Sunday, January 26, 2014

How to win campus elections



How to win campus elections
“On the day of debates take your time. Don’t hurry. Forge a memorable presence. Be audible, articulate and authoritative. Do not shake or sweat. Have unbowed confidence. Seize the moment to tell your story the best way you know how.  Be simple and clear. In journalism we say stories which are hard to tell they are also hard to sell.
BY MUSYOKA NGUI
Since this semester started the university has been engulfed in election euphoria. Contestants could not be more polite and conscious. I have been begged to join campaign secretariats since December holiday but gave an emphatic no. This gave me impeccable chance to see the action from the sidelines.

By the virtue of my position as the Managing Editor of campus magazine Varsity Post I cannot compromise the integrity of the paper by dragging it to the murky waters of politics. As such the Journalism Club has barred its members from campaigning or publicly supporting candidates. Already the whip has been cracked against errant members who defied the constitution. The honourable thing to do is to resign and plunge into politics. We have no issues about that and good luck for the bold move. To the 2014 student election contestants, good luck and may the best candidates win.

Now without much ado let’s unpack the strategies which will lead you to the governing body of CUSA.

First, declare your interest early. Some candidates expressed their interests last year. They knew there will be elections this January. If you come late and craft a shoddy campaign be sure to be the loser. Those who think ahead have the advantage of putting their house in order and correct any anomaly that may hinder their ambitions. They don’t chase electoral commission during the last minute to be cleared. For instance, they know that only those who meet the 60 % threshold in academic performance will be allowed to contest. Just because you are bona fide Chuka University student it does not mean that you have a free pass. Neither will your looks or pocket depth count or tribal numbers.

Do not bore the voters with policies. Be realistic in your manifesto. Truth is most of the contestants are neither called to serve nor do they have the students’ interests at heart. Some are just greedy for power. Others are reeling under extreme peer pressure of if-so-and-so-is vying-why-not-me. This me-too attitude is crowding the space for the genuine aspirants who really deserve the various seats up for grabs. I do not deny that comrades can notice leadership traits in you and advise you to throw your hat in the ring. But if you feel the inner voice telling you otherwise obey and decline politely.

Design your campaign posters attractively. A close up will do the trick. This will boost your visibility and help comrades remember you at the ballot booth. They will easily identify you from the pack.  Some contestants get it wrong by taking a full photo or showing up to their waists and knees. We don’t care about your trunk. Give us your head and may be the shoulders. Period. Have some fliers to leave behind to tap the undecided. Be brief .

A black and white poster is too analogue and unappealing. Better have a few coloured posters than many black and whites without identity. Even the government is urging TV broadcasters to go digital. Who are you to drag us back to the prehistory?

On online presence, push your agenda on Facebook’s CUC Live and any other social media forums where comrades converge.  Monitor the feedback. A personal reply to a like and comment will go a long way in convincing comrades that you actually have time for them.

Send unlimited SMSes to friends and tell them to forward the same to at least ten of their friends. The message will reach far and wide. After all, you are marketing yourself and you never know the recipients may end up voting for you.

Propaganda will target your reputation and question your eligibility. Take it easy. If you get time to corner your critics nail them like you are making a coffin. Challenge them to table verifiable evidence to authenticate their wild and sensational claims. If it is falsehoods they will be embarrassed and you will be vindicated. Milk the moment dry by playing the victim and you will earn sympathy votes.
  
Recruit like minded comrades to sell you door to door. Let them visit every hostel around. Target the peak period such as evening between 7 pm and 9 pm. Be orderly and take full control of your troops. They should not defame your rivals or tear opponents’ posters. They should be peaceful and courteous. Live up to the sacred ideals of democracy. Appreciate divergent opinions and respect the rights and freedoms of others. Be the bastion of plurality.

An added advantage is to get on board prominent opinion leaders among the students who are trusted by the masses. These include Class Reps, outgoing student leaders and alumni. These people have clout and ...you guessed right: Money! They will foot your campaign bills and offer valuable connections you never imagined.

Tap the flock of the Church. Most folks profess salvation and there is a good catch at the Christian Union and PCEA. Convince them to turn out and cast a ballot for you. It never hurt any pagan or atheist to throw a bottle at.  Isn’t it a party galore anyway? Provided you don’t buy beer on Thursday or on Friday (polling day), you are assured of sobriety of judgement.

On the day of debates take your time. Don’t hurry. Forge a memorable presence. Be audible, articulate and authoritative. Do not shake or sweat. Have unbowed confidence. Seize the moment to tell your story the best way you know how.  Be simple and clear. In journalism we say stories which are hard to tell they are also hard to sell.

If you win thank your campaign team and comrades profusely. If you lose fairly, concede defeat immediately and spare us the tension of appeals and recounts. Civility must prevail against hooliganism. Make a wrong move and you will rue the day you decided to crucify your life in high staked politics.  In all you do I wish you success.  Have a convincing election week ahead.

