If you started flying after September 2001, you missed out on an experience. This weekend marks the 20th anniversary of the September 11, 2001 (9/11) attacks, when terrorists hijacked four aircraft to crash them into landmark American buildings. - @bankelele
It was a day that changed the aviation industry forever.
People who grew up and started flying in the last 20 years may not know that the requirements of several security checks, removing shoes and not carrying liquids through airports and onto planes may still seem abnormal for those who had flown before 9/11.
Before 9/11, airports in many cities were more like shopping malls that were open to anyone, and going to the airport was a fun experience.
Airports had exclusive clothing shops and fancy restaurants that were not found in towns. Some had museums and other attractions like tours of different airport operations.
It was also a big deal for people to escort and receive all kinds of passengers, not just those going on major international trips such as university studies.
In some airports, you could walk up to or wait to receive someone right at the gate of their aircraft. This would also happen at the JKIA in Nairobi if the person were a VIP or if you knew someone who worked in the airport.
9/11 happened just before the cell phone era so if someone was transiting through an airport in your city, you could arrange to see them when they landed at the airport, have a meeting or dine with them and then go home as they continued to the next flight.
Most airports had one security checkpoint and airlines were responsible for security, a service which they subcontracted at a cost. You could arrive at the airport one hour ahead for an international flight and not be late.
There was a level of trust and boarding passes were often not checked unless two people had a dispute over a seat. People sometimes boarded the wrong plane, like in the movie Home Alone 2.
During a flight, you could request to visit the cockpit to chat with the pilots as they steered the aircraft over the clouds. Pilots would also walk into the cabin on a long flight to greet their VIPs or reassure anxious passengers and stretch their legs.
There were two other notable plane passenger incidents in 2001.
On New Year's morning, a Kenyan man rushed into the cockpit of a British Airways plane flying from London to Nairobi. He briefly seized the controls before he was pulled away and detained.
Then three months after the 9/11 attacks, a British man on another international flight lit a match and tried to set his shoe on fire. He had a bomb hidden inside, but the smell of smoke attracted the attention of other passengers and the flight crew who subdued him.
And since then the rest of us have had to remove our shoes for security checks, and explain all liquids in our luggage, whether water or perfumes.
Large bottles are confiscated along with nail cutters and pen-knives. And these days pilots lock themselves behind secure cockpit doors until the flight ends.
Collectively, these incidents changed the flying experience permanently.
Much as the Covid-19 pandemic has changed our lives, with masks and social distancing, we hope these new norms will end in a few months and not be with us for two decades.
A booming shadow industry of Twitter influencers for hire funded by faceless agencies has been behind the highly co-ordinated harassment and disinformation campaigns aimed at changing the country’s political direction as we head to the 2022 polls. - @NationAfrica
Twitter has suspended 100 users from Kenya after an investigation showed that their accounts had violated the platforms manipulation and spam policy through tweeting pre-determined hashtags meant to misinform the public or attack certain personalities.
The decision by Twitter was taken after a three-month investigation by American internet provision company Mozilla. The probe showed that Kenyan influencers are being paid between Sh1,000 to Sh1,500 to participate in three campaigns per day on Twitter.
Credit providers will now require written consent from borrowers to have their information shared with other lenders. - @StandardKenya
It will also be unlawful for creditors to request more than the necessary information as stipulated in a code of conduct launched by the Credit Information Sharing Association of Kenya (CIS Kenya).
The document was unveiled yesterday to guide the industry on how information is shared among them under the Banking (Credit Reference Bureau) Regulations, 2020 and @CBKKenya has given a nod to the code of conduct.
Kenya's charismatic species such as elephants, rhinos, lions, giraffe, Grevy’s zebra, and hirola have increased, the findings of the first-ever census shows. - @TheStarKenya
However, there were relatively lower records of the plain game species, the National Wildlife Census 2021 report which was unveiled on Monday shows.
Over 30 mammal species, birds and marine species were counted in various ecosystems during the census that was launched by Tourism CS Najib Balala on May 7 at Shimba Hills National Reserve in Kwale county.
In December last year, while on his death-bed, Dr Stephen Mogusu managed to contact @NationAfrica. In a long message, he left behind a grim, detailed picture of what President Uhuru’s ‘golden baby’ -- the Universal Health Coverage (UHC) programme -- had become. - @LeonLidigu
All the gallant frontline warrior wanted was for things to be better for many Kenyans as well as the doctors seeking affordable health services, but eight months after his death, things seem to have gone from bad to worse.
“I contracted the virus ... sasa niko (I am in) self-isolation ... I have never seen death this close in my life…" were some of the last sentences Dr. Mogusu could piece together before the virus overpowered his body.
Human’s impulse to communicate, stay in touch with the world, and the advances in technology, have had a profound effect on the evolution of social media. - @sokodirectory
And in a little more than a decade, its impact has gone from being an entertaining extra to a fully integrated part of nearly every aspect of daily life for many.
Social media has grown beyond establishing and nurturing personal connections at scale. What began as a desktop/laptop experience has significantly shifted to mobile devices and tablets as cellular services and phone proliferation expanded.