a worrying development that threatens to further destabilize an already violent region.

    Officials are now searching for evidence that Houthi weapons have been delivered to Somalia, and are trying to work out whether Iran, which provides some military and financial support to the Houthis, is involved in the agreement.

    The US has been warning countries in the region about this possible cooperation in recent weeks, according to a senior administration official, and African countries have also begun to proactively bring it up with the US to raise their concerns and get more information.

    “This is a pretty active area of conversation that we’re having with countries on both sides of the Red Sea,” this person said. “And it’s being viewed with a considerable seriousness.”

    It’s not a natural alliance for the two groups, which are divided by sectarianismand are not known to have had a relationship in the past. The Houthis are Zaydi Shiites, and al-Shabaab traditionally has been deeply ideologically opposed to Shiism. But they are separated by only a single body of water — the strategically significant Gulf of Aden — and they both count the United States as a top enemy.

    The intelligence raises the alarming possibility that a marriage of convenience could make things worse both in Somalia and in the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden, where the Houthis have launched regular attacks on commercial shipping and US military assets since the war in Gaza began.

    A potential deal could offer a new stream of financing for the Houthis, at a time when US officials say there are signs that the group’s primary patron, Iran, has some concerns about the group’s attack strategy. “Being able to sell some weapons would bring them much needed income,” the senior administration official said.

    For al-Shabaab, it could provide access to a new source of weapons — including potentially drones — that are far more sophisticated than their current arsenal and could offer the group the ability to strike US targets.

    There has been some routine smuggling of both small arms and commercial material between different groups in Yemen and Somalia for years. But a weapons agreement between al-Shabaab and the Houthis would be something new, according to US officials.

    “It would be the clearest sign that two organizations that are, ideologically, diametrically opposed to one another — that they prioritized something they have in common, which is hostility towards [the United States],” said Christopher Anzalone, a professor at the Marine Corps University’s Middle East Studies department. “It would be very significant because it shows there is a level of pragmatism in both organizations.”

    Any form of military cooperation between the Houthis and al-Shabaab could also undermine an informal, and fragile, ceasefire between the Houthis and Saudi Arabia that has held since 2022, the senior administration official said. And it would “definitely” go against the spirit of a proposed UN roadmap for a more lasting peace, the official said.

    “We still have a strong interest in supporting the roadmap process in Yemen,” the official added, “but this sort of trafficking between the Houthis” and al-Shabaab “would certainly complicate and undermine that effort.”

    Officials say at this point, they aren’t sure what kinds of weapons the Houthis might provide to al-Shabaab. Right now, the Somali group generally only has access to rockets, mortars and homemade IEDs that it has used in its fight against the Somali government — deadly, but relatively smaller arms. The Houthis, by comparison, have weaponized drones, including underwater drones. They also have short-range ballistic missiles. There is a sense that the deal would cover “bigger kit” than just rockets and mortars, said one US official, but beyond that, the intelligence is murky.

    No matter what the Houthis provide, there’s likely limited opportunity for al-Shabaab to fire directly at US assets in the region. Even if the Houthis were to provide them with some of the smaller missiles the group has used to target US MQ-9 drones, Anzalone said, al-Shabaab would likely have to fire them from the north of the country. Pockets of that region of the country are controlled by an increasingly powerful branch of ISIS. Al-Shabaab is often fighting to contest territory there, and as a result, has a much more limited presence and freedom to maneuver.

    “They would love to do that,” Anzalone said, referring to striking directly at US assets. Al-Shabaab views the internationally recognized government of Somalia as a puppet of the United States. But, he said, “I think they would find it hard to do. This is where the intra-jihadist fighting between Shabaab and ISIS is the heaviest.”

    The US has about 480 US troops in Somalia, according to a US official. The US has continued to carry out counterterrorism strikes against both al-Shabaab and ISIS targets in Somalia throughout the Biden administration.

    One major question for US intelligence officials is the degree of involvement Iran might have in the arrangement. There is no direct evidence yet, officials said, but the US is still looking. It fits the pattern of broader Iranian efforts to widen the front against the US and the west by directly or indirectly providing arms to proxy groups.

