Tuesday, 8 November 2016

Gikomba 101: How to avoid being ripped off by Mitumba sellers

What I hate more than being swindled by a casually dressed tour operator is being ripped off by a sweet-talking hawker.That said you might have without much effort guessed that I am a proud consumer of all manner of second-hand clothing shipped from more affluent countries over the seas.
Mitumba Traders at Gikomba market
Mitumba Traders at Gikomba market
Or let’s just say I have a thing for imports. Well, a lot of negative things can be said of my wardrobe choices but let us not forget our very decorated women standing tall in horsehair weaves and even Donald Trump’s toupee, all second-hand!

 There are a couple of things that make mitumba clothes a choice for many Kenyans ranging from the very low class to the middle-class. They are quite cheap and unique that if you a keen enough eye, you could turn heads on a very low budget.

Over the decades multi-million Mitumba business has grown beyond the monstrosity that dogged a once vibrant textile industry in Kenya with the influx of cheap clothes.

 With all sorts of designs and fabrics available at ludicrous prices in pick-and-go stalls in virtually every small town and village in Kenya, the textile industry crumbled involuntarily.

In fact, the Mitumba business is so huge that local designers have been branded ‘elitist jerks’ for their painfully conceived designs that have a forbidding price tag.

Growing up, many of us from normal Kenyan families couldn’t really recognize the difference between the second-hand and the new since the former was too dominant (in fact, the only choice for most families) to be regarded as old.

A couple of mitumba millionaires have emerged with a host of several other small scale vendors’ fortunes growing daily as Kenyans strive to not just meet this basic need but also stay fashionable.

We know you love them and you have your shoe person, trouser guy, shirt lady and bedding person on speed dial right at Gikomba or Toi Market… we call you a pro!

But, if you haven’t yet taken a short course in professional haggling from one of those 2nd floor colleges that Matiang’i recently closed, you might want to pay more attention.

Here’s a few tips on how to not get ripped off by these very talented entrepreneurs.

Have a budget

This is the very first rule of any kind of spending. Gikomba, just like your favorite supermarket, has a way of switching on your impulse buying switch. You suddenly think you need all these stuff, and of course they are so cheap! 

You’ll be amazed at how much those few hundreds from each purchase add up to a huge amount you hadn’t anticipated. Stick to your budget no matter what. Just like the unwritten rule of present-day dating where situationships and friendzones, make your intentions clear from the beginning and don’t settle for more! 

 Bring a friend along

A second opinion has never been important than when your decision-making is threatened by a smiling hawker who will always tell you that rugged jeans looks super cool on you! 

You can never go wrong in Gikomba Market if you tag along a friend who has some bit of experience with the same and better still if they have a trench coat guy on speed dial. 

What you wear to Gikomba matters

The overused adage ‘never judge a book by its cover’ is by all means terribly ignored by these entrepreneurial Kenyans. You definitely must ‘dress the part’ to get the lowest possible price in Gikomba. Rummage through your closet for that pair of jeans you can’t remember you own and a t-shirt that has some unheard of quote by some Asian standup parable champion.  

 Don’t be flattered by the low prices

Every denomination of the Kenyan currency can buy an item in Gikomba. With as low as Sh10, you can buy a pair of ankle socks, a girl’s pair of very wearable sandals or even a blouse! 

If you are fooled by this you might be headed back home with huge luggage of complete crap that you’ll never wear or give away. Price, though important, should never get in the way of you choosing ‘quality’. 

Look out for resized clothes, stains and tears

 
These are second-hand commodities on sale in the third world, right? In fact there’s no guarantee that it’s not 5th-hand. If you are a sucker for slim fitting clothes, it would pay to pay attention to the stitching and ensure there are no alterations.

You’d better get yourself a relatively larger shirt and employ the services of award-winning resident tailors. Indelible stains on armpits and pockets can escape you and that Sh100 designer shirt you wrestled from a fellow shopper could just have the most conspicuous stain on the shoulders.


