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Morning Rains and Night Showers Expected this week in Kitui County

By JOHN MUSEMBI 

Morning rains and night showers may intermittently occur over several places in Kitui County this week according to a weather forecast report. The Kenya Meteorological Department further notes, "sunny intervals are expected during the day, with partly cloudy conditions at night".
Weather forecast for Kitui county for the third week of April 2026. |KMD

Strong winds have been forecast to persist across the county. They will be blowing from easterly side to the south-eastern direction at a speed of 25knots or 12.86m/s.

There will be moderate temperatures variations for both maximum and minimum ranges. The maximum temperature is expected to oscillate between 23°C and 31°C while the minimum temperature will range from 16°C to 21°C.

Help NPR Officers In Mwingi North, Sen Syengo Says

By MWINGI TIMES CORRESPONDENT 

The National Police Reservists, NPR are undergoing immense hardships despite bearing a huge responsibility of preserving peace in the volatile Tana River and Kitui County border. As such, Nominated Senator Beth Syengo has called upon the government to restore the dignity of our soldiers. Hon Syengo said their plight is so dire that they received relief food meant for residents of Ngomeni ward displaced in a herder dispute pitting locals and nonlocals. 
A section of about 50 families camp at Mandongoi Health Centre in Ngomeni Ward in Mwingi North after they were displaced by camel herders in December 2022.|MWINGI TIMES

The ODM Senator said NPR officers lack food and medical care while on deployment. 
"NPR officers are dedicated.  They have challenges of lack of food and medical insurance.  They should also get this aid from the president president. They lack water supplies and other work related allowances", said the Senator.

Syengo called upon the government to address the neglect bedevilling the NPR in order for them to continue restoring peace in a vast dryland characterised by cross county killings,  disappearances and livestock thefts. 

Speaking separately at Masyungwa location in the neighbouring Tseikuru ward,  former Mwingi North MP John Munuve slammed the incumbent Paul Nzengu for inaction over the bandit menace. He said despite being in an influential office, MP Nzengu has done little to highlight the problems facing his people "I listen to parliamentary deliberations and our current MMP does not speak about camel herders issues. Listen to the radio and tell me if he does", said Munuve.

The Heartbreak and Hope of Assisted Reproduction

By AMOS MUOKI 

When a Kenyan couple turns to In Vitro Fertilisation, IVF or surrogacy to finally hold a child of their own, they rarely realise that the law has not quite caught up with the science. While private fertility clinics in Nairobi have made assisted reproductive technology (ART) increasingly accessible, the legal framework remains silent on critical questions: who is the legal mother when another woman carries the baby? What happens to frozen embryos if the couple separates? And can a child born through donor sperm be left without a recognised father? As more Kenyan families are built through these methods, the absence of clear rules threatens to turn the joy of parenthood into a courtroom battle over parentage, consent, and the very definition of a parent.

Kenya needs to legislate about assisted reproduction for families./ILLUSTRATION

When the Body Won’t Cooperate

Infertility is not merely a medical diagnosis. It is a thief. It steals the quiet joy of imagining a child’s face, the easy laughter at family weddings and the pride of watching a graduation procession. As Okoth’s lecture notes put it, infertile couples are constantly reminded of their perceived failures — at school events, during the birth of a niece or nephew, even at the simple sight of a neighbour pushing a pram.

But here is the strange truth: for someone who never wanted children, infertility can feel like a blessing — no more awkward conversations about contraception, no sleepless nights worrying about parenthood. The lecture acknowledged this too, refusing to paint everyone with the same brush.

How Science Steps In

The techniques sound like something from a futuristic novel. In Vitro Fertilisation, IVF begins with a woman undergoing hormonal treatment to produce multiple eggs. Those eggs are retrieved, fertilised with sperm in a laboratory dish, and the tiny embryo is either returned to her womb or frozen for another day. Then there is cryopreservation, where sperm, eggs, or embryos are stored in liquid nitrogen, waiting. 

There is egg donation, where a woman with no healthy eggs of her own receives a gift from another. And there is GIFT gamete intra-fallopian transfer where eggs and sperm are mixed and placed directly into the fallopian tube, allowing nature to take over from there.Each of these procedures has brought a baby into eager arms. But each also carries a shadow.

The Uncomfortable Questions

What happens to the embryos that are never implanted? For those who believe life begins at conception, discarding an embryo is no different from ending a life. And what of the child created with a donor’s sperm? The lecture raised a delicate point: the separation of biological fatherhood from social fatherhood. A child may grow up knowing that the man who reads bedtime stories is not the man whose DNA they carry.

Then there is the charge of “unnaturalness”. Some critics argue that ART turns children into commodities to be ordered, frozen, and chosen like items from a catalogue. Why, they ask, do we not first embrace adoption, offering a home to the thousands of Kenyan children already alive and waiting?

The Law’s Slow Walk

In Kenya, ART is currently treated as a medical procedure, governed mainly by the Health Act’s rules on consent. Before treatment, a patient must be told the benefits, the risks, the costs, and the alternatives. That is all.

But what happens when a couple disagrees? Consider the famous British case of Evans v Amicus Healthcare. A woman named Natalie Evans had frozen embryos with her partner. When they separated, he withdrew his consent. She wanted to use the embryos to have a child; he refused. The court sided with him. Her chance at motherhood — using those specific embryos was gone.

Kenya has no such clear ruling yet. And without clarity, the lecturer warned, families built through science can find themselves in heartbreaking legal limbo.

