Tuesday, July 30, 2019


Meet Francis Kaivilu the author of the touching poem by the ailing Makueni girl, which has gone viral on social media
Francis Kaivilu

In summary

·         Faith Mwende Mailu has been battling Aplastic anaemia and needs Sh4 million treatment in India.

·         Well-wishers can send their support to paybill number 641179 or to KCB Makindu branch. Account name is Faith Mwende and the Account number is 1238753264

·         Thank you as you purpose to support Faith

Born on the windy side of the Mystical Nuu hill, in the interior parts of Mwingi Central Constituency in Kitui County, a young man was born some 27 years ago. Francis Kaivilu aka ‘Malenga Wa Nuu’ had never imagined that he would one day save a young soul from Makueni; an ailing 8 year old Faith Mwende Mailu who has touched the hearts of many on Kenyan social media by presentation of a heart moving poem penned down by the famous ‘Malenga’.

The young man who sat for his KCSE exam at Kyuso Boys’ Secondary School in 2011 before proceeding to Kenya Institute of Mass Communication (KIMC) for a diploma course in Radio Programs Production has been writing the best ‘Mashairi’ in Kitui, having made it to the provincial levels even during his high school days.

Touched hearts of many

Though the young man has never featured in the national arena as a Swahili Shairi (Poem) writer cum presenter and is currently not in any formal employment and only relying on freelance journalism for a living, he has still been touching the hearts of many within and outside Kitui County through his well-crafted pieces of entertainment whenever given a chance.

Being a trained journalist, the young man used his pen, a paper and his smartphone to actualize a dream which had proved hard even for the county government of Makueni to actualize and now, the young angel Faith Mwende is set to undergo a bone transplant in India and soon she would be free from the Aplastic Anaemia disease which had been threatening her life.

In the poem, the last line in every stanza read “Mama Margaret Kenyatta nisaidie, Aplastic anaemia Yanimaliza”,  whose  translation is to : Our mom Margaret Kenyatta help me from the pangs of Aplastic anaemia which is threatening to kill me.

Blood transfusion

For the last three years, the girl has been relying on monthly blood transfusion for her to remain alive and her parents had hit a snag in getting the KSh. 4 million needed as medical fee for her bone marrow transplant in India.
Faith Mwende recites a poem asking for medical support for  aplastic anaemia she's suffering from. The poem was written by Francis Kaivilu aka Malenga Wa Nuu

Through the well-crafted poem which was voluntarily penned down and trained to the ailing girl by the Kitui ‘Malenga’, coupled with the great power of social media as manifested by the rate at which the video clip has gone viral: the video managed to reach top Kenya government officials whom might chip in their hand to help the young suffering soul.

The act by the young man is a clear manifestation of how talented our youths are, and how if well supported they can change this country for better.

Ends.

Contact Francis Kaivilu

Tel: 0743-507-600

        0724-326-294


Saturday, March 9, 2019

Of lefting WhatsApp groups and how to secure electronic devices from hacks

By MUSYOKA NGUI
Having another person’s phone number isn’t a nod that the number should be used without their consent. Adding people to a WhatsApp group without briefing them is a no no. 
A phone user scrolling. Photo/COURTESY

Okay, just add anyone on your phonebook who you believe is relevant to the agenda of creating the said WhatsApp group then immediately welcome them and brief them about the purpose of your project.
Sometimes people left the group and are blamed for sabotaging the cause which is unknown to them. At times people have multiple phones and phone numbers. Switching the two can lead to them lefting the said groups if there is no transition. 
Others hit the exit button at the bottom of the app when bored or are tired about the group. It’s within their discretion to do so. They don’t owe you an explanation or any apology.
It’s important to disable autodownload of WhatsApp media especially in busy groups because that could consume your data significantly and take up your phone memory. You can choose to download the pictures, audios or videos on need basis.
IF IT’S FREE, THEN YOU’RE THE PRODUCT
Avoid free Wi-Fi. Someone said that if it’s free, then you’re the product. Free Wi-Fi in public spaces expose you to snooping from fraudsters. The fraudulent persons could be the administrators of the free Wi-Fi or hackers pretending to be busy doing their things online but watching you online.
Frequently review your apps' passwords. Your PC, your phone, your router. And any other electronic device. The internet of things that is claiming to connect everything that’s around has many gaps that oughtn’t to be trusted. Change the passwords and note the changes somewhere you can remember.
Install applications from trusted sources. Your company that you’re doing business with will have a link on their website that will send you to an app store. Use that. 
When you reach the app market, download the recommended application and regularly update all your apps-not automatically-that could consume much data-but on need basis.
Updating your apps regularly helps you enjoy featured services from the provider and makes your app secure and reduces possibility of hangs and hacks.
Review your apps service and uninstall the apps that don’t serve your interest.
Some people don’t respect your privacy. Some will snoop. Steal data. Check emails, SMS, photos etc. without your permission.
To keep the thieves in their place, have your device locked by codes, patterns and/or fingerprints when you’re around them. You can remove when away from the leeches.

