At exactly the time of this post, at 1030HRS twenty three years ago, on 7th August 1998, guards at the rear entrance of the United States of America embassy building in downtown Nairobi waved down a truck for routine inspection.
It was halted as its occupants tried to force their way into the rear entrance of the embassy building, situated at the busy junction of Nairobi’s Haile Selassie and Moi Avenues.
A brief argument ensued between embassy guards and the truck’s “arab-looking men”, who insisted they had a package to deliver and needed to access the basement of the building.
Amidst the argument, a small blast went off.
Then followed an exchange of gunfire. In seconds, the sun seemed to glow brighter as quickly as it turned dark.
A powerful, deafening bomb explosion from the truck completely tore down half of the embassy.
Confusion reigned.
Adjacent streets were in a total state of chaos. Desperate screams from the injured, punctuated by the cacophony of security alarms of cars that had been parked further down the streets, interrupted the momentary silence.
The impact sent the entire Ufundi Cooperative Building adjoining the embassy to the ground like a pack of cards.This is the building that bore the brunt of the bomb blast. Next to it was the iconic Co-operative Bank building.Nearly all the latter building’s windows were shattered
Away from the epicenter of the blast, along Uhuru Highway and even Landhies Road, pedestrians whose attention had been drawn to a loud blast looked on in bewilderment as many private and public vehicles sped off from the scene of the blast.
Fleeing motorists, their car full lights on, hooted furiously as a way of warning others against approaching the city. Others sped away in cars whose windscreens and windows had been shattered by the bomb's impact.
Meanwhile, workers at offices as far away as the city’s Industrial Area and Upper Hill exchanged startled glances moments after the blast. They felt their windows and desks rattle. Even curtains shook violently.
Terror had visited Nairobi.
At the scene, people were strewn on the pavements bleeding.There was broken glass & pieces of twisted metal everywhere.
Mangled cars & lifeless bodies,some burnt to a crisp, were on the streets. So were a lot of bloodied pedestrians,some of whom had been wounded by flying debris
In the upper floors of the adjoining Co-operative Bank,some office workers,engulfed in blinding smoke, & in the mistaken belief that the structure was about to collapse,leaped to their deaths against desperate pleas from the public who had rushed to join in the rescue efforts.
The Kenya Red Cross, Kenya Police, the city’s Fire Brigade, Kenya Army and the American Marines soon joined rescuers. The latter had a difficult time fending off civilians eager to rescue those trapped within the bowels of the damaged buildings.
Imagine the extreme anxiety of those who had loved ones visiting or working in the city that day; at a time when the only way you could reach them was by landline phones. However, somehow, news spread.
As rescue efforts began, for instance, news started filtering through that the US embassy in Dar es Salaam in neighboring Tanzania had been hit, too.
A group calling itself the "Liberation Army for Holy Sites" claimed responsibility for the twin attacks. The FBI would thereafter establish that the Al Qaeda-associated group was actually the Islamic Jihad of Egypt.
Meanwhile,Kenyans volunteered to evacuate the injured & rescue those in the debris.They were undaunted by the phalanx of armed USA marines that had sprang out of the severely damaged embassy building like a seething mass of ants to protect its perimeter, or what remained of it.
The rescuers were not alone. In the days that followed, and amid an outpouring of sympathy and messages of solidarity from around the world, various friendly governments offered material and personnel support to the rescue efforts.
The Government of Israel sent a recovery team with specialist equipment and sniffer dogs. Working for four days with the Kenya Red Cross and Department of Defence personnel, they helped identify locations of, and retrieve, survivors buried under the concrete debris.
Later news accounts and investigations reconstructed the events leading up to August 7, 1998. It was reported that months to the attacks, suspicious men said to be of Middle-Eastern descent had been spotted filming the area around the embassy.
It also turned out that following the 1983 bombings of the US Embassy and military barracks in Beirut, the American government had started rolling out security redesigns of its missions around the world.
However, owing to the sheer cost of the improvements, the State Department had ranked which foreign missions got priority in the fortifications. Unfortunately, Nairobi was not high up in the prioritization, and terrorists had turned to embassies that were deemed less protected.
