Wednesday, 19 June 2013

[wanabidii] Kidney for sale........Att.UhuRuto



Comments like these dont need response.......ignore them...... you will
have known capacity level of their reasoning and thinking......energy is
costly......they have a right, but why bother with them.......


Judy Miriga
Diaspora Spokesperson
Executive Director
Confederation Council Foundation for Africa Inc.,
USA
http://socioeconomicforum50.blogspot.com
 


--- On Wed, 6/19/13, tomoreje@gmail.com <tomoreje@gmail.com> wrote:
 

From: tomoreje@gmail.com <tomoreje@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [PK] Kidney for sale...Att.UhuRuto
To: progressive-kenyans@googlegroups.com, progressive-kenyans@googlegroups.com
Date: Wednesday, June 19, 2013, 1:02 PM


 
Eh, you've been smoked out (