Author: NBM CORRESPONDENT

To the sick, she healed. To the hungry, she fed. To the homeless, she sheltered. To the thirsty, she quenched. To those in need of education, she flung the golden gates to infinite academic highway.  BY GAD WESONGA Adelaide Sarah Munyolo beams with delight and gratitude as she confesses that she is forever grateful to the late Sister Marianna Hulshof. In 1985, then aged at 10, she became disabled courtesy of a polio attack. Her parents responded by abandoning her at Alupe Hospital, Busia District. The search for her kin led to her grandparents who rather than despair, embraced optimism…

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BY DAN AWENDO Undoubtedly, the biggest space to play for any real estate developer in the future is affordable housing; development of units selling at between Sh2m to Sh4m. For us to achieve this sweet spot, affordable building materials and harnessing of new building technologies that lower construction cost, and availability of affordable loans for buyers will be the holy grail that will unlock the prospects of the property market. UN Habitat estimates that more than half of Africa’s population in the cities is living in informal housing and 14 million housing units are needed annually. In Kenya, 60% of…

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Artists are a clear reflection of our society. In a community rife with corruption and sabotage of legitimate artistic ventures, the creatives would rather sing popular “dirty” club bangers that will get them continuous revenue streams as opposed to mainstream music that will not pay their bills. BY DENNIS NDIRITU The world of African music is never complete without the mention of Fela Anikulapo-Kuti whose musical life spanned through a period of almost four decades, from the 1960s through to the 1990s. During his musical lifetime, Fela had a history of political activities throughout, always a rebel defying societal norms…

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He was agreeable on most occasions, a dependable man even. On the offside, he simply failed to understand the concept of being considerate of others’ preferences and feelings BY BRENDA VIOLA There he was, one knee on the ground, hope emanating from his eyes as his lips moved, spilling sweet nothings for me, and perhaps the crowd. At the moment, I knew not how to smile, for I was too disconcerted. The man who knelt before me would be my happily ever after, a new beginning to the other chapter of my life. Was I supposed to be excited? Naturally,…

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Seven days earlier Moses, being the joyful baby whom everyone loved, was in high spirit, enjoying himself and even entertaining guests during the colorful wedding of his parents at their Nyakhobi village BY GAD WESONGA A distraught Eunice Ndeda wailed when her firstborn son Moses Ikhabi Ndeda breathed his last on October 27 while undergoing treatment at Aga Khan Hospital in Nairobi, wondering how on earth she was going to mourn her baby. Exactly seven days earlier, October 20th, Moses, being the joyful baby whom everyone loved, was in high spirit, enjoying himself and even entertaining guests who included Busia Governor…

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BY CYNTHIA WAIRIMU We cook, clean, drive, walk and yes, we live on, but in the process of all of these day-to-day activities, one is exposed to so many chemicals from different activities and it is not always that we are proactive about protecting ourselves from this in the first place. Some of the cleaning agents we use are very drying to the hands and if you use them often, say, detergent or dishwashing soap, then you risk having much drier hands as they are meant to clean out oils and dirt and in the process, the moisture from your…

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BY JACOB OKETCH The story of Edmond is one that must be told in order to demonstrate the power of transformation that is open to humanity and only needs tapping. Edmond has been hooked to the drink for the past twenty years and it reached a point where he either had to change or perish altogether. Hitting rock bottom is a very personal affair and there is no set criterion for reaching one. For him, the fact that he had lost all a job, savings and friends was a sure manifestation of his complete powerlessness. He lost all the investment…

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The learning of the petty man enters his ear and comes out of his mouth where the words affect only the four inches between ear and mouth. The aim for a wise man should be that learning enters his ear, clings to his mind, spreads through his four limbs and manifests itself in his actions – ancient Chinese scholar Xunzi BY NICHOLAS KRISTOF In the Bible, St. Paul declares: “I do not permit a woman to teach or to assume authority over a man; she must be quiet.” Scholars suspect that this was actually written by some grump other than…

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As the National Ethics and Corruption Survey 2018 was being presented by a dejected retired Anglican Bishop and current EACC Chair Eliud Wabukala, spirits of the late Dr Magayu Magayu, Ken Saro Wiwa, Chinua Achebe and Ebsen Henken must have been hovering over the bishop’s collar with impish glee, for when they lived, they wrote and castigated the cancerous vice that has defied Kenya’s state machinery, with devotion and in compelling genres BY GAD WESONGA Following the release of the 2018 Corruption Report on November 19, 2019, the Ethics and Anti Corruption Commission (EACC) singled out the vice as the…

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BY VICTORIA KNIBBS Many people often confuse the similarities and differences surrounding both web hosting and cloud computing. While many believe that cloud and hosted services are the same, this is not the case. Yes, they are both hosted off-premise and can be accessed remotely through an internet connection, but that is where it begins and ends. The most significant difference between the two is the true cloud’s multi-tenancy, which involves the sharing of resources and costs among a large cluster of servers, enabling economies of scale and allowing infrastructure to be of numerous machines, with better peak-load capacity and improved…

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