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DSC03882One on one with Mutahi Kagwe and , giving a perspective on his personal tastes, his childhood, and accomplishments. He has had a long eventful career in politics and business. Hon. Mutahi Kagwe (born January, 1958), the former Minister for Information and Communications and the fifth Member of Parliament for Mukurweini Constituency.

He has had a stint at the helm of the Kenyan Parliamentary Committee on Finance, Trade, Tourism and Planning. He holds a bachelor’s degree in commerce from the University of Nairobi, and an MBA from the United States International University (USIU) of Nairobi.

In his career Mutahi has been the advertising manager, Mashambani Magazine, and the group- advertising manager, commercial manager and commercial operations director of the Standard Group Limited between 1987 and 1994. He is currently the chairman of Research International, East Africa and the group-managing director of Tell- em Public Relations (E.A) Ltd

He has many professional memberships including the Marketing Society of Kenya, the Kenya Institute of Management, the parliamentarian network of the World Bank, and the commonwealth parliamentary association.

He attended Kihate Primary School (1965- 1971), Kagumo High School- both O levels and A levels (1972- 1977), Nairobi University (1978- 1981), United States International University- USIU (1988- 1992).

He is married to Mrs. Ann Wanjiku Mutahi and they have four children.

Ten Minutes with….. Mutahi Kagwe

What is do you do for exercise?

I have gym membership but I love to walk when the weather allows it I simply take long walks. I think walking keeps me fit and it combines my need for exercise with my passion for the outdoors. I love trees, I plant trees everywhere I can it gives a deep sense of satisfaction when I plant trees

What is your favorite pastime?

I love to read, I can read more than two books at a time.   I have always had a fascination with the fusion of economics and politics and I read The Economist, often however I also read a variety of novels, autobiographies. I surround myself with books they keep my mind alive and alert. I enjoy it immensely.

If you were stranded on an Island what would you take with you?

1. My phone if possible

2. My books

I think the goal for me would be to keep my mind alive in such as situation and the Books would keep me active, mentally.

What book are you currently reading?

Am reading Joe Hamisi’s, The politics of betrayal: Diary of a Kenyan Legislator,

From Third World to First: The Singapore Story: 1965-2000 by Lee Kuan Yew

If you were to experience a place for the first time who would you take and why?

My family, if it is a holiday then I would like to spend some quality time with my family. Just relax.

What is your most memorable childhood memory? And how did it influence you

There are several but the one that influenced me to be who I am today was the fact that I was the Bell ringer for the school.

That meant that I kept the school bell on my desk with a small clock to keep time. I had to learn how to multi task by keeping time for the whole school as well as pay attention in class.

This taught me to be punctual to this day I keep time and try to ensure people around me do the same

It also gave me a sense of responsibility. Every time I rang that bell the whole school was on the move; teachers went on break, or classes came to an end, teachers moved from one class to another, students went from one place to the next. That simple task shaped my respect for power and how to handle its influence on those around you.

I also remember that as a young boy I read a book by James Hadley Chase that had someone poisoned using ice-cream and I had never tasted ice-cream. It wasn’t until I was older I was able to taste and experience ice-cream.  Most people might take such trivial things for granted today but for me it fascinates me that some of these things I experienced as a grown up.

What makes you angry on a personal level?

I rarely lose my temper, I however know that am impatient especially when people repeat themselves or don’t get to the point, I get irritated. I am aware of this and am learning to keep my impatience in check.

What sport do you play or enjoy?

I rarely have time for sports but I do play golf occasionally, it is a sport I play with my friends from time to time as we socialize.

On a personal level what responsibility do you take to conserve the environment?

I plant trees. Lots of them, I strongly feel that trees make a difference in the environment. On my farm in Kieni I have planted trees and when I get an opportunity to plant a tree I do it without hesitation. Like I said earlier I love to walk and I think the environment is beautiful with fresh air and trees.

What do you admire most about the people of Nyeri?

I admire our tenacity, determination and work ethic. I think the people of Nyeri County are the most hardworking Kenyans. Just looking at what they produce on small scale farms is amazing. They effectively feed themselves and even sell at the market. Most people in Nyeri don’t have large plantations to plant large quantities of food.  However they make an effort to work with what they have. And with this kind of attitude towards their work the sky is the limit. I believe given an opportunity, the right kind of economic environment, and the effective leadership the people of Nyeri County will capitalize on the fortunes of the county and make it the envy of other counties.

Story By  Lydiah Nyawira  of The Highland Tribune in conjunction with Nyeri online.com

kanju3Nyeri town which was once regarded as the greenest and the cleanest town is slowly turning into a garbage town. This is as a result of the failure of the Nyeri municipal council to collect garbage or doing a slapdash job just to be seen as doing something.

