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A fire incident has ravaged 19 shops containing 1,900 bags of assorted grains in Gombi, headquarters of Gombi Local Government Area of Adamawa State.

The incident occurred at a major grain market in the town, which lies in the northern part of the state.

The Secretary of Gombi Market Union, Mallam Umar Nyalli, said Saturday that the fire which spread to cause havoc was ignited by an unknown smoker who threw a burning stick of cigarette at a heap of waste materials close to the shops. 

Nyalli said the businesses of owners of the affected shops had now been paralysed.

“We lost bags of maize, groundnuts, guinea corn, sesame seeds, beans and tamarin fruits to the inferno,” Nyali said, calling on the government at all levels to intervene.

The state Deputy Governor, Professor Kaletapwa George Farauta, has commiserated with the traders whose goods were destroyed.

During a visit to the place Saturday afternoon, she described the incident as a collosal loss to the shop owners and great damage to the entire state in terms of revenue drive.

DAILY POST reports that the fire incident in Gombi comes only about two weeks after a wildfire outside the premises of the Federal College of Education in the state capital, Yola.

The Yola incident destroyed 10 shops.  Jim Ochetenwu, Daily Post

President William Ruto speaking during a meeting with Jubilee leaders at State House Nakuru on January 11, 2023.

African Development Bank and the United Kingdom (UK) have chosen Kenya as the recipient of a Ksh 9.3 billion loan for climate mitigation.

Announcing the allocation on January 19, Nnenna Nwabufo, African Development Bank Director General for East Africa, stated that the money was to be channeled to the government's last mile and power grid project. 

“Kenya is close to achieving universal electricity access with a high component of renewable energy. This represents a major milestone in both sustainable development and the mitigate against climate change,” Fwabo commented.

Termed 'Transmission Network Improvement Project', the government budgeted the project at Ksh 18.4 billion only to receive up to half the funds as a concessional loan, a deal that comes with more favourable terms that Kenya can fetch in the market.

The two organisations explained that the funds would enable the government to address existing gaps in energy transmission and achieve universal electricity access.

It will further improve the quality of life of communities in Kenya through enhanced socioeconomic development. 

Kenya, as the first country in East Africa to benefit from the program since its inception in 2022, will be joining five other North and West African countries previously selected for the funding.

So far Egypt, Tunisia, Senegal, Mauritius, and Benin have benefited.

The project, which aims at awarding Ksh 317 billion to different African countries, is funded by the United Kingdom and the City of London insurers.

"We’re working together with the AfDB and Kenya to deliver what Kenyans want and need; reliable power for reliable economic growth – all with green energy that protects the prospects of future generations," the UK high commissioner to Kenya Neil Wigan stated. 

It is expected to run up to 2027, with each country signing the loan on its terms.

So far, Kenya has received two batches of loans in 2024, with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) releasing Ksh 150 billion on January 17 and Ksh 33 billion from the Trade and Development Bank on January 19. By LOISE LENSER, Kenyans.co.ke

Uganda Cranes will today play their first 2024 International friendly against Kuwait in Cairo, Egypt.

The squad, comprised solely of players from the domestic league – the Uganda Premier League, departed on Monday after a week of intensive preparations. This will be Coach Paul Put’s third game since assuming the role.

Uganda ranked 92nd by FIFA and Kuwait 136th, will be meeting for the first time, and both teams want to start their rivalry off well. Since defeating Tajikistan in March 2022, Uganda has lost its last four friendlies, conceding nine goals and scoring twice, while Kuwait has won eight of their last ten friendlies.

Just like Uganda Cranes which failed to qualify for the 2024 Africa Cup of Nations, Kuwait equally failed to make it to the ongoing AFC Asian Cup after finishing third in Group A of the qualifiers back in June 2022.

The match serves as a test for the local-based players ahead of the FIFA World Cup qualifiers against Botswana in June. Unfortunately, Uganda Cranes will be without the services of experienced midfielder Milton Karisa and Umar Lutalo, who withdrew from the team due to injuries, as confirmed by FUFA.

