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The Ministry of Interior and National Administration has revoked a gazette notice that recently announced an increase in charges for key government services after widespread public outcry.

In a statement on Tuesday evening, Interior CS Kithure Kindiki said the notice that sought to impose higher charges on the application for birth certificates, identity cards (IDs) and passports had been revoked to allow for more public participation.

"It is notified for information of the general public that Kenya Gazette Notice No. 15239 of 2023, 15240 of 2023, 15241 of 2023 and 15242 of 2023 in the Special Issue of the Kenya Gazette Vol. CXXV-No.239 dated November 7, 2023 published by the Cabinet Secretary for Interior relating to upward revision of charges, fees and levies for various services provided by the State Department for Immigration and Citizen Services has been revoked to allow more public participation on the matter," Kindiki stated.

The CS also gazetted proposed charges for the same services set to take effect on January 1, 2024.

While most of the proposed charges remain the same, the CS announced that plans to introduce a Ksh1,000 fee for first-time ID applications had been reviewed following widespread uproar from members of the public. In the new proposal, Kenyans will now pay Ksh300 to acquire IDs. The service was previously offered at no cost.

Kindiki further noted that the government would meet the costs of Kenyans who demonstrate inability to raise the proposed fees.

"On the particular issue of acquisition of National Identity Cards by previously not registered citizens, the Government shall defray the costs of the revised charges, fees and levies through a waiver for indigent Kenyans who demonstrate inability to pay," the CS stated.

In the new proposal, Kenyans seeking to replace their lost IDs will part with Ksh1,000 and not Ksh2,000 indicated in the revoked notice.

The intended revised charges, fees and levies, Kindiki said, were informed by the need for Kenya’s self-reliance in financing the national budget, "to wean the country from unsustainable debt that poses grave threats to our sovereignty and the dignity of future generations." 

"The new intended charges, fees and levies have been adjusted to accommodate views of the public already received following the publication of the revoked Gazette Notices," he added.

Consequently, the CS directed the State Department for Immigration and Citizen Services to conduct and complete public participation not later than December 10, 2023.

Passports

The proposed charges on passports remain the same as contained in the revoked gazette notice.

Kenyans will pay Ksh7,500 for an ordinary passport (34 pages), up from Ksh4,500.

A 50-page passport will cost Ksh9,500 up from Ksh6,000 while a 66-page passport will cost Ksh12,500 up from Ksh7,500.

Work permit fees for foreigners also remain the same.

A work permit for investors Class G will cost Ksh250,000 up from Ksh100,000 while a work permit for investors Class D will be Ksh500,000 up from Ksh200,000.

Foreigners will also have to pay Ksh30,000 work permit processing fees, up from Ksh10,000.

New birth certificate applications will cost Ksh200 from Ksh50. Application fees for death certificates have also quadrupled to Ksh200 as announced in the previous gazette notice while amendment fees for both birth and death certificates have increased by Ksh870 to Ksh1,000.  

The High Court had last week suspended the revoked notice pending the hearing and determination of a case lodged by a Nakuru Doctor Magari Gikenyi challenging the legality of the newly imposed fees. By , K24 Digital

 

JUBA – South Sudan President Salva Kiir Mayardit has dismissed the country’s Inspector-General of Police Gen. Majak Akec Balok in a surprise move that comes amidst rumors of a coup attempt.

The president in his decree read out on the state-owned South Sudan Broadcasting Corporation (SSBC) on Tuesday night did not cite any official reason for the decision.

However, it comes just days after reports of unrest within the presidential guards, also known as Tiger Battalion, and the national security service (NSS), with sources claiming that around 27 officers from both security agencies were arrested.

Gen. Balok was appointed to the position in February 2018, having previously served as the director-general of nationality, passport, and immigration.

President Kiir has also appointed Lt. Gen. Atem Marol Biar as the new Inspector-General of Police. The new police chief was previously the Director General of the interior ministry’s Directorate of Civil Registry, Nationality Passports, and Immigration.

The dismissal of Gen. Balok and the appointment of Gen. Biar are the latest in a series of changes to South Sudan’s security sector.

These changes come as the country continues to grapple with political instability and violence, and as rumors of a coup attempt continue to swirl. - Sudans Post

The earthquake struck the South Sudan and Uganda border

A 4.9 magnitude earthquake hit the border areas of South Sudan and Uganda on Monday evening, according to the United States Geological Survey (USGS).

The quake struck at 9:54 pm near Yei in Central Equatoria state, some 36 km North of Yumbe district in northern Uganda. The quake hit the area at a shallow depth of 8.4 km and didn’t cause significant damage. 

According to USGS, weak shakings as a result of the earthquake were however felt in the districts of Yumbe, some 52km from the epicenter, Moyo, 63 km away, Adjumani, 87 km away, Arua 107km away and Juba city 110km away.

