Friday, November 25, 2016

How a former corporate executive ditched the corner office and a six-figure salary and breathed life into one of Kenya's oldest juice brands

They say, life begins at 40. For Bernard Njoroge, at 44 years, life started when he left a plum job and plunged into full-time entrepreneurship. Today Njoroge is known as the Treetop man. And here is his story.

The beginning: corporate career or entrepreneurship
When Njoroge confided in one of his closest friends that he was contemplating resigning from a lucrative job at Del Monte, a multi-national firm, the instant reaction from his friend was for him to immediately go for a check up to confirm his sanity. Perhaps his friend thought he was going through mid-life crisis, the time men do irrational things.
Who in his/her normal state of mind walks away from a juicy six figure executive pay, fat perks job? Who?
Njoroge was taking home over KSh1 million a month and was a high-flying marketing honcho overseeing operations in East Africa. To the world, Njoroge seemed to have it all - the money, the influence and the status.

So on the morning of November 2014, perhaps after many sleepless nights, Njoroge made up his mind. He submitted his resignation letter and walked away from the comfort of a regular source of income and ventured into the musky sea of entrepreneurship where a regular income is not a guarantee for a start-up.
 
Three years before Njoroge left Del Monte, he had bought the Treetop juice trademark from Unilever in 2011. His motivation to resign was so he could concentrate on reintroducing the brand back into the market under Sky Foods Limited.

Exactly seven months after kissing Del Monte goodbye, Treetop was born. Njoroge relaunched the beverage brand back into the Kenyan market in June 2015. He refuses to reveal how much he paid for the Treetop trademark.

Way back in the 90's, Unilever had phased out the Treetop juice concentrate after it made massive losses. The brand was last sold in Kenyan shops in 1995. After two decades, Njoroge decided to wake a sleeping giant.

For anyone born in the 70's and 80's, Treetop was the drink of choice in many homes in Kenya. During family events, the drink was served with a sense of pride. Children knew it was a very special day if their parents brought home Treetop.

Njoroge still had "Treetop hangovers" and he wanted to make money in the process. He got into the same business space with his former employer and set up shop less than three kilometres from Del Monte.

It was not the first time for Njoroge to try his hand in business. Before, he had attempted his hand in business and even burnt his fingers in the process. In 2004, then working for Coca-Cola, Njoroge started a company called African Garden Limited that processed and packaged pickled gherkins (cucumbers). He wound up the company after the supplies from farmers declined because of drought. Unbowed, he started another one for selling sun-dried tomatoes.

I am afraid my husband has joined devil worshiping- disturbed woman

Marriages are unique and special to each couple.
Most of them have deep secrets not many would want to unearth
This is probably the case of this worried and disturbed woman.
The mother of two is worried her husband is involved with the underworld if not the devil himself.
A woman shared disturbing details on social media seeking advice for her mum's friend.

Here is the post; " She is a mother of two and she has been married for 4 years. Her husband decided to buy a plot and build a big house which has 16 rooms..but the problem is that the hubby told her there is one of the room she shouldn't open. She was instructed to be placing water in a basin at the door. She has been doing that for three weeks now every time she goes to pic the basin she finds it empty...what could be in that room?" If you are married to a judge please advice because she is married to a judge. Maybe its an oath by judges. Let us help this mama of two with good advice...though she is thinking of breaking the door because it is ever closed"
What do you think is behind that door?

