Today's Headlines
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- The Obama Administration - the Hard Work Begins
- Kibaki Here for Three-Day State Visit
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- Love Thy Neighbour
- Diocese Condemns Lynching of Suspected Criminals
- é Event
- UN Warns of Crisis in Kenyan Camps
- Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania Disagree On Land Ownership
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- Now Pirates Attack Saudi Ship
- Kanda Bongoman Thrills Nairobi
- Namanga Road Project Grapples With Unforeseen Problems
- Regional Bishops to Strengthen Apostolate to the Nomads
- Religious Leaders Criticize MPs' Move to Reject Taxation
- Bishop Says Sisters' Kidnappers are Mere Vandals
- Somali Pirates Seize Chinese Ship
- Election Violence Report Divides ODM
- Nairobi Gets High On Obama
- Heavy Rains to Affect Hundreds of Thousands
- KNCHR Position On the Waki Report
- What the Global Left Can Learn From Obama's Victory
- A Global Health Model, Village By Village
- ICT - Kenya?s Seacom Cable Construction Advances
- Whom Will You Pick for the Athlete of the Year Award?
- Odinga Issues Threat On Polls Violence Report
- ICTR Takes Kenya to UN Security Council Over Kabuga
- Drought Forcing Children to Quit School
The Nation (Nairobi)
April 28, 2008
News Article By Angwenyi Gichana And Walter Menya
Efforts to address grievances by prison warders and end their strike, suffered a major setback Sunday when some officers opposed the appointment of former Vice-President Moody Awori to head a committee investigating the matter.
The warders from Kodiaga, Kibos and Kisii prisons accused Mr Awori and former Prisons Commissioner Abraham Kamakil for presiding over the current rot in prisons during their tenure at the helm of prisons in the country.
Mr Awori headed the Home Affairs ministry in the last Parliament and is credited with key reforms in the prisons department. "Mr Awori concentrated in improving the welfare of prisoners at our expense and I don't think he will come up with anything new," said a warder.
Improve terms
Another one added: "Mr Kamakil's tenure was the worst for us and it was marred with corruption allegations and promotions that were based on nepotism."
The warders said they did not have confidence in Mr Awori claiming he could help improve their terms and conditions of service when he was at the helm of all prisons.
"We do not approve the appointment of the person of Mr Awori to look into our plight when he neglected us all the years he was in the Ministry of Home Affairs," said the warders a day after the Vice-President Kalonzo Musyoka and Home Affairs minister announced the development.
The warders also questioned the Awori committee's terms of reference saying their problems were not new.
"Our predicament is obvious to everyone around and we wonder what the committee is going to investigate that they have not seen," said the warders who vowed to continue with the strike.


