Saturday, February 20, 2016

Wednesday, February 17, 2016

Thursday, February 4, 2016

RUNAWAY CORRUPTION




By James Wakibia


Corruption remains one of Kenya’s biggest threat to development, every successive year Transparency International lists our beloved nation  amongst the most corrupt nations on the face of the earth .It’s not something to beat our chests for, it’s not like marathons and javelin that we should be proud of, no, it’s something every same person should be condemning.

According to Transparency international, the bad performance can be attributed to incompetence and ineffectiveness of anti-corruption agencies who have failed to punish alleged corruption offenders. The Judiciary, Department of Public Prosecution and Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission were pointed out as institutions that have contributed in high corruption levels, they have failed in the war against corruption.

As a ‘mwananchi’ in the streets am left powerless and confused and at the mercy of these corrupt powerful people who make life very expensive and lead to increased poverty.

County governments are in a good position to bridge the gap between the haves and have nots. Through proper distribution of resources and good governance it is possible to fight the ever increasing rates of poverty and to bring the numbers down. But with entrenched corruption I doubt any positive gains are going to be achieved, more poor people will continue languishing in pain and wallowing in immeasurable poverty. These people are suffocating public coffers for their own selfish gains with utmost impunity. Anything to stop this open thievery must be top priority.

It is saddening that the youth now see corruption as an easier way to wealth creation.


Reports of maddening and unthinkable amounts spent on buying goods and services are all over- we all remember the Ksh.109,000 anti-carcinogenic wheel barrows of Bungoma, Ksh. 2m Facebook account opening fees of Muranga, fat sitting allowances and generally spending that raises so many questions. Some with our taxes allegedly have hired gangs to walk around intimidating critics. Without doubt things are going haywire, MCAs now overstocked with power are unrivaled, they are demigods- instead of being the watchdogs they can be seen every day strolling the corridors of governors offices, looking for kickbacks, to move certain motions in the assemblies.

To effectively reduce poverty in Kenya, runaway corruption must be eliminated. It is imminent that vision 2030 might just be a pipe dream. Corruption will always pull us down, and it must be fought.

It’s good that the president came out strongly to condemn and show the public his stand on corruption, using tough words and stun face but words and stun face alone and no actions will not fight corruption. It’s time for a turnaround, those well written speeches that move masses must be moving thugs to jail. Corruption now a National security problem must be axed; laws must be enacted and implemented.

We voted for devolution because we believed in it, we went back in the ballots and brought in people we had faith in, but by default almost all of them have proved to be the wrong choices, most have pending court cases, we wish we could do something but it’s so late, we can only watch as they use our resources to campaign for their reelections, bad for us.

Tuesday, January 12, 2016

Our governments



Our governments

I have watched our government
Walking on tiled pavement
While many are dying for lack of treatment
They are smearing citizens with excrement
They that lament
Get locked permanent

Our governments

They sit in the parliaments
To make political statements
Of how to better their ornaments
We need movements
Courageous citizens
To change the environment

©jwakibia

Monday, January 11, 2016

Friday, January 8, 2016

When it’s so cheap to produce new plastic bags why invest in recycling?

Plastic bags should be banned, the level of damage they are causing mother nature  is astronomical ; millions continue being  produced every day, millions of them get dumped in the wrong places and sadly enough  almost zero of them get recycled.


In fact comparing plastic bottles and their sisters the plastic bags, more plastic bottles will end up in recycling factories while the bags find their way in our rivers, drains, landfills, lakes and in our animals. This is because plastic bottles are thicker and require little sorting and cleaning unlike the nylon bag.

All that beautiful, ‘’prestigious’’ plastic bag branded Tuskys,Naivas,Nakumatt, Bata etc  that we use every day for shopping  is a poison to our environment . THINK ABOUT IT.

 There are fallacies that we can recycle all plastic bags and that’s what plastic pro lobbies make us believe, while the plain truth is that it’s not economically viable to recycle plastic bags, it’s expensive to recycle them because of their thickness; they are so thin, one will need to collect a bunch of them to make anything worth the hustle, second they are very flimsy, easily carried away  by wind and rain which makes it difficult to collect them , sorting them from other trash is a challenge. They are used in most household to store all type of waste -biodegradable waste- like potato peelings, leftover food and other myriad of waste and in most cases inside the bags are other plastic  bags mixed with rotting waste that essentially compounds the problem, nobody wants to touch rotting things. It is therefore a very expensive venture to even think of recycling plastic bags. Most would rather collect bigger plastic materials.