The town which has most of its drainage systems clogged with refuse begs the question who is sleeping on the job at the Nyeri municipal council. A company that used to clean the drainage systems has since vanished in thin air.

kanju4The Municipal council on its side seems un aware or just ignorant of the imminent problem which if continues un abated might lead to other un foreseen problems. Due to dirty parking bays, tension is slowly building among vehicles owners who are vowing not to park fees until something is done. Residents of Nyeri business fraternity have said that they will join hand en boycott paying any levies until the Nyeri municipal council puts its act together.

In the past Nyeri town had manicured flowers  gardens along the roads, Whispers and  Sungura parks when the said were under some organization, but ever since the same has recede back to the municipal council then the splendor has weathered with time.

For now only time will tell for it’s a matter of wait and see what the council will do and whether it heed to the cries of the residents of Nyeri town.

By Richard Macharia


Aliko Dangote. #1 richest in AfricaAliko Dangote

$13.8 B
World's Billionaires
#51 overall
#1 in Nigeria

  • Age: 53
  • Source: sugar, flour, cement , inherited and growing
  • Residence: Lagos, Nigeria
  • Country of citizenship: Nigeria
  • Marital Status: Married
  • Children: 3

The Nigerian businessman's fortune surged 557% in the past year, making him the world's biggest gainer in percentage terms and Africa's richest individual for the first time. The catalyst was listing Dangote Cement, which integrated his investments across Africa with his previously public Benue Cement; it now accounts for a quarter of the Nigeria Stock Exchange's total market cap. Already the continent's biggest cement maker, he has plants under construction in Zambia, Tanzania, Congo and Ethiopa and is building cement terminals in Sierra Leone, Ivory Coast and Liberia, among other places. Dangote, who recently bought himself a $45 million Bombardier aircraft for his birthday, has been shuttling back and forth to London for months, in anticipation of a public offering there later this year. Dangote began his career as a commodities trader; built his Dangote Group into conglomerate with interests in sugar, flour milling, salt processing, cement manufacturing, textiles, real estate, and oil and gas.

THE HISTORY OF OSMAN ALLU

present day osman allu shopStanding stoically in the midst of a modern day town is a century old shop that is known by many from far and wide. Whether a first time visitor or a resident, or even one who has researched about Nyeri, you have definitely heard or seen about Osman Allu. The shop being one of the earliest founded in the post colonial town of Nyeri has stood the test of time, since the turn of the 20th century in 1899 or the whereabouts.

The shop was established by Mohamedally Rattansi who was born in 1882 in Chavand, a village in Kathiawar, India.  His father Rattansi Nanji, a Shia Ismaili, owned a small shop selling basic merchandise, such as salt, sugar, and dates to villagers and neighboring farmers in India. His father later closed shop and he had to support him on a meager income he had. As a young man Mohamedally learnt, however, that there were opportunities in British East Africa (Kenya was part of it). In 1897 the British began to build a railway line from Mombasa to Lake Victoria to open up the hinterland for trade and administration.  A great number of Indian indentured laborers, eventually numbering about 32,000, were recruited to build the line.  The work started in Mombasa and soon, the small Swahili port became a bustling town.  Mohamedally's cousin, Javer Kassam, had already migrated there and ran a small shop.  In those early days the most enterprising of the Asian entrepreneurs was a Shia Ismaili by the name Seth Alidina Visram.  By the turn of the century, Visram had established a chain of dukas stretching from the Coast to the Nile.  There was a great demand for young and adventurous fellow Ismailis to steward the shops.  Seeing this opportunity, Javer sent a message to his young cousin Mohamedally, telling him:  to ‘Come to Africa.  I shall help you find a job.'

 

   


Mohamedally's initial intention was to go to Bombay to find a job. However when his cousin called him to Africa, he departed without informing his parents.  His parents were therefore, worried and his mother fasted for one month wondering where her son was.  Finally, word arrived from Visram that their son Mohamedally was in Kenya with him.

image006

Osman Allu shop in earlier days.

Mohamedally arrives in Nyeri, Mt. Kenya

 Just at the turn of the century, young Mohamedally boarded a dhow from India and docked at the old harbor in Mombasa.  With Javer's help he got a job with Alidina Visram. The firm sent him to run a shop in the newly established administrative centre of Nyeri in Central Kenya.  It lay in the heart of Kikuyu country, in a valley nestling between the ranges of the Aberdares and Mount Kenya.  He arrived there after journeying several days from Nairobi through Naivasha over the Aberdares, with the porters who had carried his trading goods.  They walked along footpaths and animal trails, covering about ten miles per day, resting each night in a forest clearing. He was to make the journey on foot dozens of times over the years until the advent of motor vehicles and roads.    His first customers were Kikuyu farmers living around the new boma.

