Four Young Graduates Build Exclusive 30-Home Estate In Kenya

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Sigona Valley

VENTURES AFRICA – Four young Kenyan entrepreneurs have staked their fortunes on the high-flying real estate sector to create Sigona Valley, a 30-home multimillion shilling, gated community, in a serene environment in West Nairobi..

The exclusive estate which was launched in March 2012 is currently going through infrastructural installations and is expected to be completed between May and August, next year.

Already, half of the homes have been sold.

Although, the dream of the proprietors of Serene Valley Properties Limited was almost aborted when 12 different banks would not grant loans for the execution of the project. The project was eventually facilitated with secure non-bank, development funds from a Development Finance Institution (DFI), an establishment charged with promoting national development through funding private initiatives.

60 per cent of the project funding was provided by the DFI at a low interest rate, while the young graduates provided the development land as equity.

Mr. Kimiti Wanjaria, Director, Serene Valley Properties Limited, recounted: “We then approached Hass Consult to model and manage the project on a pre-sale basis to raise ongoing funds from buyers’ deposits.”

At Sigona Valley, the young investors have priced the houses to attract the middle-income market segment to an area with significant growth and capital appreciation potential.

The development is offering 3 and 4 bedroom villas in three different hous designs for between Sh12m and Sh16m ($142, 348 – $190, 000), in a tranquil gated community set on 4 acres, a stone’s throw from Waiyaki Way and 5km from Sigona Golf Club.

Fashion Designer Alexander McQueen Left $82,000 To His Dogs

JACKAL NEWS – Fashion designer Alexander McQueen, who committed suicide in February 2010, designated 50,000 pounds ($82,000) towards the care of his three dogs — Minter, Juice, and Callum, pictured — according to the will made public on Tuesday.

The bulk of his 16 million pound estate went to his Sarabande charity, which supports scholarships for art and design studies. His five siblings were left 250,000 pounds each, and his “two household staff members, godson and all of his nieces and nephews” were provided also 50,000 pounds each. Finally, two animal charities were left 100,000 pounds each.

Very sad and touching. Less so, however, is John Galliano’s will, which explicitly bequeaths “a million-and-a-half kisses to Hitler’s ghost.” [Guardian, photo via Getty]

Half Of Men Would Dump Their Girlfriends For Getting Fat

JACKAL NEWS – According to Ask Men’s annual Great Male/Female Surveys, half of all straight men say they would dump a girlfriend who got fat. 20 percent of straight women say they’d dump a boyfriend who got fat.

Silver lining: Half of straight men also think can tell when women fake orgasms, and another half say they would be upset if they discovered their ladies had been faking orgasms. So, with any luck, these are all the same half of men, and when they dump their fat girlfriends, the girls respond, “All my orgasms were fake, anyway.” [Ask Men, image via Shutterstock]

Let’s Settle This Once and For All: What Exactly Is Sexting?

JACKAL NEWS – It goes like this: horny teenagers have always been horny.
Then they got cellphones, and used them to exchange raunchy pics with each other. Horrified parents demanded an explanation, and “sexting” was born. But what does that mean, exactly? This.

“Sexting” has become as nebulous as it is overhyped. And this is problematic, because the definitions in use are as ambiguous as they are many. Some say a sext is just a naked pic. Some say it’s flirty. Some say it’s sexually-suggestive or sexually themed. “Sexually-themed” being one of those wonderfully American catch-all danger words. It can be kissing! It can be nudity! It can be—sex. Is saying “I wanna make out with you” a sext? What if I include a picture of my penis with that message? What if it’s just the picture?

Nobody seems to agree—and that’s a problem. We’re swept up an exciting new word that has the potential to help unseat politicians, but we’re not exactly sure what we’re talking about.

With every wave of technology, we accumulate new words. Upload. Delete. Google. These are fine, because their meanings are technically clear, and innocuous. But sexting is something one’s accused of—an act with some degree of shame accompanying it. It might be a lot of fun (I mean, right?), but you wouldn’t want to talk about doing it over Thanksgiving dinner.