In the aftermath of the attack, 218 people were declared dead, over 5,000 injured and property worth billions of Kenyan shillings destroyed. The bombing is to this day the worst terrorist attack ever to take place in Kenya.
Five days after the attack, the death toll, sadly, had climbed to 247.
8 of the terrorists involved in the plotting or execution of the Nairobi & Dar attacks are serving various jail terms. Many others,not least Osama bin Laden & Fazul Mohammed, have been hunted down & killed.
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The Goldenberg scandal was a perfect illustration of how state capture works.
It was proof that mega-scandals could only work if they had sponsorship from the highest levels of government.
The current thieves of your taxes, got a lesson or two from the Goldenberg.
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In seeking to understand how Goldenberg was executed, one is well advised to read the 2005 Report of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into the Goldenberg Affair chaired by Justice Samuel Bosire, who was later fired in 2012. kenyalaw.org/kl/fileadmin/C…
The 2005 Bosire Report concluded that up to Sh158bn was transacted with 487 companies and individuals, constituting over 10% of GDP, which at the time stood at $8.2bn in 1992.
A night of Horror or what Kenyans came to refer as the black Sunday. The events of night of 13th-14th July 1991 at St Kizito secondary school in Meru county.
The death chamber that was a dormitory and the crazy deputy principal's remark to president Moi.
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St. Kizito was a coeducational boarding secondary school in Akithii Location, Meru County. It was named after Saint Kizito. The school was established in 1968. Initially, it began as an all-boys school and began admitting girls in 1975.
By 1991 the school had 577 students, between the ages of 14 and 18 – 306 boys and 271 girls. A combination of gender, that proved to be tragic and one that would cause stress and trauma for the longest time possible.
HOW TOM MBOYA ASSASSINATION TRIGGERED FEAR OF A CIVIL WAR IN KENYA IN 1969. And the the downfall of the Kikuyu and Luo relationship.
Tom Mboya died 52 years ago today .
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52 years ago, as the body of Tom Mboya, the assassinated Minister for Economic Planning, lay in a simple plush-lined casket beneath a yellow hibiscus tree in Lavington, an emergency Cabinet meeting was hurriedly convened by President Jomo Kenyatta in Gatundu.
The agenda included funeral arrangements and the security situation as violence spread throughout the country.There were fears that the assassination could exacerbate ethnic divisions, leading to a civil war.Despite the heavy deployment of GSU personnel, ethnic clashes continued.
Have you ever wondered why the sons and daughters of the colonial chiefs and guards who were collaborators live a good life while those of the MAU MAU fighters live in abject poverty?
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It should be known that the colonialists reached a point that they knew they had 2 leave Kenya since they couldn't handle the Mau Mau war & the world was moving toward accepting independent Africa.However,the colonialists devised an evil scheme that still eats Kenya upto this day
Under this scheme, the colonial state came up with a plan that saw the first crop of chiefly “big men” being empowered financially to take their children to schools and eventually have those children go to England for further studies...
You have heard of the 1982 1st August attempted coup in Kenya & that it was led by Senior Private Hezekiah Ochuka and Sergeant Pancras Oteyo Okumu who led a group of other air force soldiers.
But do you know how the coup was stopped?
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It is troops that wage war and the Generals take the credit but there is one former military gen who did both - he led from the front on the ground & got credit for the victory.The story of General Mohamed cannot be told without talking about the '82 coup attempt.
The casual manner in which the coup was planned makes it a laughing stock at any military academy on the planet.
The junior officers' body of plans made a perfect blueprint of how not to stage a coup.
Did you know apart from the golden handshake between Raila Odinga & Mwai kibaki in 2008 & the March 9th 2019 handshake between Raila Odinga & Uhuru Kenyatta,there was another attempted handshake of 1978 that failed? Why did it fail?
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After Kenya gained self rule in 1964, nobody imagined of a bitter divorce between the founding fathers of the nation Mzee jomo Kenyatta and his old friend jaramogi Oginga Odinga. The bitter fallout was caused by several factors that were precipitated by external forces.
Publicly it was known that Jomo and Oginga differed sharply on ideological differences in the line of capitalism and communism respectively. But apart from this there were deep propaganda information fed to Jomo.