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                    <title>TIGblogs - Ken Auma's TIGBlog</title> 
                    <link>http://Auma.tigblog.org/</link> 
                    <description>What's on the minds of young leaders from around the globe?</description> 
                    <language>en-us</language> 
             
                <item> 
                    <title>Kenya:Is it a war of Products and Markets?</title> 
                    <link>http://Auma.tigblog.org/post/340961</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Kibaki and Raila may be battling it out on electoral fraud allegations; but the international world could be fighting a war between ‘Panasoanic Radio vs Panasonic Radio’, ‘Wega TV vs Vega TV,’ ‘SQNY vs SONY’ among others. Amidst the chaos, death and displacement in the name of seeking political justice, Kenyans and by extension Africans better realize that they have the responsibility of investing in institutions that will enable African individuals to parade their products to the world. Hopefully when I get back to Bukura, I will get a cheaper and long lasting “Imbako” (hand held hoe) made from Congo. <br />
<br />
By James Shikwati<br />
<br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Tue, 04 Mar 2008 03:55:00 EST</pubDate> 
					<guid isPermaLink="true">http://Auma.tigblog.org/post/340961</guid>
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                <item> 
                    <title>Kenya Crisis: Could This Be An East And West Ideological War Front?</title> 
                    <link>http://Auma.tigblog.org/post/340959</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[China’s silence on the Kenyan crisis has been deafening! A Chinese writer argued that “Western-style democratic theory simply isn’t suited to African conditions, but rather carries with it the root of disaster.” One of the Kenyan government hardliner, Mr. Michuki is reported to have threatened to expel Western diplomats keen on pressuring the government to engage in dialogue of the flawed electoral process. “We are just turning a blind eye, but we can one day wake up and tell them to leave the country. The government has not been defeated in maintaining order and we do not need any foreigners to tell us what to do,” He said. <br />
<br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Tue, 04 Mar 2008 03:51:00 EST</pubDate> 
					<guid isPermaLink="true">http://Auma.tigblog.org/post/340959</guid>
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                <item> 
                    <title>Government of The People, by The People, for The People</title> 
                    <link>http://Auma.tigblog.org/post/340957</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[The phrase from Abraham Lincoln’s famous Gettysburg address, ‘that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth’ remains a telling reminder of the proper role, constitution, and function of government. Yet Lincoln himself was party to setting in motion a process that would increase the power of the US federal government and diminish the power of the states, so reducing America’s ‘government of the people, by the people, for the people’. <br />
<br />
African governments have blamed the past colonial powers for many sins to divert attention away from the atrocities and other injustices they have committed against their own people. Significantly they never blame them for their greatest residual injustice to the continent’s people; that of leaving behind a deadly legacy of constitutional and government structures that have led, as night follows day, to strife, war and unnecessary deaths. The pernicious legacy the colonialists left behind was unrestrained centralised power; the kind of power they believed was needed ‘to keep the natives in line’. How could they admit to having governed in a tyrannical fashion, an admission they would have had to make, in order to, prior to departure, transform their despotic rule by creating the essential institutions of truly free societies? By Eustace Davie <br />
<br />
When will the people have there say as they say it?<br />
<br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Tue, 04 Mar 2008 03:43:00 EST</pubDate> 
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                <item> 
                    <title>What happened in Kenya?</title> 
                    <link>http://Auma.tigblog.org/post/340955</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA["We need an intelligent opposition to make democracy work in Africa – not the rah-rah noisy opposition that is only capable of waving placards and chanting “Kibaki Must Go!” and “Mugabe Must Go!”The opposition must do its home work. It must know its enemy, study its tactics and develop effective counter-strategies accordingly. If the opposition doesn’t do its home work, contests on a field that is not level and loses, it should not come out screaming “Foul, foul!” Zimbabwe holds elections in March. Do we want to see a repeat of the same old age mistakes?" ]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Tue, 04 Mar 2008 03:38:00 EST</pubDate> 
					<guid isPermaLink="true">http://Auma.tigblog.org/post/340955</guid>
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                </item> 
                <item> 
                    <title>Devolution: Which way for Africa?</title> 
                    <link>http://Auma.tigblog.org/post/340953</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA["Should Kenya and other African countries explore devolution as a tool to bring stability and cohesion in their unitary states or shall we wait until separatism knocks on our doors?"<br />
<br />
Many a times I ask myself, Why should an individual becomes so power hungry till it leads to bloodloss? Africa is the richest continent on the planet, yet to my surprise, many developed countries borrows almost everything from it.i.e human resource, raw materials, and even market if not "dumping site".<br />
<br />
Devolution. Is it for Africa?]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Tue, 04 Mar 2008 03:26:00 EST</pubDate> 
