Wednesday, January 21, 2009

A Tribute to Former US President George Walker Bush

Its the 21st day of January and we have a "new leader of the free world". Yes the mantle has been passed on and one the younger generation has the baton. Congratulations are in order to America in its achievement, to the civil rights movement and to Barack Obama himself. It is a truly honorable moment even for us who are not Americans, as the sense of pride spreads wide.

As we salute Obama, it is worthy and especially Africa and us as Africans to take a moment and peek into the history and legacy of George W. Bush and his policies for Africa. Controversial as he may have been, unpopular in America and around the world as he may be, hated as he may be, Africa should be very grateful to him. Under his policies, we can say Africa was always on top of the list especially when help was needed. Africa was given the attention it deserved and especially when it came to the issue of HIV/AIDS and Malaria. We as Africans benefited greatly under his policies, more than what Bill Clinton managed to spend on Africa, though Bill Clinton is considered the most Africa friendly President. Figures and number I may not quote but when Bush was in power, the funding for the HIV/AIDS epidemic was increased, the AGOA initiative was relaunched, the US markets were opened a little to us Africans and specific goods given priority. Bush's government encouraged Africa to embrace democracy, and especially he was fond of the young presidents of Africa, especially presidents of Ghana, Tanzania, Zambia and Liberia who are proving to be more accountable.

This is one direction that we hope that the 44th President of the US, Barack Obama, will continue this direction.

Thank you George Walker Bush and enjoy your retirement.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Ubashiri: The Kenya of 2009-2012

Many at time I have been called a pessimist and so many the times I have felt as if I am a blind optimist. This is the battle of direction that at times I find myself in, but today my pessimist bone is much more active than the optimist one especially when the issue of where our beloved country is headed to is raised.

Let me state this clearly, I am a patriot who loves my country deeply and I would do anything to defend it, but unlike my optimism my patriotism is not blind and when I see thing that piss me off, the Idea of fleeing at times sounds a very good option. The grand coalition when it was formed sounded as a very good idea at the time when over 1200 people had lost their lives, ODM calling for trade sanction against the government, the western and European powers were spelling their terms and our beloved Kenya was going to the dogs while we were watching helplessly as the GSU and the police were making their presence felt. At that time, the grand coalition seemed like a very good idea, but that was the easier choice for us as a country. Had we searched keenly, took a hard look at ourselves and a more harder choice but better for the long run could have been realised. So why do I say that was an easy but bad choice??

The current crisis in the country is a very clear manifestation of this. One thing the politicians forgot, or they didnt and have never acknowledged is that Kenya is a corrupt country. Corruption runs in the blood and lives in the bone marrow of kenyans and the sooner do we acknowledge this the better. So PNU and ODM forgot that Kenyans are corrupt, and they went ahead and formed the grand Coalition, a bunch of thieves, corrupt mps and no one worthy of leadership. The results, the scandals we are seeing now, maize scandals, oil crisis, Wetangula and his team going to the states for Obama inaguration yet they will see it on TV just like you and me who we cant make it to DC but will have CNN, Nation and KTN at our services, Ong'ong'o and his team, the Mv Faina saga, of which we dont know who to believe; the ever lying government, the somali pirates, the sudan government or the marines who were guarding it, the IDPs saga where someone would rather pocket the 10,000Kshs for an IDP rather than help him/her get back to life and as sure as heaven and hell are the list will grow bigger and more scandalous.

How best can you explain this, 10 million are facing starvation yet some people can afford to siphon the food meant for them and export it so a neighboring country just to make an extra shilling, or the foreign ministry going for a visit where they are not invited ie gate crashing and are bound to spend millions where back at home people are dying of hunger, while teachers strike because the government cant give them a good deal and yet its the same government that is spending money as if it is in line for the US bailout now that a brother is in white house???

