Two Thousand Fish Farmers To Benefit From Cold Facility

Over 2000 fish farmers in Kisii County have reason to smile after the County government installed a three-tonne capacity cold storage facility to reduce wastage and encourage value addition for the commodity.
Launching the Kisii facility at the Fresh Fish Market in Kisii town yesterday, Agriculture County Executive Committee Member Esman Onsarigo said the storage facility will meet the growing demand for the commodity in the county and its environs.
Onsarigo said the devolved unit will partner with RIO FISH Firm, one of the major fish suppliers in the county to encourage more fish farming and fish mongers in the county.
He said Kisii County currently has 2,000 fish farmers and aims to boost the number to more than 5,000 by the end of 2022 to complement the diminishing land use for crop production.
Angela Odero, the Managing Director Rio Fish Firm assured residents of assistance in getting market for farmers and ample supply.
Traders led by Shaban Ayub expressed their gratitude for the launch of the cold storage facility saying it will reduce transportation costs of fish from farmers and offer optimum profits to farmers and mongers.

Source: Kenya News Agency

Stakeholders Call For Education On Road Safety To Avert Accidents

The ongoing road construction works in Turkana County is a welcome relief to residents who have endured dilapidated road infrastructure for many years.
Poor infrastructure had been an eyesore to residents and when the Jubilee administration promised to upgrade the road network in the county, many thought it was just another campaign pledge.
Nine years down the line, residents have a reason to smile especially with the construction of the Kawalase and Kainuk bridges where lives and properties was lost for many years during rainy seasons.
It is now possible for passengers to travel from Kitale to Lodwar within six hours, a distance that used to take up to 10 hours without guarantee of reaching one’s destination due to the poor state of the roads.
County director of medical services Dr Gilchrist Lokoel says the cost of flights was unaffordable to many people and with the construction of roads, residents are now able to travel without much difficulties.
However, this new development has come with its share of challenges to residents.
Lokoel citing statistics says that road accidents have increased by 24.2 percent across the country since 2013.
Road accidents have also been on the rise in Turkana County. According to Lokoel, a whole section of a ward at Lodwar county referral hospital is set aside for treatment of fractures due to bodaboda accidents.
“Due to the good condition of the roads, motorists and motorcycles are speeding not taking into consideration other road users. Animals crossing the roads, because Turkana community is mainly pastrolist, is another cause of accidents,” says Lokoel.
He also blames unmarked roads and bumps erected by locals and the contractors for the rise in the accident cases.
Lokoel regrets that besides loss of lives to road accidents, some people have suffered spinal injuries.
“Another effect of the road accidents is the psychological effect where passengers who have been involved in accidents are unable to sleep due to the post-traumatic stress disorders,” says Lokoel.
County Chief Officer in charge of Infrastructure Rosemary Nchinyei agrees that there is need for road safety campaigns to address rising cases of accidents.
“Road safety education is very critical, the road infrastructure has changed quite a bit and with dual carriage and a number of lanes, training or sensitization is necessary for both motorists and pedestrians,” said Nchinyei.
Turkana county residents are now appealing to the government to conduct road safety campaigns to avert looming accidents due to the upgrade of the road networks in the county.
The residents who spoke to KNA said most motorists and especially bodaboda operators are having difficulty navigating the roads in towns like Lodwar which have been upgraded and some sections are part of the AI road connecting Eldoret to South Sudan.
Kenya National Chamber of Commerce and Industry Turkana county chapter chairman Pius Ewoton said there is need for training on road safety.
He noted that some bodaboda operators do not even have driving licenses saying this poses a threat to themselves and other road users.
“We need to educate road users on the need to observe traffic rules to avoid accidents because many accidents are caused by human error,” said Ewoton.
According to James Ekuwam, a bodaboda operator, the government should ensure that only qualified drivers are allowed to operate on the roads.
“We have cases of unlicensed people operating as bodabodas thereby tarnishing our names because of their reckless driving,” said Ekuwam.
Turkana county police commander Samuel Ndanyi has asked motorists and pedestrians to be careful while using roads due to the upsurge in the number of vehicles in the towns.
Ndanyi cited a recent incident in December where a mother and her daughter lost their lives at Songot, Turkana West as an unfortunate incident.He appealed to motorists to observe speed limits and road signs while driving.
According to Lokoel, education on road safety will go a long way in reducing road accidents.
“There must be responsible road use and it must start with policy makers. National and county government transport authorities should educate road users and it is a matter of urgency, “he said.