So let’s set things straight right now.

Sexting is a portmanteau of sex and texting. Agreed? Good. We’ll stick with that. It’s not sexual texting, or sexually themed texting—it’s sex texting. Texting as a simulacrum of doin’ it. Remember cybersex?

:<<OH YEAH, I AM TAKING OFF YOUR PANTS NOW. HOLD ON MY MODEM IS DOWNLOADING THE REST OF YOUR BRA.

There wasn’t any confusion about cybersex. Like phone sex before it, cybersex was the acting out of sexual performances via internet. Sexting is the same thing. If I tell you I want to make out via text, I’m not sexting. If I say I want to rip off your pants and push you up against a wall (in a sweet way!), I’m probably sexting. If you send me back a naked picture with a reply to that effect, now we’re both sexting.

If I just send you an unsolicited cell snapshot of my junk, I’m not a sexter—I’m a pervert. If you’re my girlfriend and I do it, I’m still not sexting—there’s no message, no action—just “Here, look at my blurry genitals.”

So let’s stop being confused. And moreover, let’s stop being afraid! It’s a little dystopian and indicative of an alienated and repressed society, but pretending we’re having sex with electronics can be a lot of fun! So open up your phone, scroll down that contact list, and say some freaky shit. Dong shot optional.

Photo: Poulsons Photography/Shutterstock

Couple Busted For Having Sex In Public Pool For 30 Minutes

JACKAL NEWS – Feeling the heat? Why not take your kids down to Indiana’s Roberts Park Family Aquatic Center? Just try not to look at the two people having sex in the pool!

Or, y’know, go ahead and look at them—apparently “dozens of witnesses, including children” were witness to the union of 33-year-old Myron Helms and 40-year-old Victoria Cross (though one parent stood near the couple so as to guard her kids from getting close). Pool manager Cindy Schwab asked the couple to stop (“she could see the male’s penis,” according to the police report), and then called the police.

The pool later “added additional chemicals to the pool and recycled its water,” thank God (still better than having a dead body float in your pool for two days!).

[The Smoking Gun; image via Shutterstock]

Woman Accused Of Having Sex With Boy Says She’s The Real Victim


JACKAL NEWS – Candice Smith lost her job at a group home for kids after bosses accused her of having sex with a 14-year-old boy.
Now she faces criminal charges — but she says he raped her.

A tipster tells us that Smith was fired in October from her job at the Tamassee DAR School in South Carolina, a group home which lists its mission as “supporting children and families in crisis through residential, educational, and outreach services.” The reason, allegedly: a 14-year-old student there claimed Smith gave him cigarettes and money to have sex with her. On Facebook, however, she tells a different story:

I treated these kids like my own children. Then one of them forced himself on me.

I was thunderstruck at the time. Horrified. How could this broken, hurt child have betrayed all the trust and love I’d given to him? How would I ever be able to tell anyone? Shocked and terrified of losing my job and freedom, I told no one. […] I should have, because it happened again. And again. And again. And again. For three months this child forced himself on me, demanded I bring him cigarettes and alcohol, that I hand over my credit cards (I managed to get him to take money instead). He threatened me constantly, said he would “make me sorry,” “make all my money disappear.” He told me he’d steal my car, told me he thought about how much he wanted to kill me… and I just disappeared.

Then, she says, “the kid soured on me — I wouldn’t give a report that another kid had “tried to kill him” because that wasn’t the case — and because I didn’t give this kid his way, he said we’d been having ‘consensual sex.'” She says she’ll be arrested any day for sexual misconduct with a minor. She’s also made a series of videos about her case. In one, she describes being interrogated by police officers, one of whom allegedly told her, “what I think is you got into something that went a little bit more than you wanted it to, […] and you’ve never had any boyfriends so you probably liked the attention.”

