Tuesday, 7 August 2012

Francis Ewoton Death

Tuesday, August 7, 2012 - News just in indicates that former Turkana South MP Francis Ewoton is dead! The former man of the wig who left power after the 2002 election has been declared dead. This is after members of his family found him dead at his home together with his wife.
Police in the area have reported that Ewoton killed his wife before committing suicide in unclear circumstances.
Relatives said the couple has been having financial problems for some time which has led to family rows and fights in the past but they did not think that Ewoton was suicidal.
There is a somber mood in the family as they seek answers to the grisly deaths; a family member who has sought anonymity said that they found Ewoton’s body hanging in the house before finding his wife’s body that had severe stab wounds on the chest.
More news to follow…………

Friday, 27 July 2012

About the Turkana Boy

I leave for Nairobi in 12 days, so it is about time to start posting. I will also post while there teaching my class on “The Law and Literature of Colonialism and Post-Colonialism.”  In putting together my list of things to do outside the classroom the first thing that came to mind wasn’t the safari or the Indian Ocean beaches to the south of Mombasa, but a visit to the Nairobi National Museum to the KNM-WT 1500, otherwise known as “The Turkana Boy.”  The Turkana Boy is a youthful Homo erectus (or a Homo ergaster, depending on who is doing the naming) discovered near Lake Turkana, Kenya by Kamoya Kimeau and Richard Leakey of the famous family of anthropologists in 1984.
At a mere 1.6 million years old, the Turkana Boy is the youngest of the three “name” skeletons for in East Africa.  “Lucy” comes in at about 3.2 million years old and hails from the Afar Depression, to the north in Ethiopia. So-named because “Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds” was being played on the camp tape recorder as Lucy was uncovered, Lucy was an Australopithecus afarensis discovered in 1974.
Older still is “Ardi”  who was actually discovered in 1994 but not revealed to the public until 2009. Ardi is a 4.4 million year old Ardipithecus ramidius, also from Ethiopia.
The questions of how these three fit into the human family tree and whether East Africa was indeed the cradle of modern Homo is endlessly debated and the human family line changes frequently, so I can’t say whether the Turkana Boy is a relative or not, but I know I will find it fascinating to see this exhibit.  I expect a reaction akin to what I felt when I first saw “The Venus of Willendorf” in Austria. Just 4.3 inches tall, the 22,000 to 24,000 year old statue is beautifully presented in the Naturhistoriches Museum in Vienna. Ever since seeing the dinosaurs in Philadelphia’s The Academy of Natural Sciences and picking up some toy “cavemen” (I too thought they played with dinosaurs at that point, although some of grow out of that notion) I have found the subject fascinating. Not sure how I ended up as a lawyer instead of an anthropologist.  I will let you know from Nairobi how it goes.

Thursday, 12 January 2012

TURKANA COUNTY ANALYSIS

Support

PART A
Support PROTUS AKUJAH FOR MP
ANALYSIS OF GOVERNOR TO BE DR. EKAL IMANA AND MP TO BE MR.PROTUS AKUJAH BY JOURNALIST ENG.JACOBAM WILLIAM APEYO AND MR. RONALD ERUKAN (MANYWELE)
The following is the analysis of views, comments and suggestions taken from the people who support Ekal and Akujah. Let start by me, I am a supporter of Protus Akujah and Dr. Ekal Imana despite of me from Turkana Central District. Am a Turkana and I am proud of being a Turkana whereby Turkana is my nature and my colour no man can change unless God do.

The following views demonstrated great atrocity of being  at the back of the these two people despite of what is know on the ground  whereby Dr. Ekal Imana is becoming a threat to some people and his presence is like lighting fire at their sits. But all in all change must be expected and that’s why I is as a journalist .
Life must go on Rebellion with or without rain. The end of the tunnel is our target, the rest is noise & it can’t stop us from fulfilling our mission here in Loima and turkana county this round ever.”