Source: Kenya News Agency

Gov’t Launches Construction Of CBC Classrooms In Migori County.

The government will spend over Sh159 million to construct 205 classrooms in Migori County in phase one of the competency based curriculum (CBC) infrastructure development programme.
The classrooms will be developed in 198 schools across the eight sub counties in the region by April next year.
Speaking after leading in handing over the construction sites to contractors in various schools, area County Commissioner (CC) Michael Mwangi Meru said the government looks forward to delivering fully constructed classrooms to beneficiary schools by the scheduled time next year.
“The contractors are under strict instructions to deliver good classrooms for immediate use by Junior Secondary school students,” reported Mr Meru during a press brief in Migori town today.
The administrator who doubles up as the County CBC Committee chairman warned contractors against doing shoddy work, stressing that the state will black list those who will not adhere to the specifications given in the constructions of the classrooms.
“Contractors who will fail to deliver good work will not be allowed to bid again for the classrooms tenders when the second phase of this programme will be advertised next year,” he said.
Mr Meru who was flanked by the county director of education (CDE) Jacob Onyiego urged the sub-committees to do thorough supervision during the constructions to ensure quality work and handing over of the classrooms within the stated timeline.
Mr Onyiego said that all the sub county education directors in the region have been directed to put the contractors on their toes to work within the road map supplied to them to ensure that the progamme is implemented in time.
The CDE said that the Ministry was keen to see that CBC programme is implemented well with the first group of the junior secondary class students getting their education as planned.

Source: Kenya News Agency

Gov’t Calls Off Livestock Offtake Programme In Taita Taveta

The government has called off the Sh7.9 million livestock-offtake programme in Taita-Taveta County after farmers reported adequate pasture and water for animals following heavy rains pounding the region.
The County Committee on Livestock Offtake programme said after rains came, hundreds of livestock farmers said the adverse conditions which would have forced them to sell their animals to the government had drastically changed.
Taita-Taveta County had set a target of buying 528 herds of cattle from farmers who were hardest-hit by ravaging drought.
County Commissioner Rhoda Onyancha disclosed only less than four percent of the targeted farmers showed interest in selling their animals.
Speaking in Mwatate during a meeting with Deputy County Commissioners (DCC) from Mwatate, Taveta and Wundanyi and other stakeholders, Ms Onyancha said the programme was intended to mitigate artisanal farmers against the severe effects of drought and cushion them from economic losses due to livestock deaths.
The animals were to be slaughtered and the meat distributed to families without food in that locality.
The government was buying a cow at Sh15, 000 while a goat or a sheep was going for Sh3,000.
However, with the coming of the rains, the farmers are no longer interested in selling.
“We have had very few farmers willing to sell their animals. They say the rains have come and there is a lot of pastures and water,” Ms Onyancha said.
No single farmer from the sub-counties of Voi and Wundanyi showed interest while only a few in Mwatate and Taveta showed marginal interest.
Apart from the pasture regeneration, most farmers explained that with the rains, the animal body condition had improved.
Large numbers of withered cows had started gaining significant weight. Others said the current market price was markedly higher than what the government was offering.
Mr James Mbala, a farmer in Mwatate, said the offtake programme was no longer tenable. He explained that with the pastures and rains, a young cow was now retailing at between Sh25, 000 to Sh40, 000. Goats and sheep were selling at between Sh5, 000 and Sh8, 000.
“Farmers would have sold if the drought persisted. With the rains, the urge is gone. The price being offered by government is lower than what we can find at the market,” he explained.
Mr Joram Oranga, Red Cross County Coordinator, said the unwillingness by farmers to sell was indicative that the worst of the drought for livestock farmers in the region was over. He added that some farmers were urging the government to peg the buying price of livestock on an animal’s weight.
However, the county commissioner said the programme was meant to insulate the farmers from suffering catastrophic losses because of drought.
“This was not a business programme to buy livestock for sale. It was meant to shield farmers from total loss and give them back the meat from animals they sold,” she said.

Source: Kenya News Agency