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-Obits-
Richard Leakey: Kenyan conservationist dies aged 77
2022-01-03
[BBC] Richard Leakey, a world-renowned Kenyan conservationist and fossil hunter has died aged 77.

His groundbreaking work contributed to the recognition of Africa as the birthplace of humankind.

He also spearheaded campaigns to stop poaching in Kenya, famously burning the country's stockpile of poached ivory.

Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta said Leakey had "served our country with distinction".

Leakey served in various positions in the Kenyan government including the National Museums of Kenya, the Kenya Wildlife Service and as head of the civil service.

"Besides his distinguished career in public service, Dr Leakey is celebrated for his prominent role in Kenya's civil society where he founded and successfully ran a number of institutions," Mr Kenyatta said.

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Science & Technology
Rhino Researchers: Live Males No Longer Needed
2020-01-15
JOHANNESBURG (AP) ‐ Researchers say they have successfully created another embryo of the nearly extinct northern white rhino in a global effort to keep the species alive. Just two animals remain, and both are female.

The viable embryo is just the third to be created in a lab with eggs taken from the females and inseminated with frozen sperm from dead males, according to Wednesday’s statement. The embryos are stored in liquid nitrogen to be transferred into a surrogate mother ‐ a southern white rhino ‐ in the coming months.

"It’s amazing to see that we will be able to reverse the tragic loss of this subspecies through science," said Kenya’s wildlife minister, Najib Balala, in the statement by the Kenya Wildlife Service and conservationists from Kenya, the Czech Republic, Germany and Italy.

The ultimate goal is to create a herd of at least five animals that could be returned to their natural habitat in Africa. That could take decades.
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Africa Subsaharan
Four US tourists, pilot killed in Kenya chopper crash
2019-03-04
[Africa Tembelea] Nairobi ‐ Four American tourists and a Kenyan pilot were killed when their helicopter crashed on a remote island in a lake in northwest Kenya, police said Monday.

The accident occurred in the Central Island National Park in Lake Turkana on Sunday evening, police said in a statement.

"There were five people on board, four of them were US citizens and the pilot, Capt Marious Magonga," the Kenya Civil Aviation Authority said in a statement.

Magonga owned the helicopter and also piloted for Kenya’s deputy president, William Ruto.

The helicopter "lost contact and crashed" shortly after taking off with a second chopper from Lake Turkana’s Central Island, the statement said.

Rescuers found the wreckage about seven hours later "with no survivors".

"The cause of the incident is yet to be established and the details of the deceased will be released once the next of kin have been notified," a police statement said.

Known as the Jade Sea, Lake Turkana, is the most saline lake in East Africa, the largest desert lake in the world, and a popular tourist spot.

Its Central Island is made up of three active volcanoes, according to the Kenya Wildlife Service.
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-Short Attention Span Theater-
Monkey In Kenya Sparks 3-Hour Nationwide Blackout
2016-06-08
I will do my level best to keep my comments PC.
Kenya's power generation company Tuesday said a monkey caused a three-hour nationwide blackout in the country.

The Kenya Electricity Generation Company (KenGen) said in a statement on Facebook that a monkey climbed on to the roof of the Gitaru Power Station in central Kenya and fell on a transformer. This caused the transformer to trip, further causing other machines to trip on overload and resulted in the loss of 180 megawatts of energy.
I guess nobody wanted to pedal the backup generator.
The company is reportedly the country's largest generator of electricity, providing around 80% of energy consumed in the east African nation. The 225-megawatt Gitaru station is KenGen's largest. The blackout lasted more than three hours Tuesday before power was restored.

The animal survived the incident. "Monkey is alive and taken in by KWS (Kenya Wildlife Service)," a KenGen Facebook post said.

"KenGen power installations are secured by electric fencing which keeps away marauding wild animals," the company said. "We regret this isolated incident and the company is looking at ways of further enhancing security at all our power plants."
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Africa Horn
Shaboobs invade Kenyan town
2015-08-17
About 100 suspected Al-Shabaab militants on Saturday morning ambushed Basuba Village in Lamu East Sub-County and preached to the residents for one hour.

According to an eye witness who requested not to be named, the militants invaded the village at 5am, before flushing out villagers from their houses and preached to them until around 6am. They ordered the more than 300 villagers to gather in one place where they preached to them.

“I saw a group of over a 100 well armed men wearing jungle green clothes. Their faces were covered. Those who came to our houses and ordered us to converge in one place were about 20.

“The rest kept guard around the village and in the bushes but we could hear and even see them. Among those who lectured us included four white individuals, two young women and two men,” said the villager.

