Sunday, April 20, 2014

Thousands attend prophet Owuor’s Eldoret prayer meeting

 | April 19, 2014 |
Owuor+Over 6,000 ushers and 1,000 police officers punctuated the second day of self-proclaimed prophet David Owuor’s “National Thanksgiving Meeting” at the Eldoret Sports Club, on Saturday.
Acting Uasin Gishu County police commander Nelson Taliti said police were keeping vigil as Dr Owuor ministered for followers from all over Kenya and from neighbouring countries.
They were driven to Eldoret in over 500 buses – and many more in private vehicles – while many more walked or used public transport.
“Tomorrow (today) there will be no standing space here because there are more buses coming,” Dr Owuor told the congregation.
People from South Korea and USA were spotted in the crowd, waving their countries’ miniature flags as they joined other worshippers from Dr Owuor’s Repentance and Holiness Ministry.
“This is what the people of Kenya want; they want the Lord!” he declared.
Dr Owuor’s “Train of the Lord” and “River of Healing” swept through the usually quiet – even during Easter – Eldoret.
The crusade, which started on Friday with the washing of the streets of the town, attracted a huge number of enterprising residents, who experienced brisk Easter business selling foodstuff and second-hand clothes.
OPPRESSED FAITHFUL
At the prayer meeting, Dr Owuor castigated immorality in present-day society, and condemned Christian leaders who he said oppress their faithful. He also urged leaders across the world to “unite and work together in solidarity.”
The meeting was attended by, among others, Kericho County Governor Paul Chepkwony, Uasin Gishu County Deputy Governor Daniel Chemno, Nandi County Women Representative Zipporah Kering’ and Kapseret MP Oscar Sudi.
Ms Annette Ambaisi, a worshipper who spoke to the Sunday Nation, said she had travelled from Nairobi’s Shauri Moyo Estate. “I have witnessed the glory of God through the prophet’s teachings,” she said.
Most of the worshippers who could not afford hotel accommodation rates camped in the cold as they waited for Dr Owuor.
Elsewhere, Mombasa residents were on Saturday treated to a rare free shoe cleaning exercise by Christians from various churches in the region as part of Easter celebrations.
The Christian faithful of the Mombasa Church Forum (MCF), who were joined by worshippers of the Trinity Chapel, called out to pedestrians, drivers and other people walking past Digo Road, where they set up with their tools to offer a free “shoe clinic”.
The locals, mainly Muslims, were taken aback and said they had been moved by the kind gesture extended by the group.
“My friend and neighbour who is a Christian has offered to clean my shoes for free. That they have put aside religious, tribal and other differences means a lot,” said Ahmed Hamza, a resident of Likoni.
Another resident, Mohammed Abdulkarim, said: “This is a wonderful idea during the Easter period, especially coming from our Christian brothers. Love, peace and harmony is important and it is what we all want.”
MCF Secretary Stanley Prince said they came up with the shoe-cleaning exercise as a demonstration of the Christian teachings of love and brotherhood during the Easter period.
“We are here to clean the shoes of everyone irrespective of their religion, just as Jesus Christ showed love without choosing,” Mr Prince said.
“It is a show of our love to our neighbours, particularly now when there has been so much animosity between Christians and Muslims over terrorist teachings.”
Meanwhile, security forces in Mombasa continued their thorough check-ups of vehicles and pedestrians for the second day as Operation Usalama Watch entered its second week.
There were huge traffic jams extending as far as the North Coast from the Kongowea, Kisauni and Nyali junction as every motorist and cyclist was ordered to produce their national identification documents by the hawk-eyed traffic police officers.
At the Buxton junction heading to Nyali Bridge, there was yet another road block targeting public service vehicles from town and the busy Mwembe Tayari bus stages.-nation.co.ke
Head of the Repentance and Holiness Ministry David Owuor with little Wanjiru during a crusade in Eldoret on April 19, 2014. PHOTO | JARED NYATAYA