					<guid isPermaLink="true">http://Auma.tigblog.org/post/340953</guid>
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                <item> 
                    <title>Yes we can!</title> 
                    <link>http://Auma.tigblog.org/post/340951</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Restoring Unity and harmony in Kenya? Yes we can.<br />
I was once to that "..a country that does not invest in its youth, is a dying Nation..." (M.Gadhi). The future of every nation depends upon the strenghth of its youth. Youth employment is at greatest HIGH RISK. <br />
The potential of microfinance in restoring hope and eventual healing cannot be wished away, unless Kenyans live in denial. Doyle (1998) in the book Microfinance in the Wake of Conflict asserts that microfinance is a tool that can serve multiple goals. It  is not only a tool for rebuilding and restarting local economies by providing needed financial services for enterprise creation but also an instrument of relief, survival in the wake of disaster, peace and reconciliation. Is the sector able to rise to the challenge? Time will tell]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Tue, 04 Mar 2008 03:08:00 EST</pubDate> 
					<guid isPermaLink="true">http://Auma.tigblog.org/post/340951</guid>
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                </item> 
                <item> 
                    <title>Environmental Refugees</title> 
                    <link>http://Auma.tigblog.org/post/179867</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Environmental Refugees remain a key issue even as the Environment Youth Alliance comes to Our country Kenya next week. Millions of people in Sub-Saharan Africa, including Kenya, are increasingly becoming victims of the climate change and have to move from their homes."Environmental Refugees" has increasingly been used to describe the growing numbers of people displaced by environmental problems due to climate change all over the world.<br />
The Youths are the worst hit since many of the developing countries have not yet invested fully in us. In this regard Youth Action Forum for Networking (YAFNet) support the introduction of the Youth Fund. The Youth Fund would support young people in implementing projects to foster sustainable development in their communities. VIVA EYA.<br />
Ken Auma<br />
Youth Action Forum for Networking -YAFNet<br />
Nairobi,Kenya]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Wed, 11 Apr 2007 04:28:00 EDT</pubDate> 
					<guid isPermaLink="true">http://Auma.tigblog.org/post/179867</guid>
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                </item> 
                <item> 
                    <title>HIV/AIDS is 4 Real..</title> 
                    <link>http://Auma.tigblog.org/post/166777</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[The use of drug and substance abuse and the HIV/AIDS pandemic has now become a global crisis. It is eating away the noble gains in development. A total of 2,010,000 people in Kenya are infected with the youth being the most vulnerable group. This figure represents 6.7% of Kenya’s population. HIV/AIDS has posed the most formidable challenge to the science of medicine, as the cure still remains unknown. The disease has equally posed serious challenges to development and the social welfare.<br />
<br />
The scourge is eroding all gains of development that have taken various communities, regions and countries decades to achieve. It is a sweeping flood that has defied all scientific strength and discoveries. <br />
<br />
Many children cannot go to school and many others have dropped out of school either due to lack of parental support, to take care of their ailing parents or to help supplement meager family incomes. Social roles are being changed by HIV/AIDS.<br />
<br />
HIV/AIDS deaths at the Nyanza Province have left many school going children with no alternative but to succumb to miserable lives as an alternative. Young girls are forced to prostitution at the expense of going to school. <br />
<br />
This is indeed an unfortunate scenario that calls for immediate address to provide social alignment by rehabilitating the unfortunate youth in the society and giving them hope for the future. There is need to get them out of hopelessness and give them hope for tomorrow.  <br />
<br />
It is important for the local community to equally accept those infected and affected by providing education to them to make them realize the important role such children can play and avoid any gap in development. For multiplication of intervention efforts, peer education needs to be promoted within communities, as this will again break any existing communication barriers. YAFNet has a big role to assist the youth 2gether with YOU.<br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Fri, 16 Mar 2007 05:50:00 EDT</pubDate> 
					<guid isPermaLink="true">http://Auma.tigblog.org/post/166777</guid>
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                </item> 
                <item> 
                    <title>Seen this Family?</title> 
                    <link>http://Auma.tigblog.org/post/166563</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Hi,<br />
Two men met at a bar and struck up a conversation. One of them kept complaining of family Problems. Finally, the other man said: "You think you have family problems? Listen to my Situation.<br />
A few years ago, I met a young widow with a grown-up daughter and we got married. "Later my father married my step daughter. That made my stepdaughter my step mother and my father became my stepson. Also, my wife became mother in-law of her father-in-law.<br />
<br />
Then the daughter of my wife, my stepmother had a son. This boy was my half-brother because he was my father's son, but he was also the son of my wife's daughter, which made him my wife's grandson.<br />
That made me the grandfather of my half-brother. "This was nothing until my wife and I had a son. Now the half-sister of my son, my stepmother, is also the grandmother. "This makes my father the brother-in-law of my child, whose stepsister is my father's wife. I'm my stepmother's brother-in-law, my wife is her own Child's aunt, my son is my father’s nephew and I'm my own<br />