    “That’s something we definitely have our eyes on,” the senior administration official said.

    But the Houthis are also one of the most independent-minded of the different Iran-aligned groups and are the one over which Tehran exercises arguably the least amount of control. Iran broadly has sought to tightly manage any potential escalation arising from the war in Gaza, calibrating its response to extract costs from the US and Israel without allowing it to spiral into direct conflict.

    And so some US officials are skeptical Iran is involved.

    “Don’t think Iran is actually part of this,” said one military official. “Houthis be a’ Houthi-ing on their own.”

  • Sh11B International VAT Fraud Mastermind Arrested In Kenya

    Sh11B International VAT Fraud Mastermind Arrested In Kenya

    A suspected ringleader of an €85 million (Sh11 billion) VAT fraud has been arrested in Nairobi (Kenya), after hiding from the authorities, following an investigation by the European Public Prosecutor’s Office (EPPO) in Hamburg (Germany), code-named Goliath.

    The suspect is a Danish citizen who had fled Denmark to escape arrest, prior to an action targeting an international criminal ring, carried out by the EPPO on 22 November 2023. At that time, another suspected ringleader of the fraudulent scheme was arrested. The whereabouts of the second suspect were unknown to authorities. 

    After a six-month surveillance undertaking, the EPPO was able to locate and arrest the suspect in Nairobi, on 23 May 2024, with the support of the Danish authorities, Germany’s Federal Criminal Police Office (Bundeskriminalamt: BKA) and Germany’s State Criminal Police Office of North Rhine-Westphalia (Landeskriminalamt Nordrhein-Westfalen). 

    On 5 June 2024, the suspect was deported and taken into custody at the airport in Frankfurt by the Organized crime unit of the State Criminal Police Office of North Rhine-Westphalia, at the request of the EPPO, under a European Arrest Warrant.

    The suspect was wanted in connection with a criminal organisation, active in the international trade of consumer electronics (mainly AirPods). They are suspected of evading tax by means of a VAT carousel fraud – a complex criminal scheme that takes advantage of EU rules on cross-border transactions between its Member States, as these are exempt from value-added tax – with estimated losses to the EU and national budgets of at least €85 million.

    According to the investigation, the suspects established companies in Germany and other EU Member States, as well as in non-EU countries, in order to trade the goods through a fraudulent chain of missing traders – who would vanish without fulfilling their tax obligations. Other companies in the fraudulent chain would subsequently claim VAT reimbursements from the national tax authorities.

    For the location and the arrest of the suspect, the EPPO counted on the support of Germany’s Federal Criminal Police Office (Bundeskriminalamt: BKA), the State Criminal Police Office of North Rhine-Westphalia (Landeskriminalamt Nordrhein-Westfalen), the German tax investigation unit of Nuremberg (Steuerfahndung Nürnberg), the Copenhagen Police in Denmark (Københavns Politi), the Operational Network (@ON – international police cooperation on mafia-style criminal groups) and the authorities in Kenya, in particular the Directorate of Criminal Investigation (DCI). 

    The EPPO is the independent public prosecution office of the European Union. It is responsible for investigating, prosecuting and bringing to judgment crimes against the financial interests of the EU.

  • All About Apple Intelligence, The New AI Game Changer On iPhones

    All About Apple Intelligence, The New AI Game Changer On iPhones

    Apple is to boost its Siri voice assistant and operating systems with OpenAI’s ChatGPT as it seeks to catch up in the AI race.

    The iPhone maker announced the Siri makeover along with a number of other new features at its annual developers show on Monday.

    It is part of a new personalised AI system – called “Apple Intelligence” – that aims to offer users a way to navigate Apple devices more easily.

    Updates to its iPhone and Mac operating systems will allow access to ChatGPT through a partnership with developer OpenAI.

    ChatGPT can also be used to boost other tools, including text and content generation. The test version will become available in the autumn.

    Tim Cook, Apple chief executive, said the move would bring his company’s products “to new heights” as he opened the Worldwide Developers Conference at the tech giant’s headquarters in Cupertino, California.