Mr. Mohamedally Rattansi

As he got to know the surroundings, he made trips farther a field and traded with the Wadorobo hunters inhabiting the dense forests of the Aberdares. Barter remained the predominant form of trade at the time, although the Indian rupee was already officially in circulation.  He bartered beads, salt, sugar, amerikani (cotton cloth) and blankets with the Wadorobo hunters, for ivory, rhino horn, hides and skins in exchange. He then transported these goods to Nairobi himself by portage, and returned with a replenished stock of trading goods.  So successful was the barter trade that he soon employed about a hundred porters, each carrying the standard load of 18.16kgs of merchandise.  (Strict rules already regulated the maximum weights porters could carry, and the wages they were to be paid.)

After Mohamedally had been in Nyeri for several years, Seth Alidina Visram died.  His now expansive business empire (he was known as the ‘uncrowned King of Uganda') was inherited by his son Abdulrasul, but it soon began to crumble.  Mohamedally joined forces with a fellow Indian, Osman Allu, who had managed a shop in neighboring Fort Hall (Murang'a), and they bought up the Nyeri shop in partnership.  It then operated under the name of Osman Allu.

In the meantime, European settlement increased in that area by leaps and bounds.  Mohamedally and his partner Osman gave up barter with the indigenous people and now turned to satisfy the needs of these new settlers. Their profit margins in those days remained infinitesimal.  For instance, when they sold sugar scoopful by scoopful out of a sack, the empty sack was the profit.  Slowly, however, they made a success of the business.  They extended the shop-cum-house, and built a mill for grinding maize on the Chania River where it flows to Nyeri.  Mohamedally acquired several properties of his own in the growing township and in neighboring Karatina too.

The partnership continued to prosper. Mohamedally had a flair for business and looked after the customers, while Osman Allu superintended the transport - at first ox teams and wagons – and later the mill.  A setback came in the 1920s when the settlers plotted rebellion and threatened not only to overthrow the colonial administration but to `drive all Indians into the sea'.  The partners took the precaution of sending their families temporarily to India, while they kept the business going with the help of loyal employees.

In 1930, they dissolved the partnership and went their separate ways. Each established a business under his own name.  Mohamedally proceeded to become one of Nyeri's most prominent Asian merchants.  He was a member of the Town Council, which later named a street, where he had a ‘shamba' property, after him.  (The ‘Rattansi Street' sign, however, has vanished over the years and has not been replaced.)

Osman Allu

He arrived in Kenya between 1894 and 1896 aged about 17 years and died here in 1973 aged 96

Years. He told his history to his grandson Yakub Allu who was born here in 1938.

Osman Allu worked for Allidina Visram as a salesman and bookkeeper before he started his own

business. He always said that Allidina Visram was a great merchant and an enterprising man, the

kind that would take risks. He gained a lot of knowledge about business by working for him.

Osman Allu went into partnership with a man called Mohamedally Rattansi and they walked up

to Nyeri where the European settlers were starting a station; there, they started the first shop in

1901 or 1902. Nyeri then had only that shop and the government station. Thereafter they put up

a shop in Murang'a (Fort Hall) and a sawmill in Karatina from where they supplied the sleepers

for the track when the railway line was being laid to Nanyuki. Osman Allu and his wife Jomabai

had three sons and five daughters, all born in Nyeri. He helped to build a proper Indian school in

Nyeri in the late 1920s and he was a big contributor to the building of the present Nyeri Mosque

at about the same time. He contributed to the building of the Catholic Consolata Mission Hospital

at Nyeri, and to the Tumutumu Hospital, this was run by the Church of Scotland. His grandson

Yakub Allu of Nanyuki in an interview has recounted:

“My grandfather had started doing business in Nairobi with insurance (with "Pioneer" aptly named)

and property. He built a large building on Bazaar Street you can see the OA [Osman Allu] Logo

and the date 1938 on the front and back. When my uncle Abdul married he took over the shop in

Nyeri and in 1945 my grandfather moved to Nairobi. He bought a big house near the Suleiman

Verjee Gymkhana on Forest Road. I think that the main reason he went to Nairobi was to provide

a family base there, where all of us grandchildren could live while continuing our schooling.

That house was like a family boarding house, supervised by my grandfather, and because of that I

grew up with him and knew him so well.”

parapandaFamily Radio  is at it again....and giving a bad name to all of us who sincerely watch for the signs the scriptures tell us we must see first before the Lord's return. What are these folks going to do when the world  doesn't end on May 21st?.In Nyeri the Family Radio banner was placed at central hotel billboard only to be removed after curious passersby and bloggers started blogging.Below is some of the bloggers comment :

"we may not know exactly,in matt 24;1-------Jesus speaks out on "dalili" we be watchful my bro's n sis's lest we be caught unawares."

'Am informed da great day has been postponed so they had to remove the billboard"

Now the biggest questions is are u prepared if the lord come today??

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