Living without a toilet: more common than you think

Mother holding baby and small child stand in front of a shackIn the Onga Zanga zone, in the province of Luanda, the colonial-style house where Maria Laurinda lives does not have the charm it once had, and is in terrible condition.
Maria and her six children have well water throughout the year, but she still remembers the time before the Government installed the water pump. Before, they had no water and had to go to the nearest lagoon, which is 5 km away from their village.
Today, when the water pump breaks down, her brother buys the necessary parts to fix it; he also chlorinates the tank to ensure the water they use daily is drinkable.
But these advances in access to water have had no impact on the family’s reality as far as sanitation goes. Maria has a place outside where she and her family can wash with the water collected using the pump. But like a large percentage of the community, they defecate in the open air.
© UNICEF Angola/2016/Simancas Maria and her children stand in front of the place where they go to wash themselves.
This puts them in danger every day, since the area has wild animals, like snakes. Because the faeces and urine are not properly treated, it also contaminates the groundwater reserves that provide drinking water – and the land the community puts so much effort into cultivating to grow their food. This contamination leads to diarrhea and other serious health conditions.
Using latrines prevents the germs present in human excrement from entering the environment and protects the health of the entire community. But, Maria says with regret, “Nobody ever gave us any information about basic sanitation. Children should learn these subjects at school.”
A very common realityMaria’s situation, which may surprise people in many parts of the world, is still a daily reality for many others. Today, the third of the planet’s population that does not have improved sanitation facilities cannot celebrate World Toilet Day.
In Angola, according to the 2014 Census, only 6 out of 10 families use an appropriate place to defecate – and it’s only 26% in rural areas, versus 82% in urban ones. Poverty and lack of access to water make it more difficult for communities to improve basic sanitation.
Conditions are not much better for children in schools. On average, 58% of students have access to toilets, 28% use latrines, and 45% defecate outdoors, says UNICEF’s study, ‘WASH in Schools in Angola’, conducted in 600 educational centres in six provinces of the country.
The lack of sanitation is directly linked to the transmission of diseases such as cholera and diarrhea. According to the Angolan Ministry of Health, diarrheal diseases account for 18% of under-five deaths, and are very common among school-age children. Inadequate hygiene practices are among the reasons for infant deaths, faecal-oral transmission diseases, malnutrition and stunting among Angola’s children.
To reverse this situation, UNICEF works with the Government of Angola, the European Union and other partners in provinces such as Huila, Cunene, Moxico and Bié. “The goal is to help families like Maria’s to improve their sanitation situation. We work with local governments and populations to facilitate a healthier environment and a more dignified life through improved access to a safe latrine or bathroom,” says UNICEF Angola’s Water and Sanitation Specialist, David Pedrueza.
For example, since the Community-Led Total Sanitation program (CLTS) began in 2008, UNICEF and partners have been able to declare hundreds of peri-urban villages and neighbourhoods as ‘open defecation free’ communities, improving lives of inhabitants, and children in particular.
‘Toilets and jobs’World Toilet Day, celebrated on 19 November, focuses this year on how sanitation, or the lack of it, can affect livelihoods. Toilets play a crucial role in creating a strong economy, as well as improving health and protecting people’s safety and dignity – particularly for women and girls, who need clean and separate facilities to manage menstruation and pregnancies.
A lack of toilets at work and at home has severe impacts on businesses, because it leads to poor health, absenteeism and exhaustion among the workforce. Investing in good toilets in workplaces can contribute greatly to people’s health and productivity, and to making economies grow.
This all still sounds distant to Maria, but it shouldn’t be like this. She dreams of a well-constructed and clean toilet in a place near her home. Fortunately, next year she will be able to celebrate World Toilet Day like the two thirds of the world who today have access to a latrine or toilet. It is her right – everyone’s right.

Vânia Casqueiro Barreto is a communications consultant and Marcos González is a Digital Communication Officer at UNICEF Angola.

Toyota Says New Technology Means Longer Battery Life

Toyota Motor Corp. has developed a new way of observing the movements of tiny particles in batteries used to power electric vehicles — an advance it says will help boost their cruise range by 10 percent to 15 percent.
Toyota engineer Hisao Yamashige explained to reporters Thursday at the Japanese automaker's Tokyo office the complex method for tracking the lithium ions, which are tiny particles in lithium-ion batteries, also used in laptops and smartphones.
The ions' movements, which are extremely hard to detect, are critical in determining the efficiency and power of a battery.
Increasing cruise range is the biggest obstacle for electric vehicles, especially because charging stations aren't as common as gas stations.
Toyota is more bullish about fuel-cell vehicles, which are expensive but can deliver the same cruise range as gas engines. Yamashige said there is no change to that overall company policy.
Toyota, which makes the Prius hybrid, has no pure electric vehicles in its lineup since production of its electric iQ subcompact and other earlier models were discontinued after selling in only small numbers.
But all the world's major automakers are working on electric vehicles. Japanese rival Nissan Motor Co. leads with its Leaf, which has a range of about 100 miles (160 kilometers) on a single charge. The Nissan-Renault alliance accounts for about half the world's pure EVs sold.
Toyota's new technology will allow the company to test various materials and battery structures, and an improved electric vehicle is being planned for the commercial market within the next "several years," said Yoshinori Suga, a department manager.
The tests are being carried out in collaboration with Japanese research organization Riken, using its high-intensity X-ray facility. Toyota will present its observation method at a battery symposium in Japan later this month, sharing it with other automakers, although not its findings.