    What is AI and how does it work?

    The announcement was not welcomed by all. Elon Musk, the owner of Tesla and Twitter/X, threatened to ban iPhones from his companies due to “data security”.

    “Apple has no clue what’s actually going on once they hand your data over to OpenAI,” Mr Musk said on X. “They’re selling you down the river.”

    Apple has faced pressure to introduce new AI features to its products after the rapid rise of rivals who have adopted the technology.

    After it was usurped by Microsoft as the world’s most valuable company in January, Apple was overtaken again by Nvidia in early June.

    Ben Wood, chief analyst at CCS Insight, said that while Apple’s new personal AI system “should help placate nervous investors”, its ChatGPT integration may reveal and create deeper problems for the firm.

    “Arguably this sees Apple admitting its limitations given ChatGPT will kick in at a point where Siri is no longer able to help a user,” he told the BBC.

    Apple has been largely absent in the avalanche of AI products released by tech firms in recent months.

    Mr Cook told investors in 2023 that the company would approach the tech with care. On Monday, those plans were finally laid out.

    What is ‘Apple Intelligence’?

    “Apple Intelligence” is not a product nor an app in its own right.

    It will become part of every app and Apple product customers use – whether it’s a writing assistant refining your message drafts or your diary being able to show you the best route to get to your next appointment.

    In that sense, it is similar to Microsoft’s AI assistant Copilot – but you won’t have to pay extra to activate it.

    Siri, the voice assistant Apple acquired in 2010, has been refreshed with a new interface and chattier approach to help users navigate their devices and apps more seamlessly.

    Apple was keen to stress the security of Apple Intelligence during Monday’s keynote.

    Some processing will be carried out on the device itself, while larger actions requiring more power will be sent to the cloud – but no data will be stored there, it said.

    This is vital to customers who pay premium prices for Apple’s privacy promises.

    The system “puts powerful generative models right at the core of your iPhone, iPad and Mac,” said Apple senior vice president of software engineering Craig Federighi.

    “It draws on your personal context to give you intelligence that’s most helpful and relevant for you, and it protects your privacy at every step.”

    What does OpenAI and Apple deal mean?

    Apple’s decision to integrate OpenAI’s ChatGPT tech had been widely anticipated but it is an unusual move for a company that so closely guards its own products.

    Google and Microsoft have recently faced scrutiny over errors made by their AI products in recent months, with the search giant rolling back a new feature in May after its erroneous answers went viral.

    For years Apple also refused to allow its customers to download any apps outside of the App Store on the grounds that they might not be secure, and would not allow any web browser other than its own Safari for the same reason.

    It only changed when forced to by EU legislation.

    Is it a sign of recognition that even Apple can’t compete with ChatGPT right now?

    If so, it tells us a lot about the current power of the AI supergiant OpenAI.

    The firm did say it would integrate other products in future, but did not name any.

    Apple announced that its mixed reality headset, the Vision Pro, will go on sale in the UK on 12 July. It has been available in the US since February.

    Other new features announced on Monday include:

    • sending texts via satellite
    • scheduling messages to send at a later point
    • using head gestures (nodding for yes or shaking head for no) to control AirPods Pro
    • a dedicated app for passwords that is accessible across devices
    • the ability to hide certain apps or lock them away behind Face ID or passcodes.
  • Malawian Vice President Saulos Chilima Confirmed Dead In A Plane Crash

    Malawian Vice President Saulos Chilima Confirmed Dead In A Plane Crash

    The government of Malawi has confirmed that Vice President Saulos Chilima and nine others have died after the aircraft they were on did not reach its destination and crashed over land.

    In a statement released by Colleen Zamba, Secretary to the President, the search and rescue operation for the Malawi Defence Force aircraft that went missing on Monday, June 10, 2024, has ended in tragedy.

    The aircraft, carrying the Vice President, the Right Honourable Dr. Saulos Klaus Chilima, and nine others, was found this morning in the Chikangawa forest. All on board have tragically lost their lives in the crash.