When it’s so cheap to produce new plastic bags why would somebody invest in recycling?
Plastic bag is a symbol of environmental wastefulness –what’s the logic behind producing a single use bag that will last for hundreds of years destroying the environment and killing animals on land and in oceans?
 Did you know that plastic bags in our drains are habitats for mosquitoes and therefore breeding grounds for malaria, did you know that we spend so much collecting solid waste, 70% being plastic bags that will never be recycled and only lead to filling up our landfills? To somebody who is conscious about the environment, that is a threat to our lives.

 Drastic actions including banning plastic bags or at least introducing a direct charge for every bag given to a customer by shopping malls should be introduced, so that shoppers will feel the pinch are reuse more. Scotland introduced a 5p charge for every plastic bag a shopper takes home, the number of plastic bags littering their environment has plummeted since the ban was introduced.

Manufacturers who are the major polluters should be made to track down what they produce, if they argue plastic bags can be recycled they should be in the for front recycling it, otherwise the only viable way to deal with plastic bags is banning them in totality, Rwanda is a perfect example that indeed human beings can comfortably live without a single sheet of these environmental degrading sheaths. Mauritania is the newest country to ban plastic bags; this only shows how dangerous these bags are.

A lot has been said about Nairobi garbage and a lot must be done, Nairobians have for the last few weeks taken to social media to lament, the buck stops with each one of them as it stops with our leadership. Whenever you go to a supermarket ask yourself do you really need that plastic bag, why not just carry your own reusable bag, that way less bags will pollute our environment. Make smart purchasing choices. When buying an item you feel it’s already wrapped, refuse for an extra wrapper; make a habit of carrying your own bag.

Banning plastic bags is a damage control mechanism, we need that speed bump to control the massive amount of plastic pollution, and it’s a scourge. The money spend daily on waste collection will reduce drastically; it will be used for other development projects.

We cannot continue sweeping these issues under the carpet anymore. The government, both county and National have a constitutional role to protect the environment, they should begin enacting implementing environmental protection laws. The society too must embrace better waste management to combat this problem.

One quick question to you, what do you think happens to your shopping bags once they leave your door?Possibly you have no idea; best thing to do is to THINK ABOUT IT
John Githongo CEO  Inuka Kenya holding a banner in support of the campaign on banning of plastic bags in kenya |photo by Jeremy, Nisisi


























follow campaign here IsupportBanPlasticsKe






Sunday, January 3, 2016

Friday, January 1, 2016

The Year 2015: #IsupportBanPlasticsKe



James Wakibia –In The Streets of Nakuru

2015 was a great year – in fact, one of my best.  My #IsupportBanPlasticsKe campaign, one I am so passionate about,  did so well, so many supported it, and has reached so many people.  I cannot but thank all those who made it happen.

The history of my campaign can be traced back to 2013, when I was still at the university doing my undergraduate degree.  There, I penned several opinion articles related to solid waste management at Nakuru’s  biggest dumpsite.   I still have newspaper cuttings of my published letters to the editor.  In the same year, my classmates and I arranged a small protest calling for the relocation of Gioto Dumpsite, my first ever protest in Nakuru.   I felt the rush as we shouted  in the streets of Nakuru, calling for Gioto Dumpsite to be closed.  Those were the good days when the county government was still green, but they didn’t know what they could do with a petition from the public, so our protest fell on deaf ears that year.   But our mission did not die, and I have learned a lot.   With time, I narrowed down my campaign to plastic bags mainly, because they are the primary source of waste in my town and other towns.  According to a report By Nairobi City County,  70% of all solid waste is plastic bags.  A report by Daily Nation said that a staggering 20 tonnes of plastic waste is collected every year from the shores of Lake Nakuru – a worrying and ominous statistic.

Initially the hashtag was #BanPlasticsKe, but when the Cabinet Secretary for Environment, Prof. Judy Wakhungu, tweeted that she was supporting it I decided to change it to #IsupportBanPlasticsKe.  My reason was to personalize it, to make it everybody’s project.  The result was amazing, and is still amazing almost 3 months since I launched it.  We hope that soon some serious measures will be taken, including banning these plastic bags in Kenya.

Prof. Wakhungu’s tweet saying she supported our campaign became a disappointment.   I thought she could be doing much more  in her position as a cabinet secretary.  We are only calling for regulations to ensure that only reusable bags get into the market, banning all the rest – anything below 60 microns, or better still, 100 microns.
Along the way, many people have come on board to support me and the project.  First, my friends in the WhatsApp group streetnakuru (the same name as my twitter handle).  These people  are phenomenal. Without their input the project would not have been where it is – Nawavulia Kofia!
So today I give them my shoutouts, and a cuppa coffee is on the way too.

