Friday, December 11, 2015

woman vows to stop husband's wedding


Ms Kezziah Ngima during an interview- Photo By Faith Nyamai

BY FAITH NYAMAI
@faithnyamai
nyamai@gmail.com
A Nyeri woman has vowed to stop her estranged husband from legalizing his marriage with his second wife in a church wedding on Saturday for refusing he gives their 12 years old son his share of inheritance.
Ms Kezziah Ngima,38 years old is threatening to obtain a court order by Friday  and in the event the order is not issued by then she storm the wedding venue and declare to be the first customary married wife to Mr Danson Njuguna.
Her separated husband Mr Njuguna is scheduled to legalize his marriage with his second wife at the St Francis Asisi Catholic Church in Kasarani Nairobi.

According to Ms Ngima they had been customary married with Mr Njuguna from 2001 to 2010 and had together born two children, one is the 12 years old son while the other child died during delivery in 2006.
Ms Ngima said the two came to know each other in 1998 when she was a student while Mr Njuguna was her tutor at a college in Nakuru.
They visited her parents and Mr Njuguna paid her dowry in April, 3, 2001 after which they moved in together on a customary marriage as husband and wife living in Murang’a where he comes from.
At the time, Ms Ngima said she and her parents wanted they get married in church but they did not because he and his parents claimed they did not have enough money to hold a wedding.
“Disagreements started when we moved to Nairobi in 2006 and I got pregnant for our second born child,” she told the Daily Nation.
When her time to deliver came, she was taken to the Kenyatta National hospital where she was admitted, the doctors discovered a problem and they told her that it was a rapture.
“The doctor said it was already too late and that lead to the death of our baby. The doctors also said because of the rapture I could no longer give birth and to safe my life my uterus had to be removed” she said.
Mr Ngima said, soon after recovery her husband started mistreating her and would many times move out of their matrimonial home and started relating to another woman claiming he cannot continue living with a barren woman.
“ In 2010 March ,he left our house and moved in with another woman, leaving me alone with our son and he even went ahead and paid dowry for the second woman whom they are living together and wants to legalize their wedding with on Saturday” explained Ms Ngima.
She said, in October 2010, she filed a case in court seeking that Mr Njuguna supports and caters for the expenses of raising and educating their son.
On June 7, 2011 Nyeri resident Magistrate Joan Wambilyanga ordered Mr Njuguna to take his parental responsibility of his son. The court also ordered him to educate and pay for all medical expenses and a guardian up keep of Sh 10,000 per month and the cost of the suit.
Ms Ngima said that even after the ruling, Mr Njunguna has refused to support their son.
When contacted through phone Mr Njuguna said he did not want to discuss anything with the media.
Mr Njuguna said because Ms Nguma is out to shame him, he has cancelled the planned wedding but they will meet her on a separate place.
“I do not have my side of story, because she has succeeded in stopping the wedding I have cancelled it, I cannot stand that shame she wants to put me in,” said Mr Njuguna.
He added “I have talked to my lawyer and we shall be meeting her even if it is in court.”
The church is expected to officiate mass weddings where 36 couples will  formalize their marriages.
Efforts to get a comment from the priest in charge failed as call we placed went unanswered.


Tuesday, December 8, 2015

83 yeald old Grany asked to move from her 15 years old house.



Purity for the elderly foundation CEO helps Ms Zipporah Nyawira to seat on a stool outside her house.- Photo By Faith Nyamai




BY FAITH NYAMAI
@faithnyamai
nyamaif@gmail.com
On a day when Pope Francis emphatically talked on how to embrace the poor and showing compassion to the vulnerable people in the society, a granny ma in Amboni Village, Nyeri County has less than 72 hours to vacate a house she has lived for 15 years, after the landlord notified her to relocate.
The 81 year- old woman Zipporrah  Nyawira has been living  in the house with her eight grandchildren orphaned by her daughters and her 46 year old son since 2000.
According to Ms Nyawira, the land lord visited them on November 20 this month and informed them that she, her eight grandchildren and her son must relocate within 10 days as he has sold the parcel of land where the house the family has been calling their home.
The landlord also told them that he has plans to demolish the house to allow the new owner take control of the land.
“I do not know where to relocate to neither do I know where to take all these grandchildren I am their father and at the same time I am their mother,” she emotionally told the Nation yesterday during an interview.
The now helpless granny man who can barely move around to feed her family except by supporting herself with a stick has been depending on well-wishers to educate her grandchildren who are aged between eight and 17 years-old.
His third born son who is also the only living engages himself in casual jobs in the neighbourhood to enable him get food for the mother and the grandchildren.
According to the son, Mr  James Maina, 46,the family had been moving from one rental house to another for many years because they did not own any land until they moved in to the house where they have lived in good relationship with the land lord.
“We had been living so peacefully in the three roomed wooden house paying a monthly rent of Sh 200 per room, but with time the structures got destroyed forcing my mother to share one room with all the eight children, four boys and four girls left by my deceased siblings.” he said.
He added that what pains them most is because a month ago, they approached the landlord to allow them allow non-governmental organizations to help them repair the house because the house was leaking.
According to the Purity for the Elderly Foundation, an NGO based in Nyeri Ms Joyce Wanjiku Kairo the organization spend Sh 52,000 to repair the house for the family.
“ Before we did the repairs, the house was leaking and we had to buy double decker beds, beddings,  mattresses, irons sheets and other roofing materials  and repaired the house to give the granny ma and her grandchildren to live in a decent house,” said Ms Kairo.
However when reached by the Nation via mobile Phone, the landlord Mr Simoni Murange said he sold the land on November 11 this month the new owner have him  one month to remove all his structures.
“ I also informed the son that I have sold the land and so they should vacate to allow the new owner to take possession of the land” Said Mr Murange.
Mr Murange denied that he had given the family 10 days to vacate saying that they have until December 11 to relocate.
This sounding like one of the poor people that Pope Francis referred to as he addressed slum dwellers in Kangemi .Pope Francis condemned denial of basic  services to the poor.
The family is now left in the hands of well-wishers to help them find a new home.

Nurturing Self-Value: The Key to Personal Growth

  Self- value  is a critical component of personal growth and well-being. It encompasses people's views and opinions of their own worth,...