Who Is Mom and Dad?

Under the Children Act, parental responsibility means providing food, shelter, medical care, education, and dignity. But when a child is born through egg donation, sperm donation, or surrogacy, who holds that responsibility? The UK’s Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act carefully defines motherhood and paternity in such cases. Kenya may need to follow suit.

Two local cases have already tested the waters. In JLN & 2 Others v Director of Children Services, the High Court grappled with the rights of commissioning parents versus the welfare of a child born through surrogacy. And in the poignant Matter of Baby TDL, an adoption case in Milimani, the court helped clear a path for legal parentage after surrogacy. But these are individual decisions, not a comprehensive law.

Surrogacy: The Woman in the Middle

Perhaps the most emotionally charged terrain is surrogacy. Here, one woman, the gestational mother carries a child for another, with the understanding that she will hand the baby over, often within a day of birth. In partial surrogacy, her own egg is used. In full surrogacy, the embryo comes from the commissioning parents or donors.

Should money change hands? The UK’s Surrogacy Arrangements Act says no to commercialisation, though reasonable expenses are allowed. Kenya has not yet taken a firm stand. What is clear is that parentage in surrogacy is often resolved through adoption — a process that can be long, expensive, and emotionally draining for parents who have already waited years.

Guarding the Gates

There should be warning against darker possibilities. Preimplantation genetic screening could be used to select for traits beyond medical necessity. Sex selection remains a real danger in a society where sons are still prized over daughters. And then there is human cloning the asexual creation of a human organism genetically virtually identical to an existing or past person. By inserting a donor’s DNA into an egg whose own nucleus has been removed, a scientist could, in theory, produce a copy. Most countries have banned it outright. The lecturer urged Kenya to remain vigilant.

The miracle of assisted reproduction has given thousands of Kenyan families what nature denied them: a child to love, to raise, to call their own. But a miracle without a legal framework is a fragile gift. Until Parliament addresses the glaring gaps in our law; who is a mother, who is a father, what happens to frozen embryos, and how surrogacy is regulated, every child born through ART carries an invisible burden. Their parents may have signed consent forms at a fertility clinic, but in the eyes of the law, they could be strangers. 

The silence of our statutes is not neutral; it is a risk. It leaves families vulnerable to disputes, children exposed to uncertain parentage, and doctors practising without clear rules. Kenya has an opportunity to lead the region by enacting comprehensive ART legislation laws that respect the dignity of the child, the autonomy of the parents, and the ethical limits of science. The science has already arrived. It is time for the law to catch up, so that every child, no matter how conceived, grows up with the one thing every human being deserves: a legally recognized family.

The writer is legal commentator on constitutional and human rights issues, the article is intended for public education and does not constitute legal advice. 

Return National IDs to Owners, Rogue Money Lenders Warned

By MWINGI TIMES CORRESPONDENT 

Interior CS Kipchumba Murkomen has directed rogue money lenders to return national identity cards held for defaulters. Speaking during the inauguration of the newly created Nuu Sub County in Mwingi Central,  the CS said that the National IDs were not legal tender and cannot be held in exchange of goods and services. He further said those abeting the practice will be prosecuted. 
Interior CS Kipchumba Murkomen inspects a guard of honour at the Nuu Sub County  headquarters in Kitui County  on Wednesday.|MWINGI TIMES

"National ID is not a legal tender.  I want to direct all people that have held any person's ID for an exchange of a service or good to return it to the owners".               

He said IDs held in such situation disenfranchised their owner by denying them the right to register as voters and exercise their democratic rights to elect leaders.          Moreover,  he said that all affected persons should go for their IDs and register as voters during the ongoing mass voter registration.
Interior CS Kipchumba Murkomen, shares a light moment with the MCA for Nuu ward in Kitui County Judith Wanza and UDA Nominated MCA Deborah Mutuku when he visited Nuu area to unveil the new Nuu Sub County in Kitui County on Wednesday.|MWINGI TIMES

Murkomen also used the forum to invite Wiper leader Kalonzo Musyoka to work with government for the benefit of Kenyans.  "Kalonzo Musyoka is my good friend and my senior in the legal profession.  His only problem is that he does not know how to find his way into government ", said CS Murkomen. 

The inauguration of the new Nuu Sub county is part of the government's broader commitment to bring services closer to the people.  The Interior CS further revealed that the government will continue to operationalise already gazetted units as funds become available.

CEMASTEA Capacity Builds Kitui STEM Teacher HoDs

By BONIFACE MWANIKI 

The Ministry of Education through the Center for Mathematics, Science and Technology Education in Africa CEMASTEA, has embarked on a four day capacity building of Head of Departments from all Kitui secondary schools. 
Kitui County Director of Education Dr Khalif Isaac Hassan speaks at Muthale Girls' Senior School during a four day capacity building of Heads of Departments. MWINGI TIMES |Boniface Mwaniki 

The four day training is taking place at Muthale and Mulango girls' secondary schools and is aimed at equipping HODs with proper skills to handle Grade 10 learners in senior schools. 

Speaking at Muthale Girls' Senior School during the opening of the four-day workshop, Kitui County Director of Education Dr. Khalif Isaac Hassan has urged teachers to only listen to the Ministry of Education on any information about the new curriculum, as it's the only entity with proper objectives for the learners. 

Hassan said that the Education ministry shall be providing all the necessary support to teachers, so that they could properly understand the Grade 10 learners and smoothly transition to the CBE curriculum. 

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