These are some of the stories that we will be hearing of for the next four years, just because two gangs of thieves made peace and now they can eat together with no shame and no fierce dog in the name of opposition on their backs. The PNU side is busy eating because this is their last chance to eat while ODM have unfinished business since the era of KANU. This is not hard to see unless your patriotism at times is as blind as my optimism at times. The maize scandal was a time bomb, and now it has exploded. Last year, crops were burnt in the field, and in the granaries, people and especially Kikuyu who are the largest farmers were displaced from their farms and some have never gone back, the rains failed and the national granaries were running below capacity. Do you need to go to school to learn that in these conditions the country will face starvation the following year????? But our politicians and government with the brain of a **** did not see it coming and if it did, it thought by mere not thinking about it the issue would solve itself!!!

This is just the tip of the iceberg and by the time the next four years are over we will be crying hard. So the next four years brace yourself for a tough landing as we will cry our eyes out.

all the best.

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Najivunia Kuwa Mkenya

I wish Olympics were held each and every other year... but then they would not be Olympics but another venue where sportsmen/women meet to showcase their talent... or they would be another world sporting event where no Kenyan or few guys will actually get to follow them and even those who will follow them they will not remember the athletes who participated and who won what and who become which number.

The names of Brimin Kipruto, Pamela Jelimo aka Nandi Express, Janet Jepkosgei aka Eldoret Express, Catherine Ndereba, Asbel Kiprop, Dunford brothers, Ezekiel Kemboi among others strike a chord with any Kenyan of right mind and senses. They have done Kenya proud, they have flown our Black, Red, Green and White flag high up at the international meeting. Kudos to them.

At the same time Kenyans back at home have taken their success with stride, devouring every moment of their success with overflowing pride, celebrating like mad men and women when a Kenyan crosses the line the first or the second or when history is made by having a Kenyan swimmer break an Olympic record, be it for 7 minutes, or when a Kenyan lady bags a gold medal a first for the country, groaning as if their favorite team has lost, when a Kenyan fails to finish inside the medal bracket. Its a time when politics has taken a back seat, when we have forgotten which tribe we belong to, or which tribe the participating athlete hails from, we have just cheered our team with pride and with our hearts, wished them God's speed, kept them in our prayers, and we were glad and proud to be Kenyan.... period!!!

Looking back it was in January when we turned against each other, massacring and butchering each other, it was a time when your tribe mattered more than you yourself and political affiliation was something to rely on. Thank God the Olympics are here and have reminded us how it feels to be proud to be a Kenyan again, how our National Anthem sounds so good when its played on the big arena and how one can come so near to tears when a fellow country mate crosses the finishing line inside the medal bracket. And thats why I said, I wish the Olympics were held every year, but then they will not be Olympics but just another stage which people don't pay much attention.

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

DNS gaping hole

The internet has been with us for how many years .... 20-25yrs and since then we have been living with this big security flaw.

The thing is that this problem has been with us since the onset of internet and is just being discovered last month. It just begs the questions 'How safe are we in this modern era of computers and Internet?'
'Which other flaws are yet to be discovered, or have been discovered but the hackers, phishers and all em bad guys are reaping from it?'

This is a big one.

check these links:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080805/ap_on_hi_te/tec_internet_security_hole
http://www.circleid.com/posts/87216_dns_flaw_leaked_prior_to_set_date_patch/
http://addxorrol.blogspot.com/2008/07/on-dans-request-for-no-speculation.html

http://rdist.root.org/2008/07/21/dns-novice-discovers-secret-flaw/


If Thinking makes ur head ache, check this out:

"OpenBSD contains a flaw that may allow a malicious user to poison a recursive DNS cache. The issue is triggered by a weakness in the X3 algorithm used to generate random DNS transaction IDs, which combined with a static source port for all DNS queries can allow an attacker to spoof a DNS response packet. It is possible that the flaw may allow a remote attacker to poison a DNS cache resulting in a loss of integrity."


Lets hope that the clever guys will give us the security patches in time before someone gets hurt if nobodys hurt as of the moment ....