Tuesday, February 26, 2019

Tell as is, don’t editorialize news


Tell as is, don’t editorialize news
By MUSYOKA NGUI
Editorializing news is giving a reporter’s opinion when conveying the stories journalists cover in the field.
Apart from the traditional 5Ws and H, journalist should go ahead and cover news in a day two journalism style. This includes asking the sources: so what? Then what? Why now? Sometimes news data fly around and readers don’t make sense of the numbers, figures and statements issued by interested news sources.
Another way of making the audience understand the news better in an objective way is fact checking the sources. When journalists go to cover news at public places, lies will be told. Politicians, corporates, religious leaders, wananchi, all tell lies. When the event is live, the reporter will have to do a real-time fact check. Or their editor can assist in giving a background information about a certain subject being covered by the source.
DO YOUR HOMEWORK
Table reports in excerpts, in full copies and unedited ones depending on the availability of space and time. A slippery source will slide and confuse the audience if you don’t do your homework well.
A reporter should be well read. Information should be on their fingertips.  Sometimes news sources lecture journalists and this makes a big mockery of the profession. When the subject being discussed is about economics, have facts ready. The facts ought to be from credible sources. Sources that can be verified. When you quote unauthoritative source, you become gutter press.
Offering space and airtime to opposing sources, as I said in my earlier post, is the beauty of media freedom. Publish all humanely possible angles to a story. Have a disclaimer that some concerned sources where reached and didn’t offer a comment. Didn’t return a reply.
Back to editorializing news. This is a lazy way to convey news. Opinions are like asses, everyone have theirs. Facts are facts. They don’t depend on your opinion even if its informed opinion. To err is human. When you go wrong in your script, be humble enough to correct your piece. Better still, apologize to affected parties because the fact that your news circulated can be enough to injure the dignity of the source.
Maintain a good news sources contacts. There are dry days. These sources will provide leads that you can follow.
Keep them honest. The three arms of government need a robust forth estate that checks them. Above all, check yourself. Listen to your colleagues and the publics.

Saturday, January 19, 2019

Run against rivals, at their cost


Run against rivals, at their cost
BY MUSYOKA NGUI
musyokangui.blogspot.com
“They never publish me”, lamented a young journalist to yours truly.  I checked his work and found that it was good, in my view.
It is a complaint that a journalist in the making of a slate waiting to leave university was launching to his mentor.
Don’t worry bro. Keep writing. Times will be hard when you leave college. You will write and it will be pushed to the recycle bin. But don’t make the disappointments switch off your zeal to write.
Sometimes your editor will steal your story. Masquerade as you. You will freelance. You will work overnight. On demand. You will work on the trenches. For long. Endure many dry days. Do online writing. They will carry your story for small pay. They will cartel against you. Act as intermediaries. Middlemen.
I won’t lie to you that the journey to success in writing is soft. A good journalist will tell you that a great percentage of their work is unpublished. For self and for employer. For community. For private. For public. For free. For love. For life.
To be a good writer, read. Read current affairs, respected publications and publishers and then read again. Once you are done reading them, read your work. See how you have grown. From high school compositions, literature classes and then university term papers and back to work. However little. Don’t belittle yourself. Start somewhere. Today it’s a hustle. Tomorrow it’d be awesome. Don’t give up.
Read all media. Digital, newspaper, radio, TV and society. There is a lot in your community that you can write about. Observe. Study. Write.
Have mentors. Let them guide you. But don’t be like them. Don’t lose your originality. Be you.
Once you are done with your favourites, read your critics. They might tell you something that your friends won’t tell you. Your friends have bigger stakes in your life and don’t want to lose you unlike your haters. Listen.
Have different media that you write to. Let no one manipulate your story. Run against rivals. They will upstage each other for your benefit. Above all, know your worth. What’s good is worth the cost. Research the market rate and negotiate your deal.