Killing a girl because the relationship didn't work out and for what? Her whole life ends because of your selfishness. That guy doesn't deserve jail walai
@Safaricom_Care hello,
I have an e SIM and I'm changing phones. The e SIM activation card I was given is currently expired. I live overseas. How do I go about getting esim activation?
@Solphendukaa Jaba tupu Kwanza ukifika huko mwisho ndio unaona vile unabebwa Wana Sana. Hii yote NI kata but alikua captivating only Hadi uanze kufikiria kwani nini inaendelea hapa
NEW: Kenya has responded to growing scrutiny over unmarried Kenyan mothers and their children stranded in Saudi Arabia, after a New York Times report accused Nairobi of silence and noted that other African embassies, including Burundi’s, had offered more reliable assistance.
@Posta_Kenya item sent on September 4 from Kenya tracking no RA216228459KE. Is still showing city square as last update. Where is the parcel? It's been over. Month now?
ABOUT ‘AFRICAN TIME’
In Ryszard Kapuściński’s Book ‘The Shadow of the Sun’, about his time in Africa, there is a chapter where he describes his own experience of ‘African Time’ when he enters a bus and has to wait many hours for it to depart -
“We climb into the bus and sit down. At this point there is a risk of culture clash, of collisions and conflict. It will undoubtedly occur if the passenger is a foreigner who doesn’t know Africa. Someone like that wil start looking around, squirming, inquiring “When will the bus leave?"
“What do you mean, when?” The astonished driver will reply. “It will leave when we find enough people to fill it up."
The Europeans and the Africans have an entirely different concept of time. In the European worldview, time exists outside man, exists objectively, and has measurable and linear characteristics. According to Newton, time is absolute: “Absolute, true, mathematical time of itself and from its own nature, it flows equably and without relation to anything external”.
The European feels himself to be time’s slave, dependent on it, subject to it. To exist and function, he must observe its ironclad, inviolate laws, its inflexible principles and rules. He must need deadlines, dates, days and hours. He moves within the rigor of time and cannot exist outside them. They impose upon him their requirements and quotas. An unresolvable conflict exists between man and time, one that always ends with man’s defeat - time annihilates him.
Africans apprehend time differently. For them, it is much looser concept, more open, elastic, subjective. It is a man who influences time, its shape, course and rhythm (man acting, of course, with the consent of gods and ancestors). Time is even something that that man can create outright, for time is made manifest through events, and whether an event takes place or not depends, after all, on man alone. If two armies do not engage in a battle, then that battle will not occur (in other words, time will not have revealed its presence, will not have come into being).
Time appears as a result of our actions, and vanishes when we neglect or ignore it. It is something that springs to life under our influence, but falls into a state of hibernation, even non-existence, if we do not direct our energy towards it. It is a subservient, passive essence, and, most importantly, one dependent on man.
The absolute opposite of time as it is understood in the European worldview. In practical terms, this means that if you go to a village where a meeting is scheduled for the afternoon but find no one at the appointed spot, asking “When will the meeting take place?" makes no sense. You know the answer: “It will take place when people come”. Therefore the African who boards a bus sits down in a vacant seat, and immediately falls into a state in which he spends a great portion of his life: a benumbed waiting.”
When someone dies, the most painful tears aren't the ones you cry immediately after.
They're the ones you cry when you begin to grieve their absence in random moments, their smells, their laughs, their voice, and the inability to create new memories with them.
Well, I sued Kenyatta University and Won.
On May 22, 2025 the High Court ruled in my favor in the matter: Nyambura Kimani v Kenyatta University & Dr. Linda Kimencu (HCCHRPET/E197/2023).
After years of frustration where KU completely refused to let me graduate over a missing mark for an ELECTIVE unit (UCU 104 - Introduction to Entrepreneurship), I decided to go to court, represented by @HusseinOmarLLP and WE WON.
The high court in its 16 page judgment found that:
1. Kenyatta University’s refusal to graduate me amounted to irrational and unfair administrative action, and this action was also illegal because it was in violation of Article 47 of the Constitution (Fair Administrative Action).
2. Kenyatta university violated my legitimate expectation to graduate after fulfilling all my academic obligations. (I Completed 51 units, when only 49 are required)
3. There was clear abuse of power and proof of Malice by the lecturer (Dr. Linda Kimencu) and thus she was also personally liable.
4. Kenyatta University, in their dedication to frustrate me, was contravening the rules in their own Handbook and Policy.
As a result, the court:
1. Issued a mandamus order compelling KU to include me in the next graduation list (July 2025).
2. Awarded me KES 850,000 in damages for violation of rights.
3. Ordered Kenyatta University to pay all legal costs of the petition.
The wheels of Justice may turn slow, but they turn all the same.
Congratulations to me, and to my lawyers @HusseinOmarLLP and thank you to everyone who has supported me through this journey.
Imagine seeing your mom have to raise 5 kids while holding down a job that doesn’t pay enough so she has to have multiple side hustles and immediately thinking “I want the same for my wife and daughters”
This is why I excused myself from fighting with men against state oppression because after that you have to fight them to convince them you’re human too.
Notice how he says this like it’s a privilege. All those women in that generation begged us not to end up like them.