Smith’s case remains extremely murky. Her last video was posted yesterday — as yet, she doesn’t appear to have been arrested. Neither she nor Tamassee DAR officials have yet responded to my request for comment. The Oconee County Sheriff’s Office is still addressing my request. Tamassee DAR’s 2010 annual report includes a column by “Miss Candice,” in which Smith writes about meeting her students for the first time:

As the kids arrived, the Residential Manager introduced them to me one by one, my heart quieted, beating steady. I became aware of the realization of an absolute truth: Tamassee is the place for me.

This first meeting remains stamped on the backs of my eyelids. I cherish each moment my heart first encountered another heart in crisis.

Little is clear for now about Smith’s crisis — all we have is the unusual story of a woman and a boy, both of whom accuse the other of a sex crime. Hopefully time will reveal who’s telling the truth.

VOCAL [Facebook]

Epitome Of A Bad Father: Rihanna’s D-Bag Of A Daddy Says He Loves Him Some Chris Brown And Tells Poor RihRih That She’s Fat

Posted on March 8th, 2012 – By Bossip Staff

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Rihanna and Father Ronald Fenty

This guy is a piece of work:

Rihanna’s dad won’t be getting any father of the year awards, judging from a new interview. Not only is Ronald Fenty taking credit for Rihanna’s sleek physique, saying that he prodded her to workout by calling her “fat,” he also revealed that he would be fine if Rihanna were to rekindle her romance with Brown, who plead guilty to assaulting the singer in a lover’s quarrel turned physical in 2009.

”Chris is a nice guy and everybody’s entitled to make mistakes in their life. God knows how many I’ve made,” Fenty tells the new issue of Heat magazine, when asked about the singer collaborating with her ex on two songs. “She’s her own woman now.”

“I actually thought she was a little fat the last time I saw her,” he said. “When I saw her at this year’s Grammys, I thought she was back to her normal size. I used to joke with her, ‘Robyn,you’re getting too fat.’ But I think she’s fine. I think she looked excellent, as everyone saw, at the Grammys. She’s dieting, she’s working out.”
After two years of not speaking, Rihanna and Fenty only started communicating again in 2010. At the time of their reunion, Fenty said, “Maybe we’re not as close as we were when she was growing up here … But we are blood, we do not stay angry.”

Who keeps asking this man to open his mouth??? SMH. What a wankster.

Source

Genevieve Nnaji And Osaze Odemwinge Seals N50m Endorsement Deal

 

Genevieve Nnaji And Osaze Odemwinge Seals N50m Endorsement Deal

General, Movies & TV, News — By on January 26, 2012 3:15 pm

Genevieve

Genevieve given a 50m deal

Genevieve Nnaji And Osaze Odemwinge Seals N50m Endorsement Deal With South African Company

Super Eagles prolific striker, Osaze Odemwinge, and Nollywood  star Actress Genevieve Nnaji, have sealed a N50m Ambassadorial deal respectively, from a South African company which produces Cintrion Energy drink.

The duo are arguably the most talked about personalities in their individual profession,  and because of the fame and quality of service they have given and amassed in recent times, the South African brand decided to award them the deal to remain influence to African Youths.

We say congratulations to them.

All About Maina Kageni. His Life. His Career..

All About Maina Kageni. His Life. His Career..

Feb 21st, 2012 | By | Category: Celeb on the Spot

Inspite of what people say about him, he walks with his head held high and he will not be cowed by the rumours swirling around his lifestyle. He gave Julie Masiga of PASSION Magazine the absolute final words about his life.

Interview By Julie Of Passion Magazine.
A few years ago, a rather hopeful editor put me on assignment to glean some answers from a list of questions he had put to Maina Kageni, the exuberant radio host who is increasingly becoming the ladies man, for his pro-women views.

Hiding my nervousness under a confident, but somewhat shaky exterior, I made first contact, immediately encountering a scheduling nightmare of ridiculous proportions. It took several phone calls and a similar
amount of weeks to pin the man down. Finally, I got him at the other end of a table and quickly realised that getting him to sit down had not been my greatest challenge. Getting him to speak was.