 Time

I have heard people say that the best time to shop at Gikomba is early in the morning when ‘fresh’ clothes have been unpacked. You save on the amount of time taken to get what you want. It’s called the ‘’Camera’ hour.


Others say you can get the very best prices late in the evening as the vendors close shop with a ‘bei ya jioni’ offer.


But also important is ensuring you’ve got enough time to rummage through to separate the best from the not-so-good. Plus equally important, enough time to haggle since it is very possible to buy an item for three times its price in a regular shop… Not forgetting it is second hand!
If you are in a hurry, please don’t go to Gikomba.

Monday, 7 November 2016

Warrant of arrest issued aganist activist Boniface Mwangi

A warrant of arrest has been issued against vocal human right activist and PAWA 254 founder Boniface Mwangi.
Police arresting Boniface Mwangi during demonstaration
Boniface Mwangi being arrested in Nairobi
According to the warrant that was issued on Thursday, Mr Mwangi failed to appear in court for the mention of a case where he was charged with disorderly conduct and resisting arrest at the Wilson Airport Police Station on March 7, 2014.

Mwangi was scheduled to appear in court on Wednesday, November 2 but it is alleged that he skipped court with no valid reason and did not send a legal representative, prompting Principal Magistrate Barbara Ojoo of Kibera Court to order for his immediate arrest.

Fresh from winning a petition against Deputy President William Ruto, Boniface Mwangi caused a stir on social media on Wednesday after he walked out of a live interview on Jeff Koinange’s show JKL before holding mass protests on Thursday to call on President Uhuru Kenyatta to either act on corruption or resign.

The case will be mentioned on December 8.

 Credits: Citizen TV

Family and friends come together as they bid songstress Achieng' Abura farewell

The former Tusker Project Fame (TPF) judge and a Kenyan legendary songstress Lydia Achieng' Abura was finally laid to rest on saturday November 5th, in her home in Songhor village-Muhoroni,in Kisumu county.
Members of the family before her coffin.
Mourners pay their last respect to songbird Achieng' Abura in Muhoroni,Kisumu.


Popular celebrities such as Suzanna Owiyo, Idi Achieng and Hellen Mtawali attended the burial ceremony to pay their last respect to their very own Achieng' Abura.

Several speakers in the event described Abura as National icon and a mentor who was admired by her peers and most upcoming artistes since she played an instrumental role in nurturing young talents.
A moment during the mass in the burial.
A moment during the Mass in the burial ceremony.

Abura passed on on 20th October in Kenyatta National Hospital (KNH) private wing while she was under medication for depression,gastritis and kidney related complications.

Her untimely death sheds light to the painful moments of how the other celebrities and close friends had abandoned her in her time of need when she tried to raise funds for her son's,Prince treatment.

Although only a few number of celebrities attended her burial,those who attended appealed to the county and the national government to continue with what Abura was doing; nurturing and supporting young talents.


Achieng' Abura is survived by a son,Prince.
Rest in Peace Abura.


Equity bank robbery : Kayole gang in a calculated-move operation

In one of the most daring theft incidents,a suspected gang of robbers broke into the Equity bank,Kayole branch on saturday,stole from a safe,stole an ATM machine and made away with an unknown amount of ransom.


The unstable situation in Equity bank,Kayole branch.

The film view of the Equity bank,Kayole branch.
The Equity bank,Kayole branch under its normal working mode.

The gang is said to have drilled holes in the bank wall leading to the safe,then used gas cylinders to burn up the safe open.
Once inside,they stole an ATM machine and an unknown amount of money in the safe.
It is still a puzzle of how the gang managed to interfere with the bank's alarm systems and the CCTV cameras,because  none of the security guards knew about the ongoing incident until on sunday morning.
Nairobi police boss,Japheth Koome confirmed the incident and mentioned that the gang seemed to have the informational set-up of the bank,adding that the robbery might have been made a success with the help of some staff members.
A huge ransom of money.