UN: HIV rate in young African women disturbingly high

The number of HIV-infected people taking anti-retroviral (ARV) medicine has doubled in just five years, the United Nations said while highlighting high infection rates among young African women.
A new report released by UNAIDS, a UN programme, on Monday said thousands of young women and girls across the world are being infected with the HIV virus every week and preventing new infections is still proving difficult. 
The report added that while UNAIDS
was on course to hit a target of 30 million people on ARV treatment by 2020, infection rates among young African women remained disturbingly high.  In 2015, an estimated 7,500 teenagers and young women became infected with HIV every week globally, with the bulk of them in southern Africa. Data showed that in southern Africa, girls aged between 15 and 19 accounted for 90 percent of all new HIV infections among 10 to 19-year-olds, and more than 74 percent in eastern Africa.
Crucially, the report found that between 2010 and 2015, the number of new HIV infections among women aged 15 to 24 was reduced by only 6 percent across the world.
"Young women are facing a triple threat," UNAIDS chief Michel Sidibe said at the report's launch in the Namibian capital Windhoek.
"They are at high risk of HIV infection, have low rates of HIV testing, and have poor adherence to treatment. The world is failing young women and we urgently need to do more."
The number of HIV-infected people taking ARV drugs has doubled in only five years. Sidibe hailed the progress made with HIV treatment, but warned that any advance was "incredibly fragile". 
"New threats are emerging and if we don't act now, we risk resurgence and resistance. We have seen this with TB. We must not make the same mistakes again," he said.
Dr Kaymarlin Govender, research director at HEARD, an applied research centre on HIV/AIDS at the University of KwaZulu-Natal, in South Africa, told Al Jazeera that adolescents and young girls remain highly vulnerable because of a number of factors "at individual, social and structural levels".
"This includes early sexual debut, early pregnancies, biological vulnerabilities in women for HIV acquisition, school dropouts, poverty, intimate partner violence, child marriages, low perception of risk and lack of knowledge of HIV status and importantly HIV transmission dynamics [intergenerational sex]."
There are three million more HIV-positive people on drug treatment now than there were in 2014.
The UNAIDS report said that data from South Africa showed young women and teenagers were catching HIV from adult men, many of whom catch it much later in life but then continue a cycle of infection.

The report also shed new light on HIV infection and treatment among adult men, showing that men are much less likely to know their HIV status and to access treatment than women. 
This means globally there are 18.2 million people on treatment. UNAIDS said its goal was to have 30 million on treatment by 2020.
Last year, there were 5.8 million people over the age of 50 living with HIV, a figure that is greater than ever before.
Govender said that reversing the trend required an element of social protection.
"We also need to focus on psychosocial support at family, peer and community in an effort to build healthy childhoods," Govender said from Durban.

Syria's war: Aleppo residents '10 days from starvation'

The inhabitants of besieged eastern Aleppo have fewer than 10 days to receive aid or face starvation and death from a lack of medical supplies, according to the head of the Syria Civil Defence, or White Helmets.
The volunteer group, which works in opposition-held territory and has rescued thousands of people from buildings bombed in the civil war, is also running out of basic equipment from lorries to diesel and gas masks.
"You cannot imagine how the situation is," Raed al-Saleh told Reuters news agency.
Saleh was in Stockholm to receive the Right Livelihood Award, known as Sweden's Alternative Nobel Prize.
"Doctors and the rescue workers in Aleppo are just using what's left of the equipment after bombardments to do whatever they can do," Saleh said.
Anti-government fighters in the eastern part of Aleppo city have agreed to a United Nations plan for aid delivery and medical evacuations, but the UN is awaiting a green light from Russia and the Syrian government, Jan Egeland, the UN humanitarian adviser, said on Thursday.