These are the message from the members, followers and supports
'He who knows nothing and knows he knows nothing, he is a scholar; teach him. He who knows nothing and thinks he knows something, he is a fool; shun him. He who knows something and thinks he knows nothing, he is unsure; enlighten him. He who knows something and knows he knows something, he is wise; follow him' Bruce Lee
I hope i will not be crucified! I have not mentioned anyone in bad light in public. Those who know what its means to be brief call such crime 'character assassination’. I hope i have not done such kind of atrocity. I stand to be corrected.
Protus, remember that God has good and greater plans in the life of our people and will never leave nor forsake them. God has started an assignment in you of which, He promised to accomplish it. Never give up, keep your neck and eye on top of the mountain like a Giraffe. God Bless and watch over u.
Turkana County myriad problems is as a result of let down by their political leaders, 15 years down the line as leaders, there is nothing substantive to boast of them....not hunger reduction, not literacy empowerment, not clean water, not security improvement, basically nothing..Gosh.....where will one come from to rescue the community from further demise? Oh God, why u allow such greedy leaders m...is treat your innocent people?...let the Tornados rein on them,we will not cry as they do not cry for us...what new things can Munyes and Ekwee do for the county if for 15 years they helped deliver nothing this time round they are seeking more leadership come 2012.God redeem your people from the wrath of their irresponsible deeds and give us new leaders with fresh minds and hearts geared at the plight of the poor and not what we see from the duo. Your people have suffered enough that these times deliver them the York of their rule.
"We must become the change we want to see." Mahatma Gandhi. Protus, wish you all the best come 2012. Protus 4 Loima 2012 for "Good Governance, Transparency & Accountability (GTA)" Itomokino jik!
 
It is sad that his life has ended at the time the people of Turkana are in clamour of reaping the fruits of the new constitutional dispensation in which he, the late Mwalimu Timothy Wabuya Kikete contributed by moulding most of the elite and great brains in Turkana County. Let's join 2gether and condole his family in this hard tyms of sorrow. Toper Niajokon apake Denno!!. May his soul rest in Eternal Peace!
Ekile protus, it's now if not now it's never. i give u all ma heartfelt support.
 
PART B
DR.EKAL IMANA FOR GOVERNORSHIP
Ok, once again Dr. Ekal Imana is a man who I never saw, never felt his presence, but we have talked in facebook twice, but to this point when I am giving this analysis we have not talked but protus  we talk in different in occasions despite of network problem my witness is your brother Pastor Peter Eroo.  Do you know what made me go crazy over the him? was when he was answering questions of people from all corners confidence which made me to like him. I  Am proud of you brother.
One of the great supporters of Dr. Ekal Imana gave the following list of ideas:-
‎1. Education.
2. Security.
3. Infrastructure.
4. Better medicare.
5. Food security.
6. Clean tap water.
7. Accountability n transparency of funds.

These are Dr. Ekal's agenda for the Turkana people, we need to hear such things personally from the aspirants, not from the 'eaters.' we need to get something from their talk- sincerity, frankness, hw hurt by our grievances they are, vision, credibility of their agendas..we need to look at them straight in the eyes n employ the use of a truth meter! Aspirants shouldn't romour around coz Turkana is more important than a 'clique of eaters.' they shud rather come in person(s).
Dr. Ekal, i got utmost respect for u sir. Am bitter with past failed regimes driven by oddities n i was juz trynna get hw u'r gonna go about this.as a prof'l, i got a soft spot for u buh t comes with no guarantee..only hw ryt u'll do things will. To vie for any office of ur choice in the land is ur const'l right n no one's gonna deny u that. hw shud we be ranked the poorest?it's mind-blowin brother!

Press release on the recent and continued deadly attacks on the innocent civilians by bandits in isiolo disrict by the friends of isiolo and people of good will

We the people of isiolo take with great exception the continued and sustained deadly attacks that are being perpetrated by bandits in Isiolo in the last five years. We would like to condemn in the strongest terms possible and ask the ministry of internal affairs and provincial administration to quickly and decisively deal with this problem

There’s no single community that is doing this to fellow Kenyans, this is the work of banditry and should be dealt with decisively. The communities living in Isiolo do not need peace accords to live in peace but require the law take its course.
We have seen ,heard and even witnessed the atrocities being committed in the presence of government agencies, but nothing has been done to date, the communities have taken to revenge attacks on each other

Sunday, 8 January 2012

DONATE TO TURKANA CHILDREN

 
DONATE TO TURKANA CHILDREN
Support Turkana Child Send them to school, let them learn you can send your support to:

Name:                                 Jacobam Apeyo

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Email:                                   William.Jacobam@Gmail.Com

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Position:                              Webmaster

WESTERN UNION
Name:                  Jacobam Apeyo
ID/No:                  29028270
Country:              Kenyan
Town:                   Lodwar
Phone Number: +254700576781