             "Equity headquarters detected unusual activities in the Kayole branch and raised the manager who went to check and realized the strong room had been tampered with and cash stolen,"said Koome.
The security guard who was on duty that day had no knowledge of all this ongoing happenings but has been arrested to help with the investigations.
Police sources said that the bank officials asked for more time to go through their statements in order to establish the amount of money that was stolen.
It should be noted that in 2015,a similar incident took place in Equity bank Othaya branch,Nyeri county.3 thugs who identified themselves as auditors from Equity Nairobi branch threatened the security guards with knives and ordered them to lie down,after which they packed the ransom into sacks.

Sunday, 6 November 2016

Don't resign over Afya House Scandal, MP to Mailu, Muraguri

Kieni Mp Kanini Kega has told Health Cabinet CS CLEopa Mailu and principal Secretary Nicholas Muraguri to stay put amid growing pressure fpr theur resignation over the Afya House Scandal. 
Kieni MP Kanini in a past address in Nyeri County
Kieni MP Kanini in a past address
Speaking in Nyeri on Saturday, Kega said that the alleged loss of Ksh. 3 billion at the Ministry of Health is unfounded at the Auditor General on the same.


"We in Parliament cannot just rely on papers that have not been approved by the Auditor General that money was lost at the Ministry," he said, adding,"My message to PS and CS Mailu is that they should ignore calls for their resignation and stay put."

Kega said that the Opposition's calls for the resignation of Mailu and Muraguri are baseless and aimed at destabilising the Jubilee government.

Duale also rubbished recent pronouncements by CORD leader Raila Odinga aganist Jubilee government over alleged corruption scandals, saying they would not give him attention , but instead focus on development.

  "While CORD is busy planning protests and spreading propaganda, we are busy improving security, paying examination fees for Standard Eight and Form Four students and also providing water in various counties in the country,” said the Garissa Township MP.

Moses Kuria, in his speech, said that Raila is out to disorient the country with unsubstantiated allegations against the country.

 Raila has in the past four weeks moved to unearth what he considered corruption scandals touching on Jubilee government.

 On October 10th, Raila told the government to stop the construction of the nothern water collector at the Aberdare region, a project he said is being undertaken secretly.

 Odinga said the Northern Water Collector Tunnel Project, allegedly funded by the World Bank, would have dire effect on the people living on the Tana River basin, Murang’a, Garissa and Ukambani regions.

Water Cabinet Secretary Eugene Wamalwa however said that Raila's utterence are untruthful adding that the project being undertaken by the government is not secretive.

 "What surprised me is that Raila Odinga claims the project is being secretly implemented by the Jubilee administration. I don’t want to accuse him of selective amnesia because I deeply respect him,” said Wamalwa.

 “The water supplied to Nairobi is 540,000 cubic meters yet what we require is over 700,000 cubic meters. We have about 6 million people in Nairobi every day, and Nairobi doesn’t have its own water,” he said.

On October 28, Raila weighed in on the alleged loss of Ksh. 3billion at the Ministry of Health linking President Uhuru Kenyatta’s close relatives and friends to the companies that illegally received tenders in what has now been termed as the Afya House Scandal.

 The CORD leader was at it again two days ago, accusing Jubilee of initiating Itare dam water project, located South West Mau Forest Water Tower that would divert water from several rivers to Nakuru County.

“The project would divert water from rivers Songol, Kipsonoi, Itare Ndoinet, Sise, Itare Kiptiget, Itare Chemosit, Timbilil, Diony Soet, Yurith, Kipchorian, Chemosir and Jamju in Bomet and Kericho counties at the source in the Mau Forest for onward transmission to particular towns in Nakuru County.”

 “The affected counties; Bomet, Kericho, Narok, Kisii, Migori, Nyamira and Kisumu, deserve explanation as we also demand people public participation on all these areas.”

 In response, Wamalwa termed Raila’s claims as petty politics saying the Itare water dam project would not dry up the rivers in the surrounding ecosystem as Odinga had claimed.

ODM Secretary General Agnes Zani has backed Raila’s relentless efforts to hold the government to account saying they will continue with the trend until election time.

Credits: Citizen TV