The Cranes squad in Cairo includes goalkeepers Hannington Ssebwalunyo and Tom Ikara. Defenders include Kenneth Semakula, Gavin Kizito Mugweri, Rashid Okocha, Patrick Bayiga, Rogers Torach, Livingstone Mulondo, Nicholas Mweere, and Hudu Mulikyi.

Midfielders include Ronald Ssekiganda, Ashiraf Mugume, Bright Anukani, Ramz Kawooya, Laban Tibiita, and Allan Oyirwoth while forwards include Nelson Senkatuka, Alex Kitatta, Denis Omedi, Usama Arafat Kiza, Patrick Jonah Kakande, and Muhammad Shaban. By URN/Tower Post

The Hamilton Building of the Denver Art Museum. Denver Art Museum 
 
You could be forgiven if you still haven't seen the Arts of Africa gallery at the Denver Art Museum since it opened last May, given the other fantastic shows happening on the floors below in the Hamilton Building (All StarsSoul of Black Folks) and across the footbridge in the Martin Building. But you shouldn’t wait much longer before experiencing this vastly diverse and brilliantly curated collection of artworks from across the world’s largest continent. Look at it this way: The sooner you go for the first time, the sooner you can go for a second.

It’s that kind of show. With some 800 works spanning a variety of countries, the collection draws from artistic traditions nearly as rich and diverse as the continent from which they came. It’s the kind of show where visitors can notice and learn more with each visit, where each work, from a tiny brass ring to a thirty-foot-wide quilt made from found bottle tops and copper wire, suggests a magnitude of meaning and history.

“One of the things we wanted to bring into the show is the diversity of Africa itself,” explains Director of Native Arts John Lukavic. “We have works from Egypt, from Nigeria, Ethiopia, from all over. You’ll see Islam represented, and you’ll see Eastern or Ethiopian Orthodox and Christian arts represented in the galleries. We're trying to show art in a variety of ways to show how truly diverse Africa is.”

Visitors are greeted by a familiar object upon entering the space: hand-carved hair picks from several countries, accompanied by a video and a quote from the singer Solange Knowles: “Don’t touch my hair, when it’s my feelings I wear.” The display sets an immediate tone of celebration and pride. “As we were preparing the show,” Lukavic explains, “one of the main things we wanted to get across was this concept of radical joy.”
Hair picks greet visitors to Arts of Africa.
Denver Art Museum

Lukavic collaborated with Adekunle Adeniji, the Anderman Family Fellow for African Arts, to curate the show, with support from Karuna Srikureja and Jennie Hord. “We drew on conversations and research from Denver’s African diaspora and African-American communities, and this concept of radical joy is something people wanted to see represented here,” says Lukavic. “So there’s dance, there's movement, there's music. There's a lot of activity buzzing.” 

Buzzing above the five stunning masks that hang on simple mannequins at the viewer’s eye level — rather than down near waist level, where they might be typically displayed — is footage from a Mende masquerade ceremony in Sierra Leone, showing one of the masks below as it would be seen in context: on a living, dancing person. Mixed-media choices such as these help visitors see the works before them as both artifacts of masterful craftsmanship and vital objects within living social environments, often meant to be touched or worn.

On another wall above the show reads a poignant quote from Léopold Sédar Senghor, the poet and first president of Senegal: “In Africa, art for art’s sake does not exist. All art is social.” In a Western museum, where viewers typically experience art in frames on white walls, the quote gently challenges visitors to approach the Arts of Africa collection differently — to not just observe the beauty in the works, but to imagine the landscapes, people and traditions that shaped them.

Choosing favorites from a collection like Arts of Africa almost defies part of the purpose of the show, which pushes visitors to reimagine their understanding of the role of art and to let go of traditional metrics of value. “I hate answering the favorites question because...there is so much responsibility not only to the arts that we have here and the artists who created them, but to the communities they're from,” says Lukavic. “In some of these communities, there is an inversion of aesthetics, where humility is so important that something plain and undecorated, mud-splattered, having been worn in ceremony, is more beautiful than the most highly beaded piece.”