Deputy Governor Candidates - 2012

POLITICIANS HARAMBEE BAN STARTS TONIGHT

POLITICIANS HARAMBEE BAN STARTS TONIGHT

DEADLINE: Election date still August 14, 2012, officially.
DEADLINE: Election date still August 14, 2012, officially.
ASPIRANTS for political office have until midnight today to conduct their last harambee or risk being disqualified before or after the election. The Elections Act 2011 prohibits anyone aspiring for political office from participating in a fundraising eight months before the election. This applies to all levels of office from president, governor, senator, MP, women representative to councillor.
The election date is still officially August 14 according to the new constitution. Therefore the eight-month cut-off date takes effect today. The government wants to change the election date to December 17 but the Bill to amend the constitution is currently before Parliament and the High Court is yet to rule on the matter. "The polls officially and legally are in August 2012. The matter of aspirants being banned from harambees is so serious that some politicians have already bought recording equipment and video cameras to record their opponents who will conduct or send contributions to harambees after this Wednesday," a politician from Central province told the Star.
The recordings can then be used in evidence to disqualify their opponents before or after the elections, either through the IEBC or the courts. Chairman Ahmed Isaack Hassan has said the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission will be monitoring harambees and fundraising events.
He warned those contesting political office not to violate the Elections Act. “The Commission has a role to ensure that the rules are followed. For example, candidates must not participate in public fundraising or harambees eight months before the general election,” said Isaack in a statement on Monday detailing the time line for 2012.
Political aspirants are banned from attending harambees for funerals, weddings, school fees, development projects or any other fundraiser that is not directly connected to politics. The aspirants are however free to organise a fundraising to raise money for their own campaigns or for their political parties.
Clause 26 (1) of the Act provides that, “A person who directly or indirectly participates in any manner in any public fundraising or harambee within eight months preceding a general election or during an election period, in any other case, shall be disqualified from contesting in the election held during that election year or election period.” The ban on harambees was introduced in the Act after some ministers and MPs complained that their rivals were embarrassing them by contributing huge amounts of cash just before an election.
In September some ministers argued that the ban on harambees might antagonise schools and churches but they were dismissed by their colleagues. “Our names are put on cards as guests of honour without our knowledge and sometimes we are very embarrassed especially when we produce little in the form of donations,” said a Cabinet minister yesterday. “In most cases, our rivals often have more funds in store as they are aware of the events ahead of time and sometimes they are the main instigators for such events,” added the minister.
The ministers and MPs also argued that some churches had started organising harambees just before an election and including the names of elected leaders on the invitation cards without their knowledge or consent. Former Cabinet minister and Nyeri senator aspirant Mutahi Kagwe said yesterday that the Elections Act was still unclear on several key issues. "Harambees are banned in an election period, according to the Act. But what is an election period? Is it the eight months before the polls? Is it the three months between Parliament being prorogued to the election day? Is it the 21-day campaign period? The Act talks of an election period but nowhere does it define what this period is," he said.
Kagwe raised questions about the Act's ambiguity in the clause banning candidates from hosting their supporters. "The Act allows that a candidate can raise money for his campaign. But what is that money for? What can you spend the money on? If people come to my house and I give them tea, which is normal, is that an offence?" he asked. "How do you define who got tea as my guest and who drank the tea in order to vote for me? Under what circumstances will it be regarded as treating guests and bribery?" he added.
Fisheries minister Amason Kingi predicted that many politicians will be disqualified. "The Act is clear but many candidates have not read the law. The door is closed to harambees unless the law is amended to push the elections to December 2012," he said. "You have your campaign team and even your supporters coming to see you. You cannot make them wait the whole day and give them nothing. It is remuneration for work they have done for you. The problem is when you induce someone to vote for you," Amason added.
Lawyer Paul Muite, the likely presidential candidate for Safina, said the harambee ban was fine but still had loose ends including the election date. "The recent by-elections are example of how to buy electoral victory. What Kenyans and electoral agencies should be concentrating on is establishing how these aspirants have got the money," he said. "Stopping aspirants from contributing to harambees is window dressing. They will just circumvent this by using their friends and relatives to launder the money," he said.