Big money rocks athletes’ life and marriage

 | April 19, 2014 |
Athlete big moneyThe huge athletics dollar payout in races abroad aptly obeys the social maxim: more money more problems.
This precisely paints the picture on the lifestyles that some Kenyan world beating athletes lead after they win millions from lucrative competitions.
Although some may have been married before the athletics cash start rolling in, break-ups stand out as a common norm among most of them.
Upon winning millions, women superstars hatch plans to leave their “poor husbands” and vice versa. These developments play out strangely, often resulting in separations or protracted court battles.
This has been the trend in most athletic families in Kenya.
The twists range from middle distance runners to marathoners whose case files keep gathering dust in court cabinets.
Pamela Jelimo, the 2008 Olympic 800m champion and Golden League jackpot winner of $1 million (Sh86.8 million), set the ball rolling when she arraigned her lover Peter Kiprotich Murrey in a battle over a Massey Ferguson tractor.
Kenya’s first Olympic woman gold medalist and her husband have been embroiled in a court case at Kapsabet Law Courts.
It proved hard for Murrey to disclose the source of his money in court in the Sh1.9 million-tractor row, which has caused controversy between them. He told the court he had a joint account with Jelimo.
Jelimo, a double medalist during the 2007 Africa junior championships  — gold in 400 metres and bronze in 200 metres respectively — differed sharply with her husband over the management of farm implements, forcing them to separate.
Jelimo, a global track superstar who was nick-named Kapsabet Express after her 2008 Beinjing Olympics exploits, is best remembered for having ended the dominance of Africa Queen Mariah Mutola of Mozambique at the Africa Athletics Championships in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, in 2008.
She became the first Kenyan woman to win a Golden League Jackpot. She also won two medals at Africa championships, bagging gold in 800 metres (1:58:70) and silver in 4x400m relays (3:37:67) that year.
A victory at the IAAF World Athletics Final was to follow. But her performance slumped from 2009 as the relationship with Mr Murrey slowly turned sour.
Court sessions
She staged a brilliant comeback at the 2012 IAAF World Indoor Championships in Istanbul, Turkey, winning gold in 800m in an impressive 1:58.83.
Since then she has disappeared from athletic limelight, only to be spotted attending court sessions over property disputes. Although they are not formally divorced, they live separate lives.
The script is similar for double world champion Vivian Cheruiyot’s husband Moses Kiplagat Kirui, who is embroiled in a court case with his former wife Caroline Kwambai.
Kirui was charged at an Eldoret court in 2012 for allegedly neglecting parental responsibility. The two were married in a Keiyo customary marriage ceremony in 2011.
Kwambai has sued to compel him to meet the basic needs of their three children, whom they got during their 12-year marriage.
The case came up in court a few days before Cheruiyot left for the London Olympic Games, where she won silver and bronze medals in 5,000 metres and 10,000 metres races.
Kwambai, a former athlete who finished fourth at the junior race at the 1990 World Cross in France, through her lawyer Caleb Obwatinyo, said Kiplagat stopped paying school fees for the children in 2007.
She also wanted part of the property she alleges they sourced and developed together transferred to her.
The 38-year-old claimant who works as a warder at Lang’ata Women’s Prison in Nairobi also claimed her former husband has been collecting more than Sh50,000 in monthly rent from their residential houses in Eldoret town.
In the case that appeared before Eldoret Resident Magistrate Mary Njagi, Kwambai said that during their marriage, Kiplagat used to control all the money she won in international races.
She alleged that her former husband kicked her and their children out. “Our eldest son, who had been living with Kiplagat and his current wife was kicked out in 2011. Kiplagat has abandoned his duty as a parent. That’s the reason why the court should compel him to take responsibility,” she told the court.
But Kwambai says she has since lost hope in the quest for justice. “I gave up after the case dragged in court. I decided to concentrate on paying the children’s school fees. I lost hope after he kicked the boy out his house,” Kwambai told The Standard on Sunday last Thursday.
Cat and mouse game
Her  eldest son sat the Kenya Certificate of Secondary Examinations at St Patrick’s High School Iten last year while her second born daughter is a Form One Student at Chebara Girls Secondary School in Marakwet. Her last-born is a Standard Four pupil at Salaba Academy near Iten.
Kwambai warns women athletes: “Take care of your spouses when you earn money from running. Love nowadays is driven by monetary ambitions and I never imagined that I could lose all my sweat to my husband, whom I trusted. Whenever I won races abroad, I handed over the money to him.”
Kwambai’s ex-husband could not be reached for comment by the time of going to press. Two-time Boston Marathon winner Rita Jeptoo, who will compete in Boston Monday evening, is another runner with marriage problems.
Jeptoo is a mother of  a four-year-old boy, whom she got with Noah Businei — a former 800 metres runner — before they got separated.
Jeptoo won the Boston Marathon in 2006, then took a maternity break.
She then staged a strong comeback, winning Chicago and Boston marathons in 2013.
Rita married Busienei around 2005 but the love turned sour and soon they were parting ways. They have never gone to court to formalise their separation although they are living separate lives.
Two-time Berlin Marathon winner Florence Kiplagat, who finished second in last week’s London Marathon, broke ties with her husband Moses Mosop, a former Chicago Marathon winner in 2011.
Mosop and Kiplagat had perennial differences – they even had their case filed at Iten Police Station.
Elders from the two families unsuccessfully tried to mediate between the two. Mosop has since remarried.
Athlete Hosea Kogo ditched Lydia Cheromei, who was Kenya’s first gold medalist at the IAAF World Cross Country Championships in Antwerp, Belgium, in 1991. They have been embroiled in a tussle over joint ownership of property.
Cheromei moved on and is now married to Jackson Kirwa, the winner of 2008 Firenze Marathon in Italy.
Squabbles also rocked former Olympic 1,500m champion Nancy Jebet Lagat and Kenneth Cheruiyot’s marriage. Although they lived together for some time, they were never formally married and they have since separated.
There is a cat and mouse game between athletic spouses, with some preferring to have their parents as next of kin.
Ibrahim Hussein, who was the first African to win the New York City Marathon in 1987, said families of sports personalities are no exception to the challenges facing all families.
“We all need good planning and mutual relationship in our families. The issue of money exist every where even in the business and there are little break ups. So, it is something normal. Our sports people need to stick to our religious beliefs to avert problems,” said Hussein, a thee-time Boston Marathon winner.
He asked athletic families to seek counseling from professionals if they cannot iron out their issues.