Years later, the man has changed. It took exactly one phone call, and a subsequent meeting to organise this interview. I might mention that while he answered my calls, he was not as courteous to my editor, but then again, anyone who listens to Classic 105 knows he is partial to the ladies.

Because we had begun on such a cooperative note, once again I was hopeful that he would be forthcoming with all the intimate details. Let’s just say I remain hopeful. But luckily with Maina, it is more about what he does not say than what he says.

Take for example our arrangements for this interview. I was not in the least bit surprised when he offered to buy me lunch at Buffet Park. It is something one would expect because while Maina might have more money than God, his feet remain firmly on the earth, and they can usually be found under that famed guava tree.

He is endearingly modest about his wealth. “Who says I’m rich? I earn enough and I try to live a quality lifestyle. I’m just rich at heart.”

That said, he owns a couple of condos in Miami, Florida, which he is quick to say were bought on a mortgage, and a couple of homes here too. He also has various business interests in Kenya and on the continent.

From the little he reveals about his commercial ventures, one might conclude that he is building a conglomerate. His enterprises are diverse, ranging from endorsement contracts to real estate and many things in between. He even owns a modelling agency in Lagos with one of the P-Square brothers. Incidentally, Uti Nwachukwu from the Big Brother All Star House is one of his models.

He is certainly a man of contradictions. Dressing him for the shoot was a quite a production. Few people have a problem with looking too smart, but apparently he does. “I don’t do suits! That’s not me. Tuxedoes maybe, but suits? No.”

For him it is either ultra-casual or uber smart, nothing in between. But even in his wardrobe staple -jeans, sneakers and a tee shirt – he looks laid back, but not cheap, or shabby.

With Maina, you do find that the pendulum swings from one extreme to the other. He is such a regular at Buffet Park that he is on a first name basis with the waiting staff. If you found him pouring libations under that guava tree, you might conclude that he is a simple man with simple tastes. Not so.

He tells a story about what was formerly known as Thika Road but is now just a labyrinth of dusty diversions. “I was just reappointed Guinness brand ambassador and we had a meeting at East African Breweries in Ruaraka. At 1 pm the traffic was a mess. One night I had an activation at Jambo Grill which ended at 5am. I imagined trying to navigate that road at that time and decided to sleep at Safari Park Hotel.” It is not every man who will fork out tens of thousands of shillings on a whim, just to avoid driving home, less than 20 kilometres away.

In Maina, you find a curious meeting of bourgeoisie and working class values. He will not wear a suit, but he will wear a tuxedo. He will drink at Buffet, but sleep at Safari Park. He watches Nigerian movies, but vacations in Miami. Obviously money does not define who he is, for him, it is simply a means to a very happy end.

But I digress. We had agreed to meet at 1pm but it is almost 2 when he arrives in the black Hummer that is almost as well known as Maina himself. He holds court as we sit on simple wooden benches with the breeze for a blanket and the sky as our shelter.

A bottle of vodka in hand, he gives audience to a steady stream of friends and fans that came to call. “I have been drinking everyday for 12 years. I don’t know what I would do if I stopped drinking.”

When I suggest that he might have a drinking problem he is not having any of it. “I can stop if I want to. During Lent I cut down even though I am not a staunch Christian. I only drank wine which is well within Biblical parameters!

Drinking for me is a social activity. What else is there to do? Life would be so boring because you would feel like you are not part of the party.”

His interactions with the public are so seamless, it is almost as if he makes a considered effort to treat everyone as an equal – women especially. I put it to him that he is a feminist. He is not too comfortable with the title but nevertheless readily admits that he does stand up for women. “Don’t you see how badly Kenyan women are treated? That is why I am on their side. Women are stereo-typed and everything is their fault. I was brought up by a very successful, strong woman and my sister is also a very strong character. Women deserve more than they get from their men.”

We launch into an extended dialogue about the comments men make on the Classic 105 Breakfast Show with Maina and King’ang’i, ultimately concluding that as a nation, we have issues. “As a matter of fact, we spend about sh400,000 a month on counselling some of our callers. It is that bad.”