He said the militants warned them not to inform the police about their visit and also advised them not to be boarding police or military vehicles since they were their major targets.

“They said they don’t have any problem with us but with the military officers. They also advised us to avoid using military or police vehicles.

“They also told us not to disclose information concerning them to the security officers. They warned us that once we do that, they will come and burn the entire village, something that will be remembered forever,” added the frightened villager.

The militants reportedly left the village at around 6am and headed to the vast Boni Forest.

Following the latest incident, residents of the nearby Milimani Village have been reported to be leaving their homes for fear of attacks. According to a villager Mr Ali Bawadh, about 20 families had by Sunday taken refuge in Bodhai area, 14 kilometers form Milimani.

“We have opted for Bodahi. The place is a bit secure since there is a military camp, a police station and a Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) post. We can’t stay here in Milimani. We are tired of the on and off Al-Shabaab terror threats and attempts,” said Mr Bawadh

Incidents of Al-Shabaab raiding villages are not a new phenomenon in Lamu County.

On June 14 this year, over 60 suspected Al-Shabaab militants raided Mangai Village in Lamu East and held villagers hostage in a mosque and preached for over three hours. They then raided Mangai Dispensary where they burnt down two motorbikes belonging to the health facility.

They later invaded a newly built Mangai Boarding Primary School before setting ablaze over 100 mattresses.
Would it be too much to ask the Kenyan army to lay in an ambush?
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Africa Horn
Kenyans chase down and catch goat-killing cheetahs
2013-11-17
[Shabelle] Four villagers in north-east Kenya have chased down and captured two cheetahs which were killing their goats. The owner of the goats told the BBC that the cheetahs had been picking off his animals one by one, day by day.

The men waited till the hottest part of the day before launching the chase over a distance of four miles (6.4km). The cheetahs got so tired they could not run any more. The villagers captured them alive and handed them over to the Kenya Wildlife Service.

"I need compensation from them because the cheetahs killed most of my goats," Nur Osman Hassan told the BBC's Somali Service.

Correspondents say livestock is the backbone of the economy for the Kenyan-Somali community living in the arid north-east of Kenya.

'Daily kills'

Mr Hassan, from a village near Wajir town, said the cheetahs were attacking his goat herd over several weeks.

"These cheetahs killed 15 of my goats -- they were coming to my house daily to kill my goats," he said.

He said he decided to return to his village to organise their capture at a time of day when cheetahs get very tired and usually rest in shade.

"I was sipping a cup of tea when I saw them killing another goat," he said, explaining that this was early in the morning.

He said he waited until several hours later when the sun was high to go after them.

"I called some youths and we ran after them," he said. "We caught them and we brought them to the local authorities."
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-Lurid Crime Tales-
Kenya Rangers Gun Down 5 Suspected Elephant Poachers
2012-04-22
[An Nahar] Kenyan rangers rubbed out five suspected elephant poachers in a night-time firefight in the north of the country, the Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) said on Saturday.

"Five suspected poachers were last night bumped off and one beat feet during a fierce exchange of fire with Kenya Wildlife Service rangers at Chepareria in West Pokot County," it said.

Two rangers were maimed in the firefight which went on for more than 40 minutes, the KWS said, adding that it had recovered 50 kilograms of elephant tusks and three assault rifles at the scene.
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Africa Horn
Envoy pledges US support for Kenyan forces
2011-10-24
The United States on Sunday declared its readiness to provide technical support for Kenya's troops in Somalia.

The country's ambassador to Kenya, Mr Scott Gration, said although Washington would not send its troops to Somalia, it would go out of its way to help Kenya to restore its territorial integrity.

The diplomat was speaking in Lamu during a meeting with private investors and hoteliers hosted by Tourism minister Najib Balala.

Mr Gration, a retired major, said the US respected Kenya's decision to go into Somalia to rout out Al-Shabaab
... Harakat ash-Shabaab al-Mujahidin aka the Mujahideen Youth Movement. It was originally the youth movement of the Islamic Courts, now pretty much all of what's left of it. They are aligned with al-Qaeda but operate more like the Afghan or Pakistani Taliban. The organization's current leader is Ibrahim Haji Jama Mee'aad, also known as Ibrahim al-Afghani. Fazul Abdullah Mohammed, a Kenyan al-Qaeda member, is considered the group's military leader...
myrmidons.

"We respect the right of a nation to take any decision to defend its borders as per article 51 of the UN charter on self defence and pursuit of hostile elements across international borders," he said.

He observed that the abduction of British tourist Judith Tebbutt and French woman Marie Dediue had adversely affected the Kenyan economy.

But he assured Kenyans that America would stand with them to ensure security was restored.