The writer studies Bachelors of Arts Degree in Communication and Media at Chuka University. He blogs at musyokangui.blogspot.com
Email your thoughts to musyokangui02@gmail.com

Less is more: How short is short?





Less is more: How short is short?
Kwa nini mtu atembee uchi? ( Why would someone walk around naked?)
Aje? (How?)
Uchi. (Naked)
Unamaanisha nini? (What do you mean?)
Si kutembea na nguo haijafunika magoti ama kifua na mgongo ni uchi? (Walking wearing clothes which do not cover knees, bust and back)
I disagreed.
My female pal was advocating for what she called modest and decent dressing. I told her that dressing is relative. She said she already knew that. I asked her what the beef she held against skimpy dressers.
“They distract men and trigger their testosterone. Men lose focus and concentration before such girls/women.”
I weighed in: Don’t tell me you are the folks that justify rape on account of victim’s dressing style.
She: I don’t but there is a boundary.
Me: Which boundary?
She: Did you see what the conductors did to a girl in Chuka bus stage?
Me: No.
She:  You should have been there. She was stripped to the barest minimum.  Were it not for women who threw lesos her way she would have strutted her fundamentals naked.
Me: What! That is primitive.  Why would anyone take the law in their own hands? That is playing accuser, judge and executioner all in one. Mob justice. Such accused can never find justice because you are hell bent to be biased and subjective.
She: I don’t care who is stripped. Whether it is me or my mother.
Me: Ati! Dunia imepasuka mahali.
She: People should learn to dress like human beings not prostitutes. Did you see Miss Chuka change of wardrobe soon after winning the beauty contest?
Me: You want a model to dress like a grandmother? Hehee! She should expose her assets. After all they are the ones which earned her the crown. She has brains too not just a bimbo.
She: So you have never been irritated by the dressing codes of these campus chicks?
Me: I have. At times.
She: So…
Me: So what? What am I supposed to do? I respect the rights and freedoms of others as long as they do not infringe on mine or that of others. Whoever is offended should follow the law.
She: Meaning?
Me: Go to court. Go and tell the judge this and that happened to you and table your evidence for consideration but not lynching some peoples’ daughters in the name of conservativeness and decency.
She: Why should I go to court when I can do it myself there and then?
Me: This is not Amazon juggle my friend. There is democracy and human rights. You can’t trample on them like that.
She: What about the offending skimpy dressers? If they were Ugandans they would have been arrested by police. Recently their parliament passed anti miniskirt law. No more curves, cleavages and fleshes at the Pearl of Africa.
Me: Uganda is not Kenya. Kenya runs on a different OS of a constitution. It is not a one man’s show like UG.
She: Dressing depends on many factors like the context, weather, time and mood. Fashion savvy individuals capture the theme of the moment by combining colours creatively.
Me: That’s true. However let them be. By the way kwani you bought them the clothes they are wearing to get an authority to dictate what and how they wear?
She: No. Anyway am out. It was such a great intellectual intercourse.
The writer studies Bachelors of Arts Degree in Communication and Media at Chuka University. He blogs at musyokangui.blogspot.com
Email your thoughts to musyokangui02@gmail.com


The forgotten orphans of the Sahara




The forgotten orphans of the Sahara
“The sequel of my article is a passionate wish for the Maghreb Arabs and Tuaregs to never tire from their pursuit for justice and self determination. The least that the French and Mali can do is compensate them as they have suffered enough from the horrors of unwarranted exploitation and slavery.
MUSYOKA NGUI writes

Watching the international media cover Africa is painful. I live in Africa. Kenya. My country has had its own unfair share of negative publicity cast by the international press. I wonder where they gather their news about Africa from.

As an authority in what constitutes news I can say that news values have been overlooked grossly by these global cameras, pens and mouths.

The bias is conspicuous. The unfairness, the subjectivity and staging is like a window dressing exercise laced with secret economic interests. Are these media at the beck and call of their financiers who are the former African colonial masters and America?

In this gloom and doom gospel I have stumbled upon an outlet with flair for objectivity, professionalism, openness and honesty.  Al Jazeera English may not be the most popular news organization in Africa but it is the most faithful. Currently its network called Al Jazeera World has been carrying a compelling documentary called the Orphans of the Sahara. Open the links below to download it from Youtube. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tmq3RTkUFGU- Episode 1: Return


In this treatise I discuss with my readers the highlights of this well researched and thought out piece of journalism.

The three-part series documents the journey of the Tuaregs . Tuaregs are the indigenous inhabitants of the Sahara desert straddling West Africa’s Mali, Libya, Niger and Algeria. The spotlight glares at the unspeakable atrocities meted out by the Mali and French governments to the Arabs and Tuaregs. The French are the former colonial masters of Mali and a number of West African states and it wields a lot of power and influence.

The documentary alleges that the former conspires to loot the mineral resources of the Tuaregs. This exposes Tuaregs to grinding poverty, illiteracy, lack running water and electricity and die daily from poisonous radioactive emissions wafting from the mines sanctioned by both French and Mali governments.