But he is not a bleeding heart gender activist. He just calls it as he sees it. As we speak, in a segue that seems slightly contrary to his on air persona, he alleges that women enjoy sex more than men. “It is a fact,” he asserts, looking me in the eye. Obviously, for Maina, hosting a radio show is much more than just a job. He takes it personal.

When we hear him speak with such conviction, it is not an act, it is straight from the heart. It comes so naturally that it has never dawned on him that by defending women, they would come to see him as a role model-a label he recoils from. “I am no role model. I drink alot!

But I know that I am here to fulfil a purpose. Everybody is, you just have to figure it out. Mine is to help a few people here and there, and so far everyone I have helped is doing OK.”

Ironically, the radio career that has opened so many doors for him, and many others by extension, was never part of the plan. “I got on radio by pure fluke. DJ Pinye and I had brought over some deejays from the United Kingdom and we went to Capital FM to book air time to advertise the gig. We were then asked for sh40,000 for the voiceover. We did not have any more cash so I offered to do it. John Wilkins liked it and offered me a job! Basically, if I had that money on me, I would not be on radio!”

Maina has no training in journalism or psychology but he gets by. “I guess my career comes down to not having 40 grand!”

But he is well-schooled having attended the prestigious Msingi Bora Kindergarten, before joining Westlands Primary School and later the Laiser Hill Academy. He then went on a working holiday of sorts to the UK and the US, where he started doing everything from washing dishes at McDonalds to driving delivery trucks and selling cars.

Before he settled at Classic 105, he worked for 96.4 Nation FM (now Easy FM) and for KISS 100.

Over the years, he has narrowed his on-air focus to relationship issues. “It is not about sex. It is about relationships, and they always touch on sex. There was an unfulfilled market and we went for it. We realised that whenever we did relationship stuff on Wednesdays and Fridays, the response was huge. So we thought, ‘…why not do this full time?’ I am glad we did.”

But now, with more than 10 years under his belt, he is ready to move on. “Hopefully, if my plans pan out, by next year I will be off the air. If not, you are going have to put up with me for a while longer!”

When he is not on the air, at the bar, on the golf course or in Miami, he spends his time nursing a very curious TV habit: Watching Nigerian movies. And cricket. He tried to explain to me something about wickets, innings and outings but I was not getting it, so we moved on.

“I would like to have kids, but a family? No. The institution of marriage has changed and I do not think I have changed with it. It is all good when you have a long-term sweetie you can marry, but I doubt I will find someone who will love me enough for me to say,’OK, lock me up in the jail that is marriage and throw away the key!’”

Marriage or no marriage his life is full. From the number of people who call him friend, he would probably make for a very popular politician for his adoring fans are legion, and they love him.

Despite that, there is still much speculation about his lifestyle choices. That niggling rumour about his sexual orientation refuses to go away. “I don’t know why people are so caught up about whether I am gay or not. Maybe we need more Nigerian movies on telly to occupy their time! I am not bothered about what they think because an opinion is like a bad tooth…most people have one.” I accept this nonchalant world view with a pinch of salt, because, with Maina, it is less about what he says, and more about what he does not.

Whether he is gay or not is neither here nor there, and certainly no one’s business but his own. But I cannot help but feel that he has grown weary of being a conversation piece, constantly discussed like an abstract painting on display.

Every so often, he gets a wary look about him, like an impala being circled by lions (which he saw for the first time in the flesh in Maasai Mara last month) not knowing when one among the ravenous pride will strike the fatal blow.

For me, he is the embodiment of loneliness, a man surrounded by people and yet very much alone. He gives some credence to my theory when he admits that he likes his own company. “If I have a bottle of whiskey, I can spend the whole weekend at home, watching Nigerian movies, cricket or golf. I can socialise with myself.”

Maina wa Wangui is a man of many characters but you would never tell for looking at his poker face.