grandfather!<br />
And you think you have family problems!" No" man!]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Thu, 15 Mar 2007 05:10:00 EDT</pubDate> 
					<guid isPermaLink="true">http://Auma.tigblog.org/post/166563</guid>
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                </item> 
                <item> 
                    <title>Its within us all</title> 
                    <link>http://Auma.tigblog.org/post/166565</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[The trouble with so many of us is that we underestimate the power of simplicity. We have a tendency it seems to over complicate our lives and forget what’s important and what’s not. We tend to mistake movement for achievement. We tend to focus on activities instead of results. And as the pace of life continues to race along in the outside world, we forget that we have the power to control our lives regardless of what’s going on outside]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Thu, 15 Mar 2007 05:10:00 EDT</pubDate> 
					<guid isPermaLink="true">http://Auma.tigblog.org/post/166565</guid>
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                </item> 
                <item> 
                    <title>Child Trafficking</title> 
                    <link>http://Auma.tigblog.org/post/166213</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[More than 20,000 children are trafficked annually in Kenya, a trafficking in persons whistle-blowers' forum disclosed yesterday.<br />
<br />
The business had thrived in Kenya partly due to mushrooming of brothels, bars and villas, which allowed revellers to target young children for sexual exploitation and lack of effective legislation to fight the vice.<br />
<br />
The German ambassador to Kenya, Mr Walter Lindner, said the vice had branded Kenya one of the hottest sex tourism destinations in the world.<br />
<br />
He called for proper legislation that would take care of private villas and house ownership since most hotels had complied with the code of conduct signed last year.<br />
<br />
Speaking at the Giriama Beach hotel in Mombasa, when he officially opened a one-day workshop on trafficking of persons at the Coast, Mr Lindner said although his government was committed to ending the practice, there was no enough cooperation from Kenyan authorities.<br />
<br />
"Germany passed a law 10 years ago that punishes its citizens committing crimes abroad. It is amazing that Kenya has not cooperated to ensure that those Germans involved in child sex tourism are apprehended," he said.<br />
<br />
Mr Lindner said German police and prosecutors just need testimonies so that any German tourist involved in crimes was arrested immediately he landed at Frankfurt airport.<br />
As the youth of Kenya and fighting for the Rights of thr children. Lets team up against this vice and give the children thier rightful positions in the society. All in favor please say I.]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Tue, 13 Mar 2007 08:57:00 EDT</pubDate> 
					<guid isPermaLink="true">http://Auma.tigblog.org/post/166213</guid>
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                </item> 
                <item> 
                    <title>Work Hard or go home</title> 
                    <link>http://Auma.tigblog.org/post/166211</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[The lion is the most powerful animal in the jungle. The "king of beasts."<br />
<br />
But what is the lion's favorite food?<br />
<br />
Antelope, zebra, wildebeest and other large animals.<br />
<br />
There are lots of animals a lion could eat: mice, snakes, lizards, birds and other small animals. However, the lion knows that these animals don't offer a large enough reward for the time, effort, and energy expended to hunt and capture them. <br />
<br />
Lions hunt in prides, and the members work together in teams, so that after a successful hunt, there is enough food for all. Food for the hunters, food for the cubs, and food for the members of the pride that are too old to hunt. A lot of food.<br />
<br />
If a lion tried to subsist on a diet of mice, it would probably starve to death (it certainly would never be able to go to the movies or take a vacation).<br />
<br />
Paul thinks of himself as a lion. The king of the jungle. The alpha male. He's bright, sharp and talented. He knows his business inside and out. <br />
<br />
He has only one problem: He's not making the kind of money he wants to make and knows he's capable of making.<br />
<br />
He puts in lots of hours, comes in early, stays late, works weekends, but never seems to get ahead. He called me one day and asked for help.<br />
<br />
Once we started working together, the reasons why he wasn't getting ahead became apparent. He was running his business -- and managing his time -- as if he were hunting mice, instead of moose.<br />
<br />
Paul spends his days doing things that keep him busy, instead of doing things that make him productive. Things that move him closer to his goals. <br />
<br />
Each day he arrives bright and early at the office. He sits down at his desk, and begins reading -- and replying to -- his e-mail. He then writes some letters, works on proposals, and makes some phone calls.<br />
<br />
Then the phone begins to ring, YAFNet and regular mail arrives, his colleagues and coworkers walk into his office and ask him questions, and by the end of the day he hasn't accomplished very much. He's tired, stressed out, and frustrated.<br />
<br />
Paul spends his days hunting mice, not moose.<br />
<br />
Paul didn't have a plan or strategy for managing and taking control of his day. For setting his priorities. For staying focused. <br />
<br />
Yes, he was busy. But he wasn't productive.<br />
<br />
The youth can do better than this. Work hard or go home.]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Tue, 13 Mar 2007 08:48:00 EDT</pubDate> 
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