Friday, December 6, 2013

Thursday, December 5, 2013

TRIBAL CHIC 2013


The Tribal Chic fashion show is a glamorous affair at the Tribe Hotel. Adele Dejak, Mille Collines, Niku Singh, Nike Kondakis, Penny Winter and Sheila Amolo will showcase their designs. Tickets cost KES 6,000 and the event starts at 6:30 p.m. For more information, call +254 (0)20 720 0363, log onto: www.tribe-hotel.com or email: marketing@tribehotel-kenya.com

THE KENYAN MEDIA SAYS “NO” TO GAGGING


It was a time for protests, picking up the camera, taking a few shots, brief interviews then rejoining the pack to shout anti-Media Bill chants. Kenyan journalists, media practitioners, owners and civil society activists took to the streets of Nairobi on 3rd December to voice their dissatisfaction with the recent Media Bill passed in Parliament.
The demonstrators assembled outside Nation Centre on Kimathi Street a few minutes past 10 am. Whistles, and pro-media freedom chants and placards took charge of the busy streets as the procession made its way through Kenyatta Avenue and Moi Avenue before making a stop on Harambee Avenue where a signed petition was handed over to government officials at the Office of the President. A similar copy of the petition was also delivered to the National Assembly buildings. “The Bill amounts to repression of the media and should either be completely withdrawn or redrafted afresh,” said Mr. David Ohito, the Vice Chair of the Editors Guild of Kenya.
The Bill among other proposals placed a fine of KES 20 million for media houses found guilty of violating the code of conduct while journalists would be fined KES 2 million. Even after supposed consultations, the contents of the Information and Communications Bill 2013 are yet to lose their effect of sending jitters down the spines of members of the Fourth Estate. The presence of the Media Tribunal and the still hefty fines for journalists now reduced to KES 500,000 remain among contentious elements of the Bill.



“I suspect this has been brought about by the desire to take Kenya back to the days of dictatorship, but those days are gone,” said former Human Rights Commission of Kenya Chairperson and now Mombasa Senator Hassan Omar. “No one can succeed in barring the media from doing their work. I am in utter shock. I thought the Uhuru government would be an improvement from the Kibaki government but what has been happening in the first days of this government is something that confounds all of us,” he added.
Among the demonstrators was photojournalist cum activist Boniface Mwangi, Political Analyst and Director of ONE, Benji Ndolo and a host of civil rights activists. “We would rather empower the current Media Council of Kenya than create a new council that is not free of State control,” added Mr. Ohito. The media fraternity hopes to reach a reasonable compromise with the National Assembly when the Bill is brought to the floor of the House.

DECEMBER EDITORIAL: AT 50 ARE WE REALLY FREE?

UP MAGAZINE EDITORIAL

In the 1950s, Kimathi, General China, the Mau Mau and like-minded Kenyans put their lives on the line to fight for freedom, justice and independence. 50 years later, Kimathi’s statue stands regal in Kenya’s capital but the battle is still on—only the characters and weapons have changed. From the forests it’s now the streets, the blogosphere, the wit, Parliament and petitions. The Wangari Maathais, the Boniface Mwangis, the Omtatas, the Davinder    Lambas and the masses, the civil societies and the media are all pressing for freedom—50 years on.
But who exactly are they up against? Poverty, the political class, the extended unofficial hereditary hegemony aided by condescending masses—masses contented with food and shelter for today, deaf to the cry for justice and numb to the feel of equality.It is a classic re-enactment of Orwell’s “Animal Farm”: lesser animals are quickly subscribing to the philosophy of other animals being more equal than others.
On 14 November 2013, IPSOS Synovate released the findings of a public opinion poll whose scope of survey encompassed security, crime, the Westgate Attack, Somalia security issues, Muslim clerics’ killings and the ICC process. 67% of the Kenyan population believes that the Westgate attack could have been prevented. An overwhelming majority feel the laxity of government apparatus allowed the Westgate attack to take place. In short, the average Mwananchi is aware of the turn of events in the country, but has given up trying to change anything. He has chosen the path of short memory or worse, apathy.
And for the leaders entrusted with defending the Constitution, it beats logic for one to send himself to trial. “The foreigners and ICC want to jail us,” they say. We say, “Come; let us gag the media and civil societies. Let us join the continental despots, turn East and save our skins.” Besides the two media bills meant to slash the beaks off the nosy media, civil societies and NGOs have the Miscellaneous Amendment Bill 2013 aimed at limiting foreign funding to a maximum of 15 percent of their total budgets. Well, who provides supplementary public medical care in the ‘forgotten frontiers’ of Kenya? Who fights FGM in the arid lands? Unless those services are not too important, compared to politics of the day.

The Judiciary is not safe either. The principle of separation of powers matters no more. Recently, six members of the Judicial Service Commission were suspended and a tribunal set up to investigate them. The head of this tribunal, appointed by accident or design, happens to have an axe to grind with the JSC for not being shortlisted for a post he applied for back in 2011.
All the same, we, Wananchi, down here, the other 99 percent, are doing just fine. Never has there been more creativity in our ranks; never has there been more invention and entrepreneurial spirit, in spite of those who purport to lead us.
So, let’s celebrate the Jubilee, by all means. Freedom is ours, and it is what you make of it. As an African saying goes, ‘whoever thinks he is too small to make an impact has perhaps never spent a night in the company of a mosquito.’ That’s freedom.


THROUGH THE LENS OF NAIROBI’S BRILLIANT PHOTOGRAPHERS- JOE LUKHOVI

#PHOTOGRAPHY MONTH WITH @UP Magazine/ #WeLoveNairobi


Joe Lukhovi (Contemporary Photography)
Joe belongs to the young, spritely photographers Nairobi would love showcasing to the world. He has been working as a photographer for six years. “I chose to do contemporary photography and documentaries because it is a way of telling stories through pictures in a unique and interesting way,” says the lensman with a particular liking for silhouettes.
“There’s this thing about silhouettes that comes out nicely especially in the evenings or early mornings and that’s the technique I’ve taken it through.” In 2011, he was in South Africa thanks to “Project Survival Media” for his photography. Joe who prefers analogue lenses to automatic ones for the feel of the images, is currently involved in “Photographs for Africa” a project that aims to cast Africa in a positive light running across Uganda, Tanzania, Ethiopia and Tanzania.
But Joe has come a long way and gone places and still has a long way to go. “My work moves with the idea of liberty and expression,” he says. Joe held his debut exhibition at Kuona Trust in July 2013. This month, he is heading to Warsaw, Poland courtesy of the Thompson Reuters Foundation to document events in support of environmental conservation.
For more info, visit joelukhovi.wordpress.com





#kwaniat10




#kwaniat10
We celebrated our 10th anniversary between 27th – 30th November 2013 by hosting a series of literary and artistic events that reflect on contemporary writing and its place in the literary history of Kenya, East Africa & the continent. In this spirit, we hosted Kenyan writer, Yvonne Adhiambo Owuor whose story ‘Weight of Whispers’ was published in the first edition of the Kwani? journal in 2003 & won the Caine Prize for African Writing, placing Kenyan contemporary literature and Kwani? on the regional and international map. Yvonne launched her debut novel, DUST. We were delighted to welcome award-winning Nigerian writer Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie to give the Kwani? 10th Anniversary Lecture Africa and launch the East African edition of her acclaimed third novel AMERICANAH. 

Info : 
http://kwaniat10.kwani.org/ 

Images: Paul Munene, 
Quaint Photography