Resisting reductive narratives — or inverting them, in some cases — is a thematic thread that weaves through the entire display, among many colorful others. While relatively small in square footage compared to the DAM’s other floors and collections, Arts of Africa is so dense with powerful works, you can’t go wrong spending extended time with any of them. But if you only have a moment on your first visit, here are a few highlights from the collection:
 

Denver Art Museum

Merikokeb Berhanu, “Untitled LXX” (2021)
Merkokeb Berhanu’s painting uses an expressionist style to depict livestock and a colorful landscape, evoking the modern and agricultural character of the artist's native Ethiopia. “We incorporate historical and contemporary arts into our spaces to show not only cultural continuity but dynamic innovation over time,” says Lukavic. “All these sorts of things and the historical works can help to contextualize the contemporary art.”
Denver Art Museum
Ngil Mask, Fang Artist (1800s)
The Fang Ngil was a secret society in the region of what is now Gabon and Cameroon; its members wore long, intimidating wooden masks and served as the surrounding tribe’s judges and police. One of the rarest and most valuable pieces in the collection, the Ngil mask evokes age-old questions about authority in pre-colonial Africa. French colonialists outlawed the Ngil in 1910, and the society all but disappeared.
Denver Art Museum
Mende artist, Sowei Mask (Late 1800s)
Stunningly animated up close, this wooden ceremonial mask carved by a Mende artist conveys the mischief and whimsy of masquerade rituals, which blur the lines between authentic and fabricated identity.
Denver Art Museum
El AnatsuiI (Ewe) “Rain Has No Father?” (2008)
Another contemporary work, the artist El Anatsuil uses copper wire and found bottle caps to reimagine traditional weaving styles and colour palettes. The massive piece hangs above the show, leading viewers to notice its references and connections to other traditional works around it.
“In this space, in this context, we're able to show the work that reflects the philosophies and ways of knowing and being and seeing that are specific to Africa and African diaspora without only placing it in a colonial context,” reflects Lukavic.

By approaching each piece as a reflection of its own context, the Arts of Africa gallery allows the art to speak for itself, on its own terms. You'll likely find yourself returning to the gallery; it takes more than a single visit to hear all it has to say.

Find more information and get tickets at denverartmuseum.org. WestWord

Health CS Susan Nakhumicha flanked by PS for Public Health Mary Muriuki. [Jonah Onyango, Standard]

Kenya’s Ministry of Health has issued guidelines on how nurses of different cadres can apply for jobs in Saudi Arabia.  In a statement on Friday, 19 January, the Principal Secretary, State Department for Public Health and Professional Standards, Mary Muriuki, listed the requirements for those interested in filling the 2,500 jobs.

The announcement follows an agreement between President William Ruto and the Abdal Human Resource Company in Riyadh, the designated recruitment agency in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

Kenyan nurses who wish to work in Saudi Arabia will require the following to be successful:

A complete CV detailing their age, weight, and height

A full record of the applicant's educational background, including verified copies of diploma certificates and nursing degrees. 

A valid nursing council license certificate,.

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A certificate demonstrating work experience acquired after passing licensing examinations and additional certifications for any medical training undertaken including Basic Life Support (BLS), Advanced Cardiovascular Life Support (ACLS), Pediatric Advanced Life Support (PALS), Neonatal Resuscitation Program (NRP)

Records of any attended symposiums and a copy of the applicant’s passport if available.

The Health Ministry also highlighted that it has settled on two recruiting agencies to conduct the process.

"Following a thorough and competitive evaluation, the Ministry of Labour and Social Protection has identified that Fast Reliable Enterprises and Nasmama Services Limited have been selected based on their outstanding track record and capacity to ensure appropriate matching of skills with requirement.”

At the same time, the government assured Kenyans of their safety while working in foreign land, adding that the shortlisted recruits will be informed of the interview dates and those successful will receive pre-deployment training and facilitation in processing their travel documents.

"This initiative not only attests to the global recognition of the Kenyan healthcare workforce but also serves as a bridge to further strengthen the bilateral relations between Kenya and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia," the PS added.

Applicants are encouraged to liaise directly with the nominated agencies for further information regarding the application process or to visit the National Employment Agency (NEA) website.  By Mate Tongola, The Standard

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