Freezing winter conditions

With freezing winter conditions setting in, about 275,000 people are trapped in eastern Aleppo, where the last UN food rations were distributed on November 13.
Saleh said doctors were so short of supplies that they were resorting to making life and death decisions over who receives surgery.
"They cannot accept everyone ... There are not enough materials and not enough doctors," he said.
Saleh said the White Helmets had lost 50 percent of their equipment in the past two months.
"We have consumed all the stock of first aid kits in our centres and we have consumed all our stock of gas masks,"
he said.
"We are concerned that within 10 days we may consume all our remaining stock of diesel which is required for the ambulances and the trucks to move."
There has been, heavy, continuous and violent shelling on neighborhoods in eastern Aleppo in the last 10 days.
Al Jazeera's Amro Halabi, reporting from Aleppo's Thahrat Awad neighbourhood, said: "Here, a parachute bomb containing toxic material was dropped. It caused multiple cases of asphyxiation among civilians.
"A variety of weapons were used for the shelling including parachute bombs, bombs containing toxic material and barrel bombs that have taken the lives of dozens of civilians.
"The shelling continues in what is the most violent spell of bombing the besieged city has experienced."
The White Helments' Saleh said his workers had responded to approximately 10 chlorine attacks in Aleppo over the past 10 days, the last being on Wednesday.
Rami Abdulrahman, director of the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which monitors the Syrian conflict, said the observatory had documented two incidents of chlorine attacks in the past fortnight.

Banned toxic agents

On November 11, the executive body of the global chemical weapons watchdog the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) condemned the alleged use of banned toxic agents by the Syrian government and the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) group.
A 13-month international inquiry by the OPCW and UN concluded in a series of reports that Syrian government forces were responsible for the use of chlorine barrel bombs against civilians.
Syrian authorities deny having used chemical weapons in the conflict.
ISIL, also known as ISIS, has not commented.
Saleh also criticised Russia, which is backing Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in the conflict.
"I believe the withdrawal of Russia from the International Criminal Court is because it knows it commits war crimes in Syria and it doesn't want to be accountable," he said.
The White Helmets shared the Right Livelihood award this year with Mozn Hassan, the Egyptian feminist and human rights activist, Russia's Svetlana Gannushkina, who campaigns for the rights of migrants and refugees, and the Turkish newspaper Cumhuriyet.
The four laureates share a cash award of three million Swedish crowns ($325,000).
 



SCARS Coming soon....on Startimes Swahili

The StarTimes Swahili channel is planning to launch a reality show named Scars soon. Scars is a Swahili program with English subtitle which will be broadcasted in Eastern African region.

SCARS is a reality show which tells the true story of local ordinary people. The stories are all from Kenya, and some of them are sad and touching which can be warning to everybody’s life, that is why the program is called SCARS. 
     Each episode includes a host and witnesses of the stories, The target viewers are ordinary local people, especially the women. Our SCARS tells the stories of everybody’s life and can make social discussions, and will be very attractive to the local audience.
    

Paying your Electricity Bill

We have a wide number of convenient ways to pay your electricity bills
Paying your Electricity Bill with M-Pesa (Safaricom)
1. Select “Pay Bill” from the M-Pesa menu.
2. Enter the Kenya Power business number 888 888.
3. Enter your full Kenya Power account number e.g. 123456-01.
4. Enter the amount you wish to pay which should be between Shs. 100 and  Shs.35,000.
5. Enter your M-Pesa PIN.
6. Confirm that all details are correct.
7. You will receive a confirmation of the transaction via SMS.
Please note that it takes 48 hours for Kenya Power to update your account.
 
