President William Ruto (left) speaks to Interior CS Kithure Kindiki at State House in November 2022.
The Ministry of Interior has issued an update on the development of the Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA) to facilitate visa-free visits as directed by President William Ruto.
In a statement dated Sunday, January 7, the authority highlighted a number of changes introduced to the ETA which has received a total of 9,787 applications.
For instance, all travellers to Kenya will enjoy reduced fees from Ksh7,756 ($50) charged as part of visa application to just Ksh4,653 ($30). Only travellers from the East African Community (EAC) countries will be exempted from the fee.
The country will also benefit from the collection of advanced data from all travellers to ringfence Kenya’s security and other strategic interests.
"Previously, travellers from 51 countries were not required to fill out any forms on personal and relevant travel details. There was therefore no means of obtaining data to inform critical decisions and plans around security, infrastructure and insurance needs," read the statement in part.
"With the introduction of the ETA, we now have comprehensive data on all visitors, significantly improving our ability to ensure the safety and well-being of both our visitors and citizens."
Interior Principal Secretary Julius Bitok also revealed that the ETA reduces the application wait time from 14 days for visas to just 72 hours for the ETA.
From the 9,787 applications, officials managing the authorisation have already processed 4,046 while the others are undergoing review on a priority basis.
At the beginning of the year, the Ministry postponed President William Ruto’s directive on Visa-free entries to Kenya pending the development of the ETA.
The Kenya Civil Aviation Authority (KCAA), at the time, explained that the system was yet to be finalised. The Head of State had directed that the visa-free entry process kick off in January 2024.
For now, a majority of travellers to Kenya will still be required to apply for a Visa through Kenyan embassies, as has been the norm.
The first batch of Visa-free foreigners, however, landed in Kenya four days after the programme was scheduled to start. By Derrick Okubasu, Kenyans.co.ke
Season’s Greetings from the Land of the Bold and the Beautiful. Emanyulia was the place to be in the ended festive season. Leafy, serene and salubrious.
Above all, it’s my peaceful and indomitable repository of world literature. I have now returned to noisy necessity. The City of Nairobi. Sirens, screeching brakes and rude motorists.
Uber and boda boda drivers are the pick of the basket. They are graduates of the School of Scandal. They have never heard of manners, courtesy or common decency.
You have your usual rotting garbage, burst sewers and odoriferous emissions. But there is so much other din. Political hullabaloo. It sends me to make a modest proposal.
I admit that the notion of a modest proposal is not original. I have borrowed it from Irishman Jonathan Swift (1667 and 1754). Swift is famous for Gulliver’s Travels, in which he shewed up English customs and politics of the day.
Yet, A Modest Proposal stands out in its own special way. A year before Dean Swift was born, another great European artist, Jean-Batiste Moliere of France, died in 1753.
Both writers hoped they could correct extravagant misconduct in individuals and society through satire. These satirists could be mistaken for haters of humankind, as has been Alceste in Moliere’s famous play titled, The Misanthrope (1666). Are they? I leave that to you.
Swift famously advised England to eat up children of the poor, as a way of stopping them from being burdens to their parents and countries. Poor people and nations may want to borrow from Swift.
They could ease their economic troubles by selling themselves and their children to the rich, as food. You see, there are all these starving beggars, poor slum families and sundry mendicants. They cause the wealthy to quarrel all the time, about the economy, roads, taxes, judges and stuff.
Just now Nairobi is on fire over taxes, cost of living, affordable housing, roads and the Judiciary. Can’t Nairobi solve all that just by abolishing poverty?
If Nairobi cannot end poverty by making poor people rich, she may wish to consider just eating them. You see, there will be no need for more houses, or roads. The poor are the majority.
When you have eaten them up, the remaining rich can all choose to live in one place. They will have the finest roads in that small rich man’s neighbourhood. They will have superb houses and other modern conveniences.
There will be no need to take one another to court, and to quarrel over things like corruption in the Judiciary. In fact, courts should be abolished altogether. When you abolish courts, there will be no orders to be disobeyed. Nor will there be corrupt judges to stall government projects.
But, you see, there will also be no projects, because projects are for poor people. There will also be no need for taxation, or need to call anyone pejorative names like “Zakayo.”
Anyone who wants an extra road can build it for himself, without being taxed. So, let us abolish all these things that make us quarrel. Let us abolish schools and examinations.
What do we need schools for? The remaining rich population can just live happily, eating everyday what it has worked for.
This is how we are going to build a paradise; the Kenya we want. There will be no thieves, because rich people do not steal from one another. There will be no need for the police. What would be their role?