Few of us will ever know the man behind the mask. His mum Wangui, is probably the only person who can reveal the secrets of his heart as she is the one woman that he loves the most.

His father died when he was very young. “My dad passed on when I was a toddler. It is sad but I never knew him. My biggest memory of him was one night when I was sick and he offered his palms for me to vomit in.”

Maina himself seems to live in the present, not seeming to have any definitive thoughts about the future. “If I get to 60, I will probably still be a Scotch guzzler. But if I do not, my epitaph might be something like, ‘…there goes the guy who could drink a bottle of Scotch in one sitting.’ Well if I am honest, maybe not. I hope I will be well spoken of.”

Time as they say, will tell. And as always, to quote him, his listeners might be the ones to have the absolute final word.

Source: Passion Magazin

Standard Media Group Payroll Leaked.

Standard Media Group Payroll Leaked.

Mar 1st, 2012 | By | Category: Hot Gossip

Source: Jackalnews Kenya & Citizen Weekly.
Standard Group employees’ (April 2011) payroll has been leaked, exposing a horror in salary discrepancies in the Mombasa Road-based media giant, notably earnings in the editorial staff where the hard working reporters and cameramen are paid close to nothing while the fat dogs on the top take home all the cash home, according to the controversial Citizen Weekly.

God come down and save their tears.

The group’s deputy chairman Paul Melly earns a gross salary of Ksh 1.3 million a month, beating the lowest earning employee by nearly the same amount, an exposure that might compel Kenyan media to
review their salaries scales and ask God to help them survive in the media market that is under massive pressure, sources explained.

“Most editorial staff between Ksh 40,000- 60,000 while the top managers who double up as directors earn from Ksh 400,000 and above,” according to a source.  “Oh my God, I am looking for another job; if this is what is happening in Standard Group, I am read” a top Standard Group source told the Jackal News.

Meanwhile, massive shock, despair and excitement descended on the Standard Group after the Jackal News re-published the leaked payroll, exposing a horror of salary discrepancies in the group. And staff reacted. “People are shocked and demoralized after discovering what others earn while they do the same work,” a source told the Jackal News after the list went viral.

Another source added: “These small people who are underpaid are very happy. They want the world to see what is going in this company. The top managers are hiding in their offices wondering what to do next.” “This is the best thing that has ever happened to Standard Group and now we are demanding change,” the source added.

Several other sources called the Jackal News desk to complain that their salaries were much lower than what has been published. “The story on salaries is not true n I don’t earn that, part of this list is so 2008,” the source said on total confidentiality. “It is a bit unfair to publish such (the list) without checking if it’s the truth. We all want to be paid better, but u (what you) published and what Citizen Weekly published so malicious.”

Another source added: “Anchors, apart from the salaries, get responsibility allowances that include: make-up, wardrobe, hair allowances every month, which is way more than their gross salaries are. In addition, there is an allowance if you fly.”

Note: The fellow who leaked the information redacted some names and some of the employees have since fled the company to greener pastures. The list reflects gross salaries as of April 2011.
Group Managing Editor John Bindotich:  Ksh 596,090