Paying your Electricity Bill with Airtel Money (Airtel)
1. Select ''Airtel Money'' from the menu.
2. Click on "Make Payments".
3. Select "Paybill".
4. Choose Kenya Power Bill for postpaid bill OR Kenya Power Prepaid for purchase of tokens.
5. Enter the amount you wish to pay.
6. Enter your Airtel Money PIN.
5. Under the reference option, type your full Kenya Power account number e.g. 123456-01.6. Confirm that all details are correct.
7. You will receive a confirmation of the transaction via SMS.
 The transaction takes 24 hours to be updated.
You can check your Kenya Power bill by sending the first part of your account number e.g. 123456 by SMS to 95551.
- See more at: http://kplc.co.ke/content/item/30/Paying-your-Electricity-Bill#sthash.G8LcWbOd.dpuf
We have a wide number of convenient ways to pay your electricity bills
Paying your Electricity Bill with M-Pesa (Safaricom)
1. Select “Pay Bill” from the M-Pesa menu.
2. Enter the Kenya Power business number 888 888.
3. Enter your full Kenya Power account number e.g. 123456-01.
4. Enter the amount you wish to pay which should be between Shs. 100 and  Shs.35,000.
5. Enter your M-Pesa PIN.
6. Confirm that all details are correct.
7. You will receive a confirmation of the transaction via SMS.
Please note that it takes 48 hours for Kenya Power to update your account.
 
Paying your Electricity Bill with Airtel Money (Airtel)
1. Select ''Airtel Money'' from the menu.
2. Click on "Make Payments".
3. Select "Paybill".
4. Choose Kenya Power Bill for postpaid bill OR Kenya Power Prepaid for purchase of tokens.
5. Enter the amount you wish to pay.
6. Enter your Airtel Money PIN.
5. Under the reference option, type your full Kenya Power account number e.g. 123456-01.6. Confirm that all details are correct.
7. You will receive a confirmation of the transaction via SMS.
 The transaction takes 24 hours to be updated.
You can check your Kenya Power bill by sending the first part of your account number e.g. 123456 by SMS to 95551.

Cash Payment
As a rule, all cash payments should be made at Kenya Power's authorised pay points which are located within official premises and the paying counters clearly marked CASHIER.
 
Uchumi
Please note that we have suspended bill payment via Uchumi (25-10-2016).

Postal Corporation of Kenya

We have suspended bill payments via Postal Corporation of Kenya.

ATM Payments
If you have an account with Co-operative Bank, Postbank or Standard Chartered Bank, you may also pay your bill through any of these banks’ Automatic Teller Machines (ATMs).

Bank Payments
You may also pay your electricity bill by cash through appointed Co-operative Bank branches in Nairobi. Additionally, you can pay your electricity bill at any branch of the following banks countrywide.
  • National Bank of Kenya (at no extra cost)
  • Postbank (at no extra cost)
  • Barclays Bank of Kenya
  • Co-operative Bank
  • Standard Chartered
 
Cheque Payments
Cheques may be deposited in designated boxes in pay centres and at specific business premises appointed by Kenya Power to serve as drop-off points.

Bill Payment Through M-Banking
If you are a Co-operative Bank customer, your mobile phone is now an electricity bill payment point. To use the service, one must be registered with the bank for M-Banking service and also one must have registered their Kenya Power account number with the bank.

Kenya Power Contact Centre: 95551
- See more at: http://kplc.co.ke/content/item/30/Paying-your-Electricity-Bill#sthash.G8LcWbOd.dpuf
We have a wide number of convenient ways to pay your electricity bills
Paying your Electricity Bill with M-Pesa (Safaricom)
1. Select “Pay Bill” from the M-Pesa menu.
2. Enter the Kenya Power business number 888 888.
3. Enter your full Kenya Power account number e.g. 123456-01.
4. Enter the amount you wish to pay which should be between Shs. 100 and  Shs.35,000.
5. Enter your M-Pesa PIN.
6. Confirm that all details are correct.
7. You will receive a confirmation of the transaction via SMS.
Please note that it takes 48 hours for Kenya Power to update your account.
 
Paying your Electricity Bill with Airtel Money (Airtel)
1. Select ''Airtel Money'' from the menu.
2. Click on "Make Payments".
3. Select "Paybill".
4. Choose Kenya Power Bill for postpaid bill OR Kenya Power Prepaid for purchase of tokens.
5. Enter the amount you wish to pay.
6. Enter your Airtel Money PIN.
5. Under the reference option, type your full Kenya Power account number e.g. 123456-01.6. Confirm that all details are correct.
7. You will receive a confirmation of the transaction via SMS.
 The transaction takes 24 hours to be updated.
You can check your Kenya Power bill by sending the first part of your account number e.g. 123456 by SMS to 95551.