As a result, the Tuaregs remain marginalized, weak and orphaned. As I streamed the tube, I could not help but think about South Sudan and occasionally Somalia. They are so much similar: ethnic wars, poverty, separatist ambitions and the unashamed African regimes who won’t mind to go to bed with their former colonial masters at the expense of their citizens.

I write this with much grief. Statistics say that the Tuaregs are the poorest people in the world. Yet they sit on energy resources of extreme worth. The Sahara desert is home to uranium, gold, oil, gas and diamonds. These colossal deposits have done little to change the fortunes of the inhabitants. On the contrary, the Arabs and Tuaregs have been condemned to go to exile in Libya, Burkina Faso and Algeria. In the eyes of the French and Mali regimes the Tuaregs and Arabs are terrorists. What more insult and humiliation do these people need? I mean, to them they have seen it all: they have fought seven uprisings ad rebellions since independence and lost all. They have lost their dearest families and friends and seen their properties run over by military tanks against the backdrop of deafening gunfire and shelling of bombs.

In effect, the inhabitants are boiling with despair, anger and frustration. The pain is immense. Take for instance the uranium mines conducted by the Areva Mining Company. The locals and animals (read camels) are not spared. They suffer and succumb to complications of cancer. Expectant mothers give birth to deformed infants who die shortly after. Others die in the womb. Some go crazy in search of water in a poisoned oasis. The company denies any pollution has occurred despite overwhelming evidence that the consequences are dire.

The aftermath of climate change lead to encroachment of the largest and hottest desert in the world is death and exile. The dreams of Sahara people are dashed by the combined invasion of the Tuaregs and Arabs by the French and Mali armies. The dream of Tuaregs to form their own independent State of Azawad is a nightmare of slow suffering.

The Tuaregs have been accused of working with Al Qaeda Maghreb operatives. It is also alleged that they capture French miners and demand hefty ransom. But this must not be used to deny them their autonomy. I do not support religious extremism. No. Mali has never shown the slightest interest to negotiate with the Tuaregs despite the Tuaregs being the foremost freedom fighters of the Malian independence from the French. Mali has resisted the investigation into the environmental impact of uranium mining. Such betrayal is hypocrisy of a government that claims to be democratic and just.

The sequel of my article is a passionate wish for the Maghreb Arabs and Tuaregs to never tire from their pursuit for justice and self determination. The least that the French and Mali can do is compensate them as they have suffered enough from the horrors of unwarranted exploitation and slavery.

To the bold Al Jazeera correspondent and her production team who covered the plight of the forgotten I take off my hat for you.

Dear readers, savour the Sahara souls’ songs of patriotism in a world that would rather choose to forget the Orphans of Sahara.

Our history is written in the mountains
they are our guardians
our elders died because of it
and the children became the guardians….

Greeting to my homeland
where I left my family
greetings to my homeland….

When I left my people
only God knows how my soul was burning
when I left my people….
The writer studies Bachelors of Arts Degree in Communication and Media at Chuka University. He blogs at musyokangui.blogspot.com
Email your thoughts to musyokangui02@gmail.com


Getting the best out of Youtube



Getting the best out of Youtube
BY MUSYOKA NGUI
If you have been using Youtube for some time by now you know it is better than cable TV.

Youtube gives users unlimited options to download, view, upload and stream videos live. You can download the latest music video clips from your favourite artistes. You can subscribe to your preferred TV and experience various features posted there.

Before you panic why your laptop does not access the Youtube make sure you have the right software. You require Adobe Flash Player to stream the videos. Get one. Once that is done, update with time in order to get the latest features for maximum performance.

Invest in a reputable antivirus. This will ward off malicious files from invading your PC.  Some good antiviruses include Kaspersky Lab, Avast and AVG.

Install current media players in your PC. Get Microsoft Windows Media Player and VLC. VLC will be useful in playing flv files while Windows come in handy in playing MP4 videos.

You are wondering how to download now? Fetch Internet Download Manager (IDM) for free trial from the internet. This will serve you for 30 days and expire. Within that grace period get a geek to show you how to crack and patch IDM so that you can update it on your own. Be sure to crack and patch your stuff offline lest you are detected as fake user of a corrupted version.

There are different qualities of video on the Youtube. Don’t be mediocre. Go for the best quality. The most advanced video now is High Definition (HD). There are even 3D(1080p) ones but they have trouble playing and cannot be deleted. There are other digits of descending order to look out for such as 720p, 480p, 360p and 144p. The numbering is in descending order of quality.  Thus 720p will be HD, crisp clear with quality sound and pictures while 144p will be grainy and blurred. The choice is yours: excellence or mediocrity.

On the top search bar is an upload option. Do not just download. Create your own content and post online for other Youtubers to view, download and share. If someone did not upload their files on Youtube what would you download?
The writer studies Bachelors of Arts Degree in Communication and Media at Chuka University. He blogs at musyokangui.blogspot.com
Email your thoughts to musyokangui02@gmail.com