Wanamgambo Wa Al-Shabaab Watoa Tishio Jipya

Mavericks-Spurs Preview

By JON KRAWCZYNSKI (AP Basketball Writer)

AP - Sports
Mavericks-Spurs Preview
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Dallas Maverickscoach Rick Carlisle calls a play against the Memphis Grizzlies in the first half of an …
While San Antonio Spurs steamrolled toward their fourth 60-win season in 11 years, coach Gregg Popovich was asked if there is a secret formula for the franchise's almost unfathomable run of excellence.

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''Yes there is,'' said Popovich, in typical deadpan fashion. ''Get the No. 1 pick in the draft every 10 years and make sure that it's a franchise player. That's the formula. That's how lucky you have to be. You've got David (Robinson) for a decade and then Timmy (Duncan) comes. Well, I think most anybody could build around that.''
Of course, Popovich is oversimplifying. What the Spurs have created is a program unlike any other in the league, one built on the willingness of three stars to take less money, band together and establish a culture and a pecking order under their no-nonsense coach.
''Everybody knows their secrets,'' Minnesota Timberwolvescoach Rick Adelman said. ''It doesn't do you any good, though.''
The Spurs finished with an NBA-best 62-20 record, wiping out last season's heart-breaking loss in the NBA Finals in emphatic fashion. Duncan, Tony Parker and Manu Ginobiliare back for another run, and standing in their way is another one of the league's most enduring forces.
In his 16th season, Dirk Nowitzki has enjoyed a renaissance, averaging 21.7 points, 6.2 rebounds and shooting 49.7 percent from the field to lead the Dallas Mavericks back to the playoffs. That patented one-legged step-back jumper is as dangerous as ever. He's battled Duncan for 16 years now, and one more matchup should be a thriller.
''This is a treat for people that appreciate NBA basketball and the history of the game,'' Mavericks coach Rick Carlisle said. ''And you've got two guys whose love and respect for the game is so high and their work ethic and standards are so high. They've kept it going in their mid-30s as well as anybody I've ever seen.''
Here are five things to watch in the series, which begins on Sunday in San Antonio:
COACHING CLASH: The series features a matchup of two of the best coaches in the league in Popovich and Carlisle. The moves and counters from the opening tip of Game 1 will be fascinating to watch, and the postgame interviews of two men completely comfortable in their own skin should be almost as entertaining.
''Those little adjustments with coach Pop and Carlisle, those in-between games, trying to adjust something,'' Nowitzki said. ''It's just a fun time.''
SPURS DOMINANCE: The Spurs have won nine straight games against their in-state rivals. Parker's penetration has given the Mavericks' porous perimeter defense fits and generated easy layups or wide-open 3-pointers for the Spurs offense. On defense, the Spurs have Boris Diaw, Tiago Splitter and even Kawhi Leonard to throw at Nowitzki.
''We've got to pick up our game,'' Carlisle said. ''We haven't played well against these guys. It's pretty clear from the results and the stats. We've got to bring a better game.''
RESTED VETERANS: As usual, Popovich did a masterful job of navigating the grind of an 82-game season and limiting the wear and tear on his aging Big Three. The Spurs didn't have a single player average 30 minutes a game this season, meaning everyone should be rested and ready for another deep run.
LEONARD'S EMERGENCE: One could argue the Spurs no longer have a Big Three, but a Big Four. Leonard has delivered a career season and is the heir apparent to Duncan's throne. The Spurs are 54-14 when Leonard plays this season.
''He really made a big step forward in the last two months of the season and hopefully he keeps getting better for the playoffs,'' Ginobili said.
X-FACTOR: Monta Ellis. The mercurial guard has reinvented himself in Dallas as a slightly more efficient scorer. When he gets rolling, he's tough to stop and that may represent the Mavericks' only chance at an upset.
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AP Sports Writer Schuyler Dixon in Dallas and freelance writer Raul Dominguez Jr. in San Antonio contributed to this report.

IEBC finally releases 2013 polls tally

IEBC finally releases 2013 polls tally
After a period of over one year, the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission has finally released the much-awaited final results of the March 4,...
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