    The search and rescue operation was launched immediately after the aircraft went off the radar, with various agencies, including the Malawi Defence Force, the Police Service, and the Department of Civil Aviation, working tirelessly to locate the missing plane.

    President Dr. Lazarus McCarthy Chakwera has been informed of the tragic outcome and has expressed his deepest condolences to the families of the Vice President and all those who have lost their lives in this tragic incident. The President has declared a national day of mourning and ordered that all flags fly at half-mast from today until the funeral day.

  • Govt Supplies Chiefs With New Electric Motorcycles

    Govt Supplies Chiefs With New Electric Motorcycles

    The Government is phasing out more than 13,000 fuel-injected motorcycles being used by chiefs and their assistants with electric ones.

    Internal Security and National Administration Principal Secretary Dr. Raymond Omollo said the move is aimed at improving mobility and efficient service delivery at locations and sub-location level.

    Speaking at his Harambee House office today while launching the pilot project’s distribution of the first batch of 22 motorcycles, the PS said the initiative placed chiefs and their assistants at the centre of the fight against climate change in the grassroots.

    “Besides mobilising wananchi at the location and sub-location levels to grow trees, the use of electric motorcycles by the administrators boosts our climate action efforts at the grassroots,” he said.

    Dr. Omollo said the 22 motorcycles would benefit the administrators in Kajiado, Kiambu, Machakos and Nairobi.

    More motorcycles will be distributed in the pilot project expected to take one month before a phased roll-out targeting all parts of the country.

    “This Initiative, covering twenty-two locations within the four counties, aims to enhance the efficiency of NGAOs in the service delivery, solving the challenges of transport and supporting our commitment to eco-friendly and sustainable solutions,” said Dr. Omollo.

    The PS said priority will be given to vast counties and remote areas facing security challenges for easy e-mobility of the officers.

    There are 3,972 locations and 9,055 sub-locations in the country.

    Dr. Omollo said police officers and other National Government Administration Officers (NGAOs) will in future be issued with electric vehicles for official use.

    He noted that NGAOs did not have enough vehicles for field officers and motorcycles for chiefs and assistant chiefs and the acquisition would go a long way in enhancing their operations.

    The PS said the officers will be trained on the use and maintenance of the electric motorcycles before being issued with them.

    Refresher training will also be conducted from time to time on a need basis, he added.

    Dr. omollo explained that the transition from fueled motorcycles will go a long way in the fight against air pollution, primarily due to the reduction in greenhouse gas emissions.

    The PS encouraged the private sector to purchase the e-motors.

  • Plane Carrying Malawian Vice President Saulos Chilima Goes Missing

    Plane Carrying Malawian Vice President Saulos Chilima Goes Missing

    Government of Malawi say Malawi Defense Force Aircraft which had Vice President Saulos Chilima and 9 others on board failed to make its scheduled landing-efforts by aviation authorities to make contact with the aircraft have failed thus far.

    Search and rescue operations underway.

    “The Office of the President and Cabinet wishes to inform the general public that the Malawi Defense Force Aircraft that left Lilongwe today, Monday 10th June 2024 at 09:17 Hours, carrying the Vice President, the Right Honourable Dr. Saulos Klaus Chilima, and nine others, failed to make its scheduled landing at Mzuzu International Airport at 10:02.” Reads part of the statement released by the government.

    “All efforts by aviation authorities to make contact with the Aircraft since it went off the radar have failed thus far. As such, the Commander of the Malawi Defense Force, General Valentino Phiri, has since informed His Excellency Dr. Lazarus McCarthy Chakwera of the incident and the President has since canceled his scheduled departure for the Bahamas and ordered all regional and national agencies to conduct an immediate search and rescue operation to locate the whereabouts of the aircraft.”

    This is a developing story.

  • Former President Uhuru Accuses Ruto Of Frustrating His Office

    Former President Uhuru Accuses Ruto Of Frustrating His Office

    The silent war between former President Uhuru Kenyatta and his successor William Ruto, which dates back to Kenya’s 2022 succession race, has burst into the open, with the former detailing his pains at the hands of the latter.

