Master crafters What is the life of an artist like and should
Kenyans expect to make a decent living from
the profession?
Our heritage
The search is on for a face to promote Kenya as a tourist destination.
Cupid's arrow
So you have been feeling a bit odd lately.
Catholics reject Kaiser report
The FBI's verdict of suicide on Fr. John Kaiser
was roundly rejected by Kenya's Catholics yesterday.
They said it left many questions unanswered and was conducted "unprofessionally".
Americans
narrate ordeal
An American priest yesterday broke down in court
several times as he narrated his 87-day ordeal at the hands of his
three Nigerian captors.
Rev William Danny Marrow, 60, recounted how after being kidnapped,
he was stripped naked, thrown down on the corridor, burnt on his
private parts and feet with candles and two guards kept watch over
him round the clock.
Wanted men seized
Two men branded as among Kenya's most wanted
criminals were arrested yesterday.
Mr David Mwololo Wambua and Mr Joseph Obiero Onyango alias Malik
Onyango Anyango, were seized in their hideouts in Nairobi.
They surrendered when they were ambushed by a team of officers
from the CID and Special Crime Prevention Unit.
Why
amnesty is key to transition
One year to the next General Election, Kenya is
at a crucial point in its history. It stands on the verge of a
power transition.
This can be either smooth or convoluted, depending on citizens'
preparedness. Not only is there the complex task of managing change
of leadership from pre-Uhuru to post-Uhuru generations, but there
is the question of what to do with those whose actions have impoverished
the country.
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American
weeps in kidnap case
American William D. Marrow Jr, left, broke
down and wept as he gave evidence in a kidnap case in a Nairobi
court yesterday. Mr Marrow and Mr Jim E. Harrell, right, claimed
they were lured to Kenya and held captive in a Nairobi house
by Nigerian Augustine Azubuke Nwangwa. The hearing continues
on Monday
(Picture by PAUL WAWERU)
Let's
do better than the Stone-Age man
Kenya has, again, captured international media
attention for the one scientific field in which its boasts
global leadership the never-ending search for the origin
of man.
In
an insular world, Kyoto's not a US toy
American President George Bush recently said that his government
would not ratify the Kyoto Protocol to the Climate Change
Convention because of economic reasons.