The envoy said some of security concerns in Kenya could not be tackled overnight, adding that the US was considering providing short- and long-term support to the government.

"Some of these problems can not be solved overnight. It is real there are challenges and Kenya needs to review its strategy. We will see what to do through our mutual relations," he added.

Heightened security

Mr Gration also said the US Government was content with the heightened security measures taken by the Kenyan authorities to avert terror attacks.

He hinted that the US would review travel advisories issued to citizens against visiting Kenya.

"We are in the process of reviewing travel advisories. The big review will be announced on November 1. The work by police, military and Kenya Wildlife Service officers is very positive. There is tremendous progress in terms of security measures put in place around this beautiful place (Lamu)," he said.

Mr Balala appealed to the Africa Union to fast-track reporting the Al-Shabaab provocation to the UN Security Council.

The minister said the group's activities had adversely affected the country's economy and brought tourism in areas like Lamu on its knees.
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-Short Attention Span Theater-
Woman attacked, eaten by lion in her own home
2011-07-21
[Emirates 24/7] A woman has been eaten by a lion after it escaped from a game reserve in Kenya.

According to The Sun, Martha Nduta was said to have been attacked in her own home, and dragged from the property on Friday.

Officials, who searched the area in the Nyahururu district for her, found only a human skull and a few scraps of bone.

Relatives identified the tragic 58-year-old's body from the remains of her ripped clothes and a shoe found at the scene.

Francio Nyamatari, Laikipia West police chief, said Kenya Wildlife Service rangers are now hunting the male lion as panic-stricken villagers fear it may strike again.
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-Short Attention Span Theater-
Engineer killed after his car hits elephant in forest
2011-02-17
[The Nation (Nairobi)] A 47-year-old telecommunications engineer died on Tuesday night in a freak accident when his car rammed an elephant at Nkunga forest on the Meru-Nanyuki road.
"Look out, Dalton! It's an elephant!"
"Aaaaiiiieeee!"

Mr Dalton Mwachenga, who was travelling from Uganda, hit the elephant that then fell on his car.
"It's a falling elephant!" [SMASH!]
Africa Wins Again
Imenti North police boss Joshua Lutukai said the incident occurred around 1 am. Highway officers, who were manning a roadblock near the forest, rushed to the scene but could not rescue the man as there was a herd of about 50 elephants hovering around the scene.
"Jumbo! Wasn't there a car here just a minute ago?"
"I thought I saw one, too. Say! What's the matter with Tusko?"

Mr Lutukai said there were many accidents in the area because of overgrown shrubs that reduced visibility on the 6km stretch. He also said that there were no warning signs for motorists that they were driving through a forest.
The trees weren't a giveaway?
Couldn't see the forest for the trees, of course. Can't blame a man -- or an elephant -- for that.
"The accident could have been avoided if the road had markings indicating it is passing through a forested area," he said. Mr Lutukai said his department would write to the Ministry of Roads to have the necessary markings put up.
"Dalton, maybe you'd better slow down! There are trees all around us! I think we're in a forest!"
"Tut tut! Obviously we're not, since there's no sign!"

Meanwhile,
...back at the ranch...
another car overturned as its driver evaded an elephant crossing the road.
Which brings up the question: Why did the elephant cross the road?
Mr Lutukai said the vehicle occupants were unhurt.
He was looking for a chicken.
Isiolo Kenya Wildlife Service warden Thomas Mailu blamed the accidents on speeding drivers.
"Hey! Slow [CRASH!] down."
"It is clear the vehicle was speeding. It's rare to see an elephant die after being knocked down," he said and asked drivers to be careful while passing through the forest.
And next time that elephant might be a tiger. Tigers are generally not satisfied with merely falling on attacking cars.
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-Signs, Portents, and the Weather-
Asymetrical warfare and sexual harassment : Monkey misery for Kenyan babe villagers
2007-08-25
By Juliet Njeri

A troop of pervert vervet monkeys is giving Kenyan villagers long days and sleepless nights, destroying crops and causing a food crisis.

Earlier this month, local MP Paul Muite urged the Kenyan Wildlife Service to help contain their aggressive behaviour.

But Mr Muite caused laughter when he told parliament that the monkeys had taken to harassing and mocking women in a village.

But this is exactly what the women in the village of Nachu, just south-west of Kikuyu, are complaining about.

Sexual harassment

They estimate there are close to 300 monkeys invading the farms at dawn. They eat the village's maize, potatoes, beans and other crops.

And because women are primarily responsible for the farms, they have borne the brunt of the problem, as they try to guard their crops.

