Sunday, November 29, 2009
President Barack Obama, his mother-in-law Marian Robinson, first lady Michelle Obama and daughter Sasha watch a college basketball game between George Washington University and Oregon State in Washington, Saturday, Nov. 28, 2009. President Obama's brother-in-law Craig Robinson is head coach of Oregon.
Saturday, November 21, 2009
KANYAMA CHIUME
NOVEMBER 22, 1929 - NOVEMBER 21, 2007
Dad it has been two years since
You closed your eyes forever.
Two years of sadness,
Two years remembering the
Good memories we shared together
And two years of knowing that you have
Joined the angels in heaven
Dad we miss you every day, every hour,
Every minute, and every second.
Hoping one day we shall meet again.
May you rest in peace!
Your loving family.
You closed your eyes forever.
Two years of sadness,
Two years remembering the
Good memories we shared together
And two years of knowing that you have
Joined the angels in heaven
Dad we miss you every day, every hour,
Every minute, and every second.
Hoping one day we shall meet again.
May you rest in peace!
Your loving family.
Thursday, November 19, 2009
SOME WORDS OF WISDOM:
Whether the situation is good or bad, it will change.
Dream more while awake.
Don't compare your life with others, you have no idea of the highways they have traveled during their lives.
Make peace with your past, so as not to ruin your present.
Remember well that we have no control over what happens to us, but only what we do.
What others think of us is not completely under our control.
Take care!
Wednesday, November 18, 2009
KENYA UNVEILS NEW DRAFT CONSTITUTION AFTER UNREST:
Kenya on Tuesday unveiled a new draft constitution proposing that the president be the head of state and creating a post of prime minister who will be the head of government.
The east Africa country currently has a president who is both head of state and government, a source of intense election tussles that has repeatedly plunged Kenya into bloody clashes.
The current prime minister is not the head of government and the position was created last year in a unity government put in place to end widespread post-election violence.
Under the draft, the president will be directly elected and will name a premier from the largest party or coalition of parties in parliament and who will be confirmed by parliament.
"Kenyans were unanimous that the era of an imperial president must come to an end and there must be an elaborate system of checks and balances running throughout the entire government structure," Nzamba Gitonga, the head of a panel of experts that drafted the law, said at the unveiling.
The draft law also proposes a decentralised government, introducing regional and county governments, sets limits on the size of the cabinet and introduces a senate.
Kenyans will debate the draft for the next 30 days and make suggestions to the experts. The final draft will be voted for in a referendum in 2010.
The last constitutional referendum in 2005 ended with the defeat of the government-backed "yes" camp, prompting President Mwai Kibaki to dissolve the cabinet and rename a fresh one without the ministers who opposed it.
Leaders of the two emerging camps -- Kibaki and then opposition chief Raila Odinga -- ran for the presidency in 2007 elections, whose disputed result sparked Kenya's worst post-independence violence which claimed some 1,500 lives.
Odinga accused his rival of stealing the vote.
A power-sharing deal brokered by former UN chief Kofi Annan made Odinga the premier and Kibaki retained his post.
Also in the agreement was an undertaking to make institutional and legal reforms, wich included a new constitution to avoid fresh unrest.
"I think the time has come for Kenyans to bite the bullet. Let there be a civilised debate," Odinga said during Tuesday's ceremony.
The east Africa country currently has a president who is both head of state and government, a source of intense election tussles that has repeatedly plunged Kenya into bloody clashes.
The current prime minister is not the head of government and the position was created last year in a unity government put in place to end widespread post-election violence.
Under the draft, the president will be directly elected and will name a premier from the largest party or coalition of parties in parliament and who will be confirmed by parliament.
"Kenyans were unanimous that the era of an imperial president must come to an end and there must be an elaborate system of checks and balances running throughout the entire government structure," Nzamba Gitonga, the head of a panel of experts that drafted the law, said at the unveiling.
The draft law also proposes a decentralised government, introducing regional and county governments, sets limits on the size of the cabinet and introduces a senate.
Kenyans will debate the draft for the next 30 days and make suggestions to the experts. The final draft will be voted for in a referendum in 2010.
The last constitutional referendum in 2005 ended with the defeat of the government-backed "yes" camp, prompting President Mwai Kibaki to dissolve the cabinet and rename a fresh one without the ministers who opposed it.
Leaders of the two emerging camps -- Kibaki and then opposition chief Raila Odinga -- ran for the presidency in 2007 elections, whose disputed result sparked Kenya's worst post-independence violence which claimed some 1,500 lives.
Odinga accused his rival of stealing the vote.
A power-sharing deal brokered by former UN chief Kofi Annan made Odinga the premier and Kibaki retained his post.
Also in the agreement was an undertaking to make institutional and legal reforms, wich included a new constitution to avoid fresh unrest.
"I think the time has come for Kenyans to bite the bullet. Let there be a civilised debate," Odinga said during Tuesday's ceremony.
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