Cash Payment
As a rule, all cash payments should be made at Kenya Power's authorised pay points which are located within official premises and the paying counters clearly marked CASHIER.
 
Uchumi
Please note that we have suspended bill payment via Uchumi (25-10-2016).

Postal Corporation of Kenya

We have suspended bill payments via Postal Corporation of Kenya.

ATM Payments
If you have an account with Co-operative Bank, Postbank or Standard Chartered Bank, you may also pay your bill through any of these banks’ Automatic Teller Machines (ATMs).

Bank Payments
You may also pay your electricity bill by cash through appointed Co-operative Bank branches in Nairobi. Additionally, you can pay your electricity bill at any branch of the following banks countrywide.
  • National Bank of Kenya (at no extra cost)
  • Postbank (at no extra cost)
  • Barclays Bank of Kenya
  • Co-operative Bank
  • Standard Chartered
 
Cheque Payments
Cheques may be deposited in designated boxes in pay centres and at specific business premises appointed by Kenya Power to serve as drop-off points.

Bill Payment Through M-Banking
If you are a Co-operative Bank customer, your mobile phone is now an electricity bill payment point. To use the service, one must be registered with the bank for M-Banking service and also one must have registered their Kenya Power account number with the bank.

Kenya Power Contact Centre: 95551
- See more at: http://kplc.co.ke/content/item/30/Paying-your-Electricity-Bill#sthash.G8LcWbOd.dpuf
We have a wide number of convenient ways to pay your electricity bills
Paying your Electricity Bill with M-Pesa (Safaricom)
1. Select “Pay Bill” from the M-Pesa menu.
2. Enter the Kenya Power business number 888 888.
3. Enter your full Kenya Power account number e.g. 123456-01.
4. Enter the amount you wish to pay which should be between Shs. 100 and  Shs.35,000.
5. Enter your M-Pesa PIN.
6. Confirm that all details are correct.
7. You will receive a confirmation of the transaction via SMS.
Please note that it takes 48 hours for Kenya Power to update your account.
 
Paying your Electricity Bill with Airtel Money (Airtel)
1. Select ''Airtel Money'' from the menu.
2. Click on "Make Payments".
3. Select "Paybill".
4. Choose Kenya Power Bill for postpaid bill OR Kenya Power Prepaid for purchase of tokens.
5. Enter the amount you wish to pay.
6. Enter your Airtel Money PIN.
5. Under the reference option, type your full Kenya Power account number e.g. 123456-01.6. Confirm that all details are correct.
7. You will receive a confirmation of the transaction via SMS.
 The transaction takes 24 hours to be updated.
You can check your Kenya Power bill by sending the first part of your account number e.g. 123456 by SMS to 95551.

Cash Payment
As a rule, all cash payments should be made at Kenya Power's authorised pay points which are located within official premises and the paying counters clearly marked CASHIER.
 
Uchumi
Please note that we have suspended bill payment via Uchumi (25-10-2016).

Postal Corporation of Kenya

We have suspended bill payments via Postal Corporation of Kenya.

ATM Payments
If you have an account with Co-operative Bank, Postbank or Standard Chartered Bank, you may also pay your bill through any of these banks’ Automatic Teller Machines (ATMs).

Bank Payments
You may also pay your electricity bill by cash through appointed Co-operative Bank branches in Nairobi. Additionally, you can pay your electricity bill at any branch of the following banks countrywide.
  • National Bank of Kenya (at no extra cost)
  • Postbank (at no extra cost)
  • Barclays Bank of Kenya
  • Co-operative Bank
  • Standard Chartered
 
Cheque Payments
Cheques may be deposited in designated boxes in pay centres and at specific business premises appointed by Kenya Power to serve as drop-off points.

Bill Payment Through M-Banking
If you are a Co-operative Bank customer, your mobile phone is now an electricity bill payment point. To use the service, one must be registered with the bank for M-Banking service and also one must have registered their Kenya Power account number with the bank.

Kenya Power Contact Centre: 95551
- See more at: http://kplc.co.ke/content/item/30/Paying-your-Electricity-Bill#sthash.G8LcWbOd.dpuf