Ngombe ya wenger na @Mundu Mulosi enzi zao wakigojea unga isiagwe huko kimilili
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alwaysfollow your instict, it works for me
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African Troops in Burma during secon world war - 1940s
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Chloe
August 17, 2017, 12:15pm
44
@Meria Mata, there’s a photo of Hon. Charity Kaluki Ngilu fleeing from teargas with other people. She was trying to calm down demonstrators in (I guess) Nairobi University in late 90s.
She is holding her skirt high up exposing some thighs as she was fleeing when the photo was taken.
Tafuta hio picha uletee hawa watu waoshe mecho.
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Late Mr Ntimama, MP and Cabinet Minister, in his younger days giving a speech when Queen Mother visited Narok, Kenya. Picture was probably taken in 1959
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TIG.
By then he was in Narok county council
Nimefika late. Lakini siku hizi ES, kwenda leta some more tbt alah!
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Chloe:
@Meria Mata, there’s a photo of Hon. Charity Kaluki Ngilu fleeing from teargas with other people. She was trying to calm down demonstrators in (I guess) Nairobi University in late 90s.
She is holding her skirt high up exposing some thighs as she was fleeing when the photo was taken.
Tafuta hio picha uletee hawa watu waoshe mecho.
Pia pale globe roundabout, on your left from muranga road to cbd ,there used to be a slum all the way to riverside primary school . Is it possible you get those photos or the story …currently there is a mud house still existing !
system
August 17, 2017, 2:43pm
49
Yollo
August 17, 2017, 4:38pm
50
Memories indeed,I remember we used to go to coca cola bottlers to collect straws then we would tie them together to use as rope for the ball,hio ball tulikuwa tunaongeza sponge ya mattress so that it could bounce kama adidas,lol,downside of adding sponge was that the ball should not come into contact with water juu ilikuwa ina absorb Maji then inakuwa nzito
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6th Avenue present day Kenyatta Avenue - Nairobi - 1930s
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what great vision this city fathers had, look how wide the street is.
am saddend by the fact that we call ourselves modern men and we cant plan nothing not even our eatates, we have encrouched on the road reserves and every availiable space. In Mombasa its horrible, in between the swahili hses ata boda hupata shida kupita. ukiwa na ka probox kako mtu huachia maasai huko kwa mainroad.
one thing i have always appreciated of the colonialist is their ability to plan 50-100 years ahead of their time,most of the infrastructure we have around are almost the same way they left them
system
August 18, 2017, 5:08pm
52
2 bob, 1993 Westlands to Tao.
Fun times.
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system
August 18, 2017, 6:17pm
54
Nilikuwa class 8 then.
Wazee watengenezewe category yao.
:D:D
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system
August 19, 2017, 6:50am
55
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August 14, 1990.Where were You on that Date?
About three days before the Bishop’s death, Kenya’s then Labour Minister Peter Habenga Okondo told Muge that he would not return home alive if he dared visit Western Kenya.
The Daredevil Bishop took on the challenge, but true to Okondo’s threat, he did not return home alive. As fate would have it, Bishop Muge was killed when on his way back. A milk truck crashed into his car along the Webuye-Eldoret road on his way back after a triumphant entry into Busia in total defiance of Okondo’s threats.
Muge’s death was a major setback to the pro-democracy activists then.He died in mysterious circumstances after he defied an order from a Kanu stalwart not to visit Busia town. It was the mark of Muge’s enduring courage and fearlessness that he made the journey in the first place because three days before his death, Peter Okondo, then Labour minister, had warned the Bishop that he would ”see fire and might not leave alive” if he visited Busia town.
There has been speculation that Okondo did not mean it when he issued the death threat to Muge who perished in a road accident along the Eldoret-Turbo road after a visit to Busia.
A Former Intelligence Officer, James Lando Khwatenge, who worked with the Special Branch in Eldoret at the time, reportedly told the Truth, Justice and Reconciliation Commission (TJRC) that the Clergyman was killed by police officers who were sent directly from Nairobi to “finish” the outspoken bishop and use the accident to cover up.
Khwatenge was widely quoted in the media saying the bishop’s death on August 14, 1990, was the final job on what police called Operation Shika Msumari.
He said KANU loyalists who wanted to assassinate Muge merely seized threats issued by the former Labour minister against the bishop and used him as a scapegoat.
TJRC listened to the former intelligence officer while conducting hearings on unresolved political murders since independence. No evidence was, however, presented to show that his death was anything but an accident.
The driver of the truck was charged with causing his death through reckless driving and sentenced to seven years in prison, but he died after serving only five years.
The Attorney General ordered an inquest in response to the public outcry over his death and widespread suggestions of foul play, but nothing came out of the inquiry.
The clergyman was famous for fighting corruption, land grabbing, political assassinations, bureaucracy and other social ills and did not confine the fight for what he believed in Kenya’s borders.
Bishop Muge is also remembered over his open stand against Homosexuality made on May 17, 1990 during a visit to the USA. He based his condemnation on classical understanding of the scriptures.
Source : North Rift News.com
I still recall the pic of the mangled wreck of what was his car, a light blue Peugeot 405. KAA 405 S.
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Dakan
August 19, 2017, 3:15pm
56
@Meria Mata news network on location, bringing you news raif Raif.
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hii place ni uchafu imezidii sultan amefanya mombasa the dirties town
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