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Your Say
Ideally the voters should be able to recall incompetent MPs but this power must be entrenched in the laws. Otherwise malicious constituents, working in cahoots with MPs rivals, will bring parliament to its knees. In any case an MP who fails in his duty is merely a reflection of the character of his ... Cosmas K Ronno, Kenya
How Jomo taught authority a lesson
With all due respect to the member for Ikolomoni, the bulls I have seen pretending to fight on TV are all fakes.
For starters, they remind me of body builders — nothing natural, all steroids and hot air. They are not even zebu seeing as most show a smattering of Friesian blood and such. In short they are genetically modified. I also doubt that they would pass a drug test — I’m talking about busaa and marijuana — after their fights.
In my childhood, though, my grandfather boasted the real deal. Jomo was magnificent to look at, a huge, stately bull that moved around with a swagger, mounting every heifer in close vicinity as skinny mortals cowered in fright.
So fierce was he that only my grandfather and, his in drunken absences — and they were plenty — only my father could tether him. And when he got into a belligerent fight, it took grown men with clubs to subdue him lest he commits murder.
I recall with nostalgia the day Jomo showed utter disdain for the Chief’s Act and struck a decisively blow for justice. Apparently, my grandfather, an arrogant, know-it-all drunk, had not been paying some warped village tax for years. And as a consequence, his worship the sub-chief arrived home one morning with his henchmen in tow to collect what was owed Caesar.
prize bull
The arrears, said the chief, amounted to a whopping Sh20. My grandfather listened with characteristic calm as the sub-chief presented his case. When he was done, the old man, with annoying simplicity, said, "I have no money."
"In that case, we will confiscate your property," the sub-chief thundered. "No problem," the old man shot back. "In fact, take my bull. Sell it and bring me change."
A greedy smile lit up the sub-chief’s face. You can bet he stood to personally make a tidy bundle from that transaction. But he should have been alarmed if he had understood my grandfather’s sly grin as his prize bull was carted away.
Trust old Jomo to do the unthinkable. While he was being lead away, he suddenly whipped around, thrust his horn in the neighbourhood of the sub-chief’s well-fed bottom and heaved.
As the chief fell with an alarmed screech, Jomo danced left and right, sending the entire delegation scampering for cover as my grandfather collapsed on the ground shaking with mirth. Needless to say, the sub-chief never returned.
Business
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The European Commission (EC) has given Sh1 billion in grants to local private sector.
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ET: for SA
After two years of trudging the road to the Fifa World Cup finals in South Africa, the mosaic of 32 finalists is complete.
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Today's magazine
Woman's Instinct
Forensic dentist and beauty queen She struts the runway like she was born to do it and makes heads turn with her enchanting features, long mane and the fact that she is usually the only Asian on most catwalks in Nairobi. But 29-year-old Amrit Khalsi has another life: She traded the haute couture designer outfits for a lab coat and the runway for the Kenyatta National Hospital morgue.
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