The tremor sent some people in northern Uganda into panic and confusion. Olivia Milanzi, a resident of Arua Central Division in Arua city, says that she felt a strong vibration that left her room shaking. She noted that it was her first time experiencing such a strong earthquake. 

“I ran out of my house thinking it was going to collapse. The vibration was really very strong,” she said.  

Hundreds of miles away from the epicenter in Gulu city, Emma Ajok, a resident of Pece-Laroo Division was seated with her son on a chair in their living room when she felt the tremor.

“I was seated on my chair with my son Josh, I felt my chair shaking. I thought he was the one pushing it after the whole house was vibrating, later I thought somebody was driving my car, but it was a strange movement...Josh ran away from where he was seated while shouting 'Mum the house is going to fall let's get outside',” said Ajok. By URN/The Observer

Demonstrators outside the Royal Courts of Justice, central London in 2022. File pic

Robert Jenrick has vowed the government will do "whatever it takes" to implement its Rwanda deportation plan - following Suella Braverman's sacking as home secretary.

The immigration minister - who kept his job in Monday's dramatic reshuffle - said the government's plan "must" go through, "no ifs, no buts". 

However, the policy faces a make-or-break decision on Wednesday when the Supreme Court will rule on whether the plans are lawful.

Speaking to The Daily Telegraph during a visit to Bulgaria, just hours after Ms Braverman's sacking, he said: "Be assured that as a prudent government, we have been thinking through what further steps we could take.

"I worked closely with the former home secretary on various options. But at the heart of this is the deep conviction that you have to inject deterrence into the system. 

"We must ensure the Rwanda policy succeeds before the next general election. No ifs, no buts, we will do whatever it takes to ensure that happens."

Mr Jenrick did, however, concede that the government would struggle to achieve its goal of stopping small boat crossings in the English Channel if their plans to send asylum seekers to Rwanda were deemed unlawful.

 

Asked whether the boats could be stopped without the Rwanda policy, Mr Jenrick replied: "No."

The deal - signed by Ms Braverman's predecessor Priti Patel, but later championed by the now former home secretary - would see some asylum seekers sent to Rwanda to claim asylum there.

Suella Braverman laughs during her visit to Kigali, Rwanda
Image:Suella Braverman during a tour of a migrant housing facility in Rwanda in March

Last month, the Home Office challenged a Court of Appeal ruling from June that the multimillion-pound deal was unlawful.

The Illegal Migration Act brought into law the government's policy of sending some asylum seekers to Rwanda, but because of the legal wrangling, no deportation flights having taken place.

The first planned flight to Rwanda in June 2022 was grounded minutes before take-off following a ruling by a judge at the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg.

As a result, Mr Jenrick has not removed the possibility of the UK's exit from the European Convention on Human Rights - a move which Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has repeatedly refused to rule out. By SKY News

A plane taking off from an airport on July 12, 2022.

Televangelists Dave and Sherry Mackay have, for the first time, addressed recommendations by a Senate Ad hoc committee which proposed they should be banned from visiting Kenya over alleged links to controversial pastor Paul Mackenzie.

In a responder sent to Kenyans.co.ke on Tuesday, the duo distanced themselves from the controversial cult leader, claiming that the Senate Committee relied on an unknown source who did not provide Senators with factual details.  

The Mackays maintained that they have never interacted with Mackenzie either physically or on online platforms.

"Once again, no evidence is given for this.  I have never had any contact with Paul Mackenzie, not in person, not through email, nor via phone, zoom, or social media. Once again, the committee has not provided any evidence to support this claim," read the statement in part.

"The Committee rightly makes reference to a sermon delivered by a friend of mine, in 2019, at a meeting organised by Paul Mackenzie.  That sermon can be viewed in its entirety, as it was filmed by followers of Mackenzie and displayed on their website," the statement added. 

Therefore, the couple demanded that the committee reveal the identity of the source, claiming that the report was defamatory. 

On the other hand, the Mackays added that the Senators were also misinformed of their status as religious leaders, arguing that they retired from the organisation they founded.

The duo neither held any title in the organisation, adding that they were not a cult institution as alleged. 

"If the worship of Jesus is enough to define a group as a cult, then it is quite likely that every church in Kenya would fit your definition.

"The report states that our teachings "include forsaking all private ownership."  This much is correct.  Voluntary poverty and a communal lifestyle have been part of many Catholic orders, as well as some Protestant movements over the centuries," the Mackays countered the Senate committee.  

The response of the Mackays came weeks after the Senate Committee recommended that the duo be banned from ever visiting the country.

According to the report, the duo was accused of facilitating Mackenzie with anti-government summons to incite his followers.

Notably, the Huduma Namba was one of the government projects that the duo allegedly opposed, claiming that it was the mark of the beast, cited in the Bible as a revelation for the end of the world.

The report will be debated in the Senate before being adopted for implementation. By Washington Mito, Kenyans.co.ke

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