In no specific order:  Koech, Rapportour, Incognito, Tapphie, Swamkidd, Dr.Muniu, Kimaani, Jabu, Vincent, Mary, Martin, Annabel, Amos, Prince, Robertinah, Aaron, Azu, Benard, Mbatia, Joyce, Branu, WanjiruM, Caisey, Edith,Dorcas, Charles, Josymras, Kare, Mercy, Njery, Ogallo, Pierra, RonPeter, Sammy, Karanja, SamPrince, Shiku, SupaHuka, Uba – nobody forgotten.  You are dear to me.  Thanks for taking up the campaign, thanks for owning it.  You guys are a godsend.  Last year we met several times for uji at Maigos – this year we will drink coffee like other people in those nicer places.  So don’t leave the group yet, we have more to talk about, more coffees to drink,  and for sure more campaigns.

I cannot forget NISISI and Onward254 – thanks so much; I am looking forward working with you in 2016.

And to the many who took the #IsupportBanPlasticske  photos without asking ‘’Hizo picha unaenda kuuza wapi’’ – thanks a million. The photos are on my blogs.  They will be among many I will be using for a street exhibit.

Osteen Njenga from hivisasa.com – thank you.
P.S.
Thanks to all who supported the release of Baby Jeremy (#ReleaseBabyJeremy) and Baby Godwin (#HelpReleaseBabyGodwin).  Both kids had been detained in two Nakuru hospitals just because their parents could not raise money to pay the bills.
Martin Gicinga, Samuel Kuria, Susan Kihika , Alex Blogger, Kuria Mwangi , Sam West, Vincent Tanui, Eza and so many others – God bless you, I salute you.
While I was hitting the keys to write this, my longtime friend Abigail came and bought me a heavy lunch – 
 God bless her soul, it can’t get any better than these.

Naomi and Suzanne Niles – thanks for reading the draft and making a few edits .

Sometimes it’s not what you have that matters, but what you do with it.


                                                          Prosperous new year

follow me on twitter @jwakibia and @streetnakuru follow #IsupportBanPlasticsKe campaign here @banplasticske

Thursday, December 24, 2015

Monday, December 14, 2015

Call to ban substandard plastic bags in Kenya -for #IsuppportBanPlasticsKE

Andrew Watt 

Two online petitions have been launched online calling for an outright ban on substandard plastic bags in Kenya on change.org and avaaz.org.
Non-biodegradable, plastic bags thinner than 60 microns are regarded as non-reusable are causing an environmental hazard and are problematic to recycle, according to campaigners.
A 2005 report by the United Nations Environmental Program, National Environment Management Agency and the Kenya Institute for Public Policy Research and Analysis, claimed that around 100 million plastic bags are freely given to consumers in supermarkets, grocery stores and kiosks every year and very few of these are recycled or reused.
Organisers of the petition claim these very thin, one-use plastic bags are a ‘disaster-in-waiting’, choking lakes, rivers and blocking major drainage systems in Kenyan towns.
In fact, according to a report by Magdalene Wanja (Daily Nation, October 2, 2014), a total of 24 tonnes of plastic was collected in 2013 from the shores of Lake Nakuru alone.
The amount of plastic bags and wrappers in our rivers is staggering.
The Kenya Wildlife Service reported that the lake would soon be “too toxic for the current aquatic life as well as herbivores that often eat the same non-biodegradable material leading to their deaths”.
Also, the burning of these bags, which is common practice in Kenyan landfills, contributes to air pollution by releasing harmful carbon when burned.
Organisers of the petition warn that an outright ban is the only workable solution.
We have already demonstrated our inability to protect the environment by reckless dumping, a citizenry that is unaware and does not care, government agencies that do not work, and NGOs that have forgotten their calling.
They claim that a ban on plastic bags thinner than 60 or even 100 microns is the only way to “cure this malignant tumour eating Kenya” and that the only plastic bags to be manufactured in the country should be both reusable and recyclable.
Recently the campaign was seeing support online with #BanPlasticsKe and #ISupportBanPlasticsKe trending on Twitter in Kenya.
In the UK, a 5p charge was placed on plastic bags in supermarkets to encourage the use of reusable carriers.




 story first appeared here. Call to ban substandard plastic bags in Kenya

Monday, December 7, 2015

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