They say the monkeys are more afraid of young men than women and children, and the bolder ones throw stones and chase the women from their farms.
Intifada™!

Nachu's women have tried wearing their husbands' clothes in an attempt to trick the monkeys into thinking they are men - but this has failed, they say.

"When we come to chase the monkeys away, we are dressed in trousers and hats, so that we look like men," resident Lucy Njeri told the BBC News website

"But the monkeys can tell the difference and they don't run away from us and point at our breasts. They just ignore us and continue to steal the crops."

In addition to stealing their crops, the monkeys also make sexually explicit gestures at the women, they claim.

"The monkeys grab their breasts, and gesture at us while pointing at their private parts. We are afraid that they will sexually harass us," said Mrs Njeri.
Call the sexual harassment panda!

The Kenyan Wildlife Service told the BBC that it was not unusual for monkeys to harass women and be less afraid of them than men, but they had not heard of monkeys in Kenya making sexually explicit gestures as a form of communication to humans.

The predominantly farming community is now having to receive famine relief food.

The residents report that the monkeys have killed livestock and guard dogs, which has also left the villagers living in fear, especially for the safety of their babies and children.

All the villagers' attempts to control the monkeys have failed - the monkeys evade traps, have lookouts to warn the others of impending attacks and snub poisoned food put out by the residents.
IED are next.

"The troop has scouts which keep a lookout from a vantage point, and when they see us coming, they give warning signals to the ones in the farms to get away," said another area resident, Jacinta Wandaga.

'Monkey squad'

The town has been warned by the Kenya Wildlife Service not to harm or kill any of the monkeys, as it is a criminal offence.

Running out of options, residents are harvesting their crops early in an attempt to salvage what they can of this year's crop.

Unfortunately, this only invites the monkeys to break into their homes and steal the harvested crops out of their granaries.

Even the formation of a "monkey squad" to keep track of the monkeys' movements and keep them out has failed.

The area is simply too large for the few volunteers to cover, they say.

Some residents have lost hope and abandoned their homes and farms, but those who have stayed behind, like 80-year-old James Ndungu, are making a desperate plea for assistance.

"For God's sake, the government should take pity on us and move these monkeys away because we do not want to abandon our farms," he said.

"I beg you, please come and take these animals away from here so that we can farm in peace."
Link


-Short Attention Span Theater-
Newlywed trampled to death by bull elephant
2006-10-03
Elephants, why do they trample us?
A British tourist on honeymoon in Kenya was trampled to death by a herd of elephants as his wife looked on.
Bummer
Patrick Smith was killed when the animals he and his wife, Julie, were watching in the Masai Mara National Reserve were startled and stampeded. The couple, both aged 34 and from South London, had been married for one week. Along with their Masai guide, the couple had set off from the luxury Richard’s Camp lodge, where they were staying, early on Sunday morning for a bush walk.
"Honey, what would you like to do this morning?"
"How about we take a walk through the thorn bushes before the lions wake up and sneak up on some elephants?"
"Oh, Pat, how romantic!"
They had gone a short distance when the tragedy happened. Remaining downwind, they approached nine elephants. But something startled the herd and the elephants charged towards them.
You do know how to stop elephants from charging, don't you? Take away their credit cards. (rimshot) Thank you, I'll be here all week.
While Mr Smith was unable to flee the animals, his wife and their guide managed to jump out of the way.
"Air Jordans, don't fail us now!"

It is believed that Mr Smith was trampled by a lone bull.
And is now the answer to that old schoolyard question, "What's the stuff between elephants toes?"
Jake Grieves-Cook, chairman of the Kenya Tourist Board, said that the elephants had shown no signs of aggressive behaviour before they charged. “This was truly a tragic accident and on behalf of the tourism fraternity in Kenya we wish to express our deepest sympathy and sincere condolences to the wife and family of the visitor who died,” he said.

“Elephants have poor eyesight so they probably weren’t even aware the humans were there. This was not an attack. It was all unprovoked and all we can say is that it was a very tragic accident.”
"They are good elephants, kind to their mothers, never hurt anyone."

Mrs Smith and her husband’s body were later flown to the capital, Nairobi, by the country’s flying doctor service. Mrs Smith was expected to return to Britain yesterday.
Patrick will be mailed at a flat rate
The British High Commission said that officials had contacted Mr Smith’s family to inform them of the death.

Connie Maina, a spokeswoman for the Kenya Wildlife Service, said: “It is very unusual . . . but accidents can happen. “We will try to monitor, to see if we can get any leads. If it is a rogue elephant it may do this again, but we don’t have any information on whether it is or not.”
Kenyan FBI is searching for a lone white elephant.
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