    In a classic case of reversed roles, Mr Kenyatta— who was accused of mistreating and plotting to block Dr Ruto, then his deputy, from ascending to power— on Monday openly bewailed frustration and mistreatment by State House.

    Over Sh20M disappeared into pockets of few senior police officers at the expense of juniors

    Through his spokesperson Kanze Dena-Mararo, Mr Kenyatta accused Dr Ruto of refusing to pay for his office and denying him budget for two consecutive financial years.

    “In the financial year 2023/2024, which ends in a few weeks, the budget allocation to this office was 503 million shillings. The year is ending without the office having any access to this allocation. The total amount for the two years that we have not had access to is approximately 1 billion Kenya shillings,” Mrs Mararo said.

    Given the uncertainty surrounding the disbursements, she said Mr Kenyatta was “waiting with bated breath” to see if the Sh579 million allocated to him will be honoured.

    “The quagmire that the office is in is that the office cannot substantiate what has been used and where the monies have been used since several requests and attempts to get budget returns from the accounting officer (at State House) have fallen on deaf ears,” she said.

    She noted that whereas salaries and medical insurance had been paid, no other monies spent could be accounted for by the office of the former president.

    Speaking at the Uhuru Kenyatta Institute in Nairobi, where Mr Kenyatta puts up in a private office he pays for, Mrs Mararo revealed that her boss had not received new vehicles as stipulated in the Presidential Retirement Benefits Act.

    The former commander-in-chief, she said, is forced to move around using the old transition fleet that he used while handing over power— vehicles that State House refused to fuel.

    “The office would like this to go on record that after transition, a conversation on the purchase of vehicles as required by law commenced between the two offices,” she said.

    “Identification of the vehicles was done, down to the color of the said vehicle, then the conversation froze. To date, no discussions have been revived. We do not know if the cars were purchased or not.”

    Mr Kenyatta, she noted, also takes great exception to the mode of communication that State House has adopted to address his office.

    “State House chooses a verbal form of communication on official issues or chooses not to respond to correspondence generated by this office. This includes the requisitions for fuel and maintenance, office operations and facilitation, pending renewal of contracts and budget returns,” she said.

    She said there is need for written communication to maintain transparency and order.

    The former Head of State also decried alleged harassment of his staff by State House operatives who make calls at night.

    It also emerged that Mr Kenyatta has been paying the salaries of two of his senior officers— Mrs Mararo, Secretary of Communication, and Mr George Kariuki, Secretary of Administration — after State House refused to renew their contracts.

    The two have not drawn government salaries since Mr Kenyatta handed over power Dr Ruto after he defeated the former president’s preferred successor Raila Odinga.

  • Gachagua Should Know His Political Marriage With Ruto Is Over, Ex-MP Kirwa Says

    Gachagua Should Know His Political Marriage With Ruto Is Over, Ex-MP Kirwa Says

    Former Cherangany Member of Parliament Kipruto Arap Kirwa has opined why the deal between President William Ruto and his Deputy Rigathi Gachagua is over.

    Speaking to TV47 on Monday, the former MP accused the President of reneging on his earlier promise he made to protect his deputy against attacks.

    The latest attacks facing DP Gachagua, Kirwa said, means the two no longer read from the same page.

    “The deputy president should know that the deal with William is over, but he should not show his head,” he said.

    “We still need him there, he should only reach out to good friends. I am sure he has ways of identifying.”

    Kirwa claimed the recent attacks directed at DP Gachagua were deliberately made to taint the image of the DP.

    “The DP is being attacked deliberately to make him look bad,” he said.

    “I know some of the young men and women who are casting aspersion on the integrity of the deputy president; people cannot do it without tacit approval from the boss himself. This, therefore, means everything has been choreographed to make sure that the deputy president is made to look bad,” he said.

    Kirwa added that the position of DP needs to be accorded respect.

    He warned that if Gachagua was to give in and step down, the move would deal a blow to President Ruto.

    “The president knows that the numbers around the mountain if they are to be combined with the eastern block of the Akamba nation, the president will be at home by nine o’clock,” he said.

    The former MP asked Ruto and Gachagua to tolerate each other for the peace and development of the country.