FIND THE ASPIRANTS IN YOUR AREA

MPs Rift Valley Region

Turkana County
1. Turkana North Constituency
2. Turkana West Constituency
3. Turkana Central Constituency
4. Loima Constituency
5. Turkana South Constituency
6. Turkana East Constituency
Uasin Gishu County
1. Soy Constituency
2. Turbo Constituency
3. Moiben Constituency
4. Ainabkoi Constituency
5. Kapseret Constituency
6. Kesses Constituency
Elgeyo Marakwet County
1. Marakwet East Constituency
2. Marakwet West Constituency
3. Keiyo East Constituency
4. Keiyo South Constituency
West Pokot County
1. Kapenguria Constituency
2. Sigor Constituency
3. Kacheliba Constituency
4. Pokot South Constituency
Baringo County
1. Baringo East Constituency
2. Baringo West Constituency
3. Baringo Central Constituency
4. Mochongoi Constituency
5. Eldama Ravin Constituency
Trans Nzoia County
1. Kwanza Constituency
2. Endebes Constituency
3. Saboti Constituency
4. Kiminini Constituency
5. Cheranganyi Constituency
Samburu County
1. Samburu West Constituency
2. Samburu East Constituency
3. Samburu North Constituency
Laikipia Couty
1. Laikipia West Constituency
2. Laikipia East Constituency
3. Laikipia North Constituency
Nandi County
1. Tinderet Constituency
2. Aldai Constituency
3. Nandi Hills Constituency
4. Emgwen North Constituency
5. Emgwen South Constituency
6. Mosop Constituency
Narok County
1. Kilgoris Constituency
2. Emurua Dikiri Constituency
3. Narok North Constituency
4. Narok east Constituency
5. Narok South Constituency
6. Narok West Constituency
Kajiado County
1. Kajiado North Constituency
2. Kajiado Central Constituency
3. Kajiado East Constituency
4. Kajiado South Constituency
Bomet County
1. Sotic Constituency
2. Chepalungu Constituency
3. Bomet East Constituency
4. Konoin Constituency
Nakuru County
1. Molo Constituency
2. Njoro Constituency
3. Naivasha Constituency
4. Gilgil Constituency
5. Kuresoi South Constituency
6. Kuresoi North Constituency
7. Subukia Constituency
8. Rongai Constituency
9. Bahati Constituency
10. Nakuru Town West Constituency
11. Nakuru Town East Constituency
Kericho County
1. Kipkelion East Constituency
2. Kipkelion West Constituency
3. Ainamoi Constituency
4. Bureti Constituency
5. Belgut Constituency
6. Sigowet Constituency