Assistant Director Creative Peter Ndungu Gachui:  Ksh 546,140

Assistant Director Commercial Lawrence Njiru: Ksh 596,090

Assitant Director, HR, Legal Human Resource: Ksh 646, 090

Assistant Manager Finance Dickson Changwony: Ksh 207, 340

Deputy Managing Editor Fredirick Mbugua: Ksh 315, 698

Deputy Managing Editor Peter Okongo: Ksh 315,698

Technical Director John Opiyo: Ksh 1.3 million

Finance And Commercial Director Channa Sarvjeet: Ksh 974,090

Deputy Chairman Paul Melly: Ksh 1.4 million

Production HOD George Okoth: Ksh 335,498

Technical HOD Thomas Owuor: Ksh 292, 998

S and D HOD Moses Ocholla: Ksh 302,348

ICT HOD: Richard Kiprop: Ksh 444,098

Manager ICT John Kamonde: Ksh 241,779

Manager Finance: Gavid Gacheru: Ksh 242, 279

Manager, HR, Legal and Admin: Ksh 287, 279

Production Manager Michael Ndetei: Ksh 280, 879

Managing Editor Oketch Kendo: Ksh489,098

Managing Editor: Paul Woka: Ksh 324,448

Managing Editor Zipporah Musau: Ksh 433,848

Managing Editor Katua Nzile: Ksh 392,789

Managing Editor Kizito Namulanda: Ksh 354,123

Associate Editor Peter Kimani: Ksh 186,128

Associate Editor Beatrice Marshal: Ksh 273, 548

Senior Manager Finance Mohamed Zainab: Ksh 300,348

Business Manager Commercial James Sogoti: Ksh 407, 148

Business Manager Commercial Robert Nderitu: Ksh 327,148

Business Manager Commercial Veronica Ocholla: Ksh 327,148

Business Manager Commercial Betty Kuremwa: Ksh 407,148

Commercial Team Leader Joseph Onditi: Ksh 227,279

Commercial Team Leader Juma Harre: Ksh 213,348

Commercial Team Leader Harun Ngugu: Ksh 273, 348

Commercial Team Leader Ruth Murage: Ksh 273, 348

Commercial Team Leader Stanley Mwangi: Ksh 273, 348

Standard Newspaper Journalists (amount below in shillings)
Amran Athman – 109,301