No need for all these things we call independent authorities and commissions. No auditors, no controllers of budgets, no Parliament, no political power and elections to fight over. There will be just pure joy. Abolishing the poor is my modest proposal. - Dr Muluka is a strategic communications advisor
A photo of police officers conducting a raid on nightclubs at City Hall in Nairobi in November 2022.
PHOTO
An impromptu raid on Friday night conducted by the National Authority for the Campaign Against Alcohol and Drug Abuse (NACADA) at a local club in Nairobi turned hostile following the attack of several journalists and officers.
Speaking to Kenyans.co.ke, a contact at NACADA confirmed the incident, explaining that the bouncers at the club, eight in total, went rogue and began attacking the NACADA officers and journalists at the scene.
Police officers attached to NACADA, accompanied by journalists, arrived at the club at around 11:00 pm to arrest the club managers for allegedly selling shisha, which is prohibited in the country.
Upon identifying the journalists, the bouncers charged and rained heavy blows on them. In the process, they forcefully seized their recording equipment.As a result of the melee that ensued, Nation photographer Boniface Bogita was stabbed twice in the ribs, Jane Kibira of Kenya Broadcasting Corporation (KBC) was stabbed in the back and Standard Group's Boniface Okendo and Francis Odee were also beaten up and badly wounded.
"They even beat up our officers but we managed to arrest all of them," the source stated while confirming that two NACADA officers sustained serious injuries from the incident.
According to the source, the bouncers were taken into custody at Kileleshwa Police Station, pending arraignment in court on Monday.
On the other hand, the journalists who were attacked are currently receiving medical treatment at Aga Khan Hospital in Nairobi.
The source explained that the resistance portrayed by the bouncers was a result of the club being owned by an influential person in the country.
He added that NACADA would continue with the raids to ensure that those contravening the law would be brought to book.
"We are doing big things as NACADA. The place is owned by one of the most influential people in the country hence all the scuffle," he added. By Brian Kimani, Kenyans.co.ke
Boys play football in Garowe, Puntland, Somalia. Photographer: Andrew Renneisen/Getty Images Europe , Photographer: Andrew Renneisen/Getty Images
(Bloomberg) -- Somalia’s ambassador to Turkey quit to run for vice president of Puntland, the oil-rich, semi-autonomous territory in the eastern part of the country that holds elections on Monday.
Jama Abdullahi Mohamed, who held the position in Ankara since 2017, issued a statement on his decision on X, formerly Twitter.
Puntland, an arid region in Somalia’s northeast, has oil and gas reserves that haven’t been fully commercially extracted due to ongoing instability. Apart from clashes between national government and Puntland officials over energy and electoral laws, the area has been long known as a haven for pirates and Islamic State militants.
Read more: Oil-Rich Somalia Region Elects Leader Amid Tensions
The elections in the territory of about 4.9 million people come a week after Somaliland, Puntland’s self-declared independent neighbor, concluded an agreement with Ethiopia to grant the landlocked country access to the Red Sea in exchange for a stake in Ethiopian Airlines.
Puntland’s next leader will be chosen by 66 lawmakers at a meeting in Garowe, the regional capital.
Somalia, the United Nations-recognized owner of the land, rejected the deal as illegal and recalled its ambassador to Ethiopia as tensions continue to rise on the northeast Indian Ocean coast. Timothy Rangongo, Bloomberg News
EU officials have confirmed when you'll need a new travel pass before being allowed into Europe. They have issued a revised schedule for when they expect the new rules to come into effect.
The European Travel Information and Authorisation System - ETIAS for short - will mean anyone wanting to travel to 30 European countries. will need to apply online for approval to do so. The electronic pass will be linked to your passport and valid for up to three years or until the passport expires, whichever comes first.
Spain, Greece, Italy, France, Germany, Netherlands and Cyprus are among the countries where people from the UK and dozens of other nations around the world will need to obtain an ETIAS ahead of their visit. It will cost seven euros per person - just over £6 in UK currency - and you'll need to pay by credit or debit card at the time of application.
The fee applies to adults between the ages of 18 and 70. Others who are younger than 18 or older than 70 will not have to pay. By David Bentley, Birmingham Mail
Informer East Africa is a UK based diaspora Newspaper. It is a unique platform connecting East Africans at home and abroad through news dissemination. It is a forum to learn together, grow together and get entertained at the same time.
To advertise events or products, get in touch by info [at] informereastafrica [dot] com or call +447957636854. If you have an issue or a story, get in touch with the editor through editor[at] informereastafrica [dot] com or call +447886544135.
We also accept donations from our supporters. Please click on "donate". Your donations will go along way in supporting the newspaper.