humanitarian mission


During his recent visit to Southern Sudan as part of a Jubilee Action humanitarian mission, the independent Crossbench peer, David Alton, visited the frontline missionaries of St Paul. Imagine a diocese the size of Ireland and a parish where you can travel for most of two days without seeing another vehicle. This is the remote region of Turkana in Northern Kenya, close to the turbulent borders of Sudan, Kenya and Ethiopia. Turkana district comprises some 77,000 square kilometres and semi-desert where there is only very sparse vegetation. It has been described as "a sun-dried moonscape" and it is easy to see why. Famine and drought are a part of every day life for the Turkanas and death, suffering and endurance are words that need no explanation here. The young missionary priest who had invited Jubilee Action to see the work of his community had, one day earlier, buried seven of his parishioners shot dead by a raiding party who had come over the border to steal women and livestock. Death is no stranger in Turkana. During my recent visit I met the energetic and resourceful bishop, Patrick Harrington, an Irish priest of the Society of African Missions (SMA). Support As bishop of Lodwar (and only the second, having succeeded Bishop John Mahon) he is the only authority actively engaged in the provision of health, education and development initiatives. The government and aid agencies are nowhere to be seen. In his diocese 70 out of every 100 adults cannot read or write in an language; only about 15 of every 100 women are literate; more than 50% of children of school age do not attend school; and the infant mortality rate is 159 deaths for every 1000 live births. Last year the District Medical Officer said that the HIV/AIDS virus infects some 34% of the population. Before ending their relief operations in the area last month, World Vision reported that in the most recent famine (2000-2001) some two thirds of the people received food aid supplies. As the agencies move on to the next disaster zone it is difficult to see how they can conclude that the crisis is over in Turkana or to see what capacity they have left in place to equip the Turkanas to combat the next famine more effectively. Bishop Patrick has been a missionary all his life, and having served as Superior General of the SMA in Rome, he was asked to head up the diocese in 1995. He has a flock of about half a million Turkanas. Most follow traditional religions. About 20% are Catholic. He says, "Christianity is the one liberating force available to these people." During his episcopacy twelve new churches have opened, 10,000 people have been baptised and 5,000 others confirmed. I met one of the four Turkana priests who have been ordained and had the privilege of acting as witness for four young men as they received their minor orders in preparation for ordination next June. They will become part of a pastoral approach developed by the bishop and which seeks to spread the gospel message in word and deed. Bishop Harrington is fortunate to have a group of missionaries who have their motherhouse in Turkana. They run three of his parishes, covering a staggering area of about 30,000 square kilometres, and with each parish operating 10 to 12 outposts. The Missionary Community of St Paul the Apostle, and Mary Mother of the Church, was founded by a Spanish priest, Fr Francisco Andreo, who first came to Africa in 1968. He came to Turkana in 1982 and then, he says, "the desire to move to that region never left us." One of his priests, Fr Albert Salvans, is a priest of the Westminster diocese, an intriguing mixture of Spanish and adopted English, who was allowed to go to Turkana permanently by Cardinal Hume. He combines the role of priest, with that of engineer, medic and teacher. He even seems to run a mobile seminary in the back of his truck. I have never seen anyone change another burst tyre so quickly but a hundred miles from anywhere I did secretly wonder what happened next as the last spare was fitted to the truck. These Irish and Spanish missionaries follow in the relatively recent footsteps of the first missionaries to Turkana. During the colonial period the British did not permit access to what was a restricted area but famine in 1961 led to the first Catholic missionaries arriving here. Of course, other parts of Kenya have a long and sustained Christian presence. Kenya's great seaport of Mombassa reminds us that this was a cultural crossroads where Arab, Chinese, Portuguese, and Spanish sailors met. Today, there is still plenty to remind us of this period: Fort Jesus in Mombassa, built by Philip the II, the Vasco da Gama pillar, or the chapel that St Francis Xavier used to celebrate Mass during his stay in Malindi before departing to India. Even in the time of St Francis Xavier, the great Jesuit patron of the missions, the Christian travellers shared knowledge and expertise as well as the faith. Down to our own times, in the form of remarkable women like Mother Teresa of Calcutta, the Catholic approach has been to base evangelisation on this powerful combination of word and deed. In 1987 three women of the community of St Paul went to live in Loarengak, Turkana, in order to carry out a far-reaching health programme, covering more than 10, 000 sq. km. They organised a mobile clinic for the nomad population in fifteen different centres and a network of six primary health dispensaries. In the mobile clinics they make periodic checks on mothers and children up to 6 years of age. They have immunisation campaigns for children, and inform the mothers about questions related to basic hygiene and health. The desperate need to extend this provision was underlined to me in one graphic incident. Fr Albert was flagged down by some villagers to tell him that a young women was lying under a tree half a mile away choking on her own blood. She had miscarried two days earlier and was haemorrhaging. He lifted her into our truck and took her to the dispensary. Another young missionary then transferred her to his vehicle to drive her to the hospital at Lodwar - about five hours away. They have a rough airstrip but no plane. In this sort of situation it could have made the difference between life and death. In addition to dispensaries it is the Church who provides the education in Lodwar diocese - operating 97 primary and 6 secondary schools. The Missionaries of St Paul have also constructed many nursery schools. Since the beginning of 1993, the mission of Nariokotome has tried to be a place of initiatives in development projects that could improve people's lives long-term. This has included the practical formation of young aspirants to their community as well as vocational training for Turkana's young people. Carpentry, basic mechanics, and learning to work with metal form a basic vocational education. The goal is to make people self sufficient and not reliant on western handouts. I met a wonderful Kenyan called Frederick who has been working with the community on a range of horticultural and agricultural initiatives. With stunning success, and learning from the Israelis, they have made green barren tracts of land. Over the past decade they have dug wells, erected wind pumps, built dams and created irrigation projects - often with the help of young people from Britain, America, Spain and France. Today, hundreds of fruit trees grow at the mission together with vegetables, melons and watermelons - introducing the Turkanas, a nomadic people, to basic agriculture. They have also been developing fishing and bee keeping projects. It is now two years since the community started planting coconut and date palm-trees in the villages near the highly saline Lake Turkana. Planting trees has involved fencing the orchards from foraging animals. There is also more to be done in educating villagers about the necessity of the daily watering of the trees. Fr Albert took me to one of the rock catchments that the mission has built across small valleys that flood once or twice a year. Since they built their first dam at Nyiburin near the mission, more than five years ago, 14 more have followed. And four others are under construction. Each dam assures permanent water supply for around six hundred people and their livestock. Previously these people had to migrate to the areas bordering Sudan and Uganda during the dry season. With the help of two new excavators they have started building sand dams in the places where the absence of bedrock prevents the construction of rock catchments. Fr Albert says he desperately needs two Massey Ferguson tractors to get on with this work. Like the plane they need this is about life and death. The daily quest for drinking water for Turkana families is perhaps the most poignant sight you will see in Turkana. Women are crouched in the riverbeds scooping out sand trying to find water below. It is backbreaking work and these manual wells are always in danger of collapsing. When the rainy season comes and the women's water holes are covered in sand the process has to begin all over again. Perhaps the picture of water bringing life to the arid land is the best metaphor of all for these remarkable missionaries. Their water of life, through baptism and through development, brings the only hope in the lives of countless people. So what might we do to help? A parish in North London runs a small charity, New Ways that supports the work in Turkana. Bishop Harrington told me that he would like to twin his diocese with one in Britain. Why not put that to your own bishop? Parishes can twin too, perhaps taking on the building of a dam, a well, an irrigation project, a dispensary, a school or the pastoral support of the young men and women of this exciting and vibrant community. They also need volunteers - single and married - to commit themselves to working in the diocese, especially as catechists , teachers, and medics. And what else? On this Mission Sunday it is worth recalling what Fr Albert told the four men going forward for ordination next year. He reminded them of what Don Bosco's mother told him on the day of his ordination: "To become a priest is to begin to suffer." But the old Irish saying that where there is no pain there is no gain can comfort missionary priests. In Turkana the Missionaries of St Paul are standing at the centre of immense suffering and pain but they are making remarkable gains. It puts our own interminable introspective concerns into perspective. We are part of a universal church and these missionaries deserve our prayers and our practical support. You can write to Fr Albert Salvans at PO Box 49547, Nairobi, Kenya, or e-mail him at mcspa@form-net.com This article has been published on-line with permission of Lord Alton. It will be printed in The Catholic Times for Mission Sunday, October 20th 2002.