Maarufu Mohamed – 104, 706

Mohamed Hussein – 142, 968

Susan Kasera – 156, 654

Martin Mutua – 117, 438

Moses Andayi – 52,500

Isaac Okoth – 115,000

Benson Riungu: 105,000

Joseph Muiruri: 138,000

Simon Wainyoike: 39,200

Mercy Githinji 30,000

Jacob Otieno: 142, 968

Andrew Gathaara: 164,514

Julius Mokaya: 130,000

Peter Macharia: 149,676

Richard Kerama: 150,000

Andrew Kipkemboi: 115,833

Patrick Mathangani: 100,000

Bacj Linda Arth: 100,000

Tabitha Otwori: 70,000

William Murugi: 95,000

Evelyn Kwamboka: 80,000

Kagundu Njiru: 121,000

Dorothy Otieno: 85,000

Dennis Mongoa: 59,000

Amos Kareithi: 65,000

Cyrus Kiyungu: 105,000

Bismark Mutahi: 65,000

Alex Kaguchu: 75,000

Robin Chepsingor: 80,000

Alex Kiprotich: 60,000

Lilian Aluanga: 65,000

Anderson Onjwang: 57,750

Otuma Ongalo: 141,750

Fred Biketi: 100,000

Titus Asiba: 63,000

Ann Kamoni: 52,500

Kenneth Kwama: 80,000

Jesse Kamwaro: 30,000

Charles Otieno: 140,000

Kipkurui Kemboi: 66,000

Jibril Adan: 100,000

Lynet Otieno: 85,000

Charles Njaramba: 66,000

Stephene  Ndegwa: 60,000

Judith Ogutu: 52,500

Oscar Obonyo: 115,500

Gakuu Mathenge: 125,000

Elizabeth Mwai: 50,000

Jane Kenda: 60,000

John Oywa: 90,000

George Mulala: 75,000

Irene Owino: 65,000

Martin Mwangi: 80,000

Ezra Mutuota: 60,000

James Mwanzia: 65,000

James waindi: 50,000

Patrick Govedi: 75,000

Dan Okoth: 80,000

Nicholas Asego: 80,000

Michael Onyango: 80,000

Rose Mwaura: 65,000

Samuel Ithula: 85,000

Antony Ngare: 75,000

Steven Mwendo: 65,000

Millice Muthoni: 85,000

Peter Kibera: 75,000

Joshua Agwanda: 75,000

Pocyline Kungu: 65,000

Licianne Limo: 50,000

Allan Kisia: 50,000

Samuel Khamala: 65,000

Moses Njagi: 45,000

Stephen Mkawale: 50,000

Beatrice Obwocha: 50,000

Francis Muigai: 45,000

Peter Kedete: 50,000

Aphaeu Ngumbao: 50,000

Stephen Makabila: 80,000

Roselyn Obala: 60,000

Charles Ndegwa: 65,000

Vincent Moracha: 65,000

Solomon Omondi: 65,000

Francis Wambilyanga: 81,500

Joel Odidi: 65,000

Roselyne Nzioka: 160,000

Andrew Kilonzo: 80,000

Brenda Kageni: 55,000

John Muchiri: 60,000

Simon Kayugira: 80,000

Peter Opiyo: 55,000

James Ratemo: 55,000

Leonard Kwayera: 110,000

Zablon Omondi: 65,000

James Mwanba: 60,000

Hellen Miseda: 65,000

Thabita Areba: 60,000

Shadrack Mulei: 60,000

Nancy Odera: 60,000

Wafula Naliaka: 65,000

Elizabeth Kinoti 80,000

Dorcas Muga: 80,000

Isaac Wahome: 80,000

Kwamboka Oyaro: 130,000

James Anyanzwa: 80,000

Susan Karuoya: 130,000

Jackson Okoth: 50,000

Kipchumba Some: 60,000

Martin Machi: 60,000

Changole Adelai: 60,000

Isaiah Lucheli: 40,000

Vincent Bartoo: 40,000

Jamah Ali: 50,000

Winnie Rono: 50,000

Caroline Wahome: 90,000

KTN JOURNALISTS:

John Mutahi: 100,000

Aggrey Mutali: 95,000

Francis Githae 120,000

John  Mwangi: 92,400

Geoffey Miringu: 92,400

Kiplim Sum: 69,000

Robert Sio: 125,000

Anne Ngugi: 160,000

Henry Marete: 131,000

Patrick Mugo: 70,000

Swaleh Ahmed: 170,000

Mwanaisha Chidzuga: 170,000

Emmanuel Talaam: 120,000

Murauya Kariuki: 108,000

Purity Mwambia: 80,000

Dan Iman: 68,000

Dorcas Mwangi: 50,000

Isabella Mwagodi: 108,000

Mwendwa Kiogora: 75,000

Ondeko Aura: 210,000

Bonface Odinga: 81,000

Samuel Kantai: 56,000

Yusuf Lakicha: 120,000

Joshua Kengagor: 85,000

Domonic Ndinda: 55,000

David Kaigi: 70,000

David Mwanda: 50,000

John Allan Namu: 155,000

Celestine Karoney: 50,000

Carol Nderi: 50,000

Antony Hassan: 50,000

Victor Mwasi: 55,000

Cynthia Nyamai 75,000

Zipporah Karani: 55,000

Innocent Mganga: 90,000

Frank Omollo: 60,000

Mohammed Ali: 186,000

Ali Manzu: 160,000

Esther Kahumbi: 55,000

Damaris Katavi: 55,000

Peter Njuguna: 50,000

Winnie Kamau: 40,000

Martin Kioo: 40,000

Joseph Kariuki: 40,000

Gadvi Narhadas: 90,000

Noah Otieno: 75,000

Nicholas Mburu: 50,000

Anne Sio: 69,000

Khadija Hassan: 130,000

Evelyn Kinyanjiu: 60,000

James Karani: 50,000

Edith Kimani: 110,000

Kathy Omwandho: 50,000

Angel Katyusia: 50,000

Rose Halima: 45,000

Tony Biwott: 50,000

Moses Sweri: 50,000

James Muturi: 57,750

Anne Kiguta: 180,000

RADIO MAISHA

John Muli: 70,000

Irene Kaimuri: 45,000

Kenneth Wariahe: 65,000

Benard Odinga: 50,000

Mark Nyongesa: 100,000

Alex Mwakideu: 76,136

James Chanji: 86.773

Mary Jeruto: 38,000

Hassan Ali: 88,182

Emman Mwashumbe: 64,318