Turkana Has Turned Into Political Circus

Confucius once told his followers that three things are required for government: weapons, food and trust.
If correct, the coalition government may have to resort to force to maintain its grip on power, as it presently lacks both public trust and sufficient means to feed its hungry citizens.
That became apparent in the angry public reaction to Government spokesman Alfred Mutua's trivialisation of the current food crisis.
Politicians, however, quickly recovered and flew their private helicopters high above the potholed roads to arrive in Turkana before the relief food convoy.
Thanks to their own press service - paid by you the taxpayers - and modern technology, we all saw them on the evening news dishing out dry maize to hungry pastoralists.
By then the politicians were already back in the capital planning the next move to turn tragedy into votes.
Not a hint of shame or embarrassment that half a century after independence droughts become famines because regimes fail to heed the early warning signs and plan accordingly.
Now it appears that the dozen or so presidential aspirants have discovered that food influences local and national politics.
Turkana has had little or no rain for five years and up to 70 per cent of the livestock have been wiped out in some parts of the county.
In January this year, 27 per cent of the population were already receiving food assistance from WFP.
Long before Red Cross led the relief convoy, Unicef had warned in a June 2011 survey that 30 per cent of children below five were malnourished.
But when international and local media houses move on to the next big story, what will remain?
Turkanas have been victims of bad politics for decades, beginning with President Moi's expulsion of Noraid in 1989 because of Norway's decision to grant asylum to Koigi wa Wamwere.
Noraid had funded the construction of the Kitale-Lodwar road -- completed in 1983 -- as well as assisting many educational and health programmes.
The Catholic Church currently has a huge investment in the county providing over 200 medical personnel as well as constructing hundreds of schools and providing various social services, ranging from boreholes to local radio.

Yet the government's failure to maintain the main road linking the county with Kitale and Sudan has led to Turkana becoming a frontier zone again.
Uganda now benefits much more from business opportunities in South Sudan because of its superior infrastructure.
The cradle of mankind may have once been the Garden of Eden but it is now a vast desert of missed opportunities.
Relief food will temporarily save the Turkana yet their greatest famine is one of leadership, imagination and planning.
Elected representatives who survive on relief politics must be replaced by leaders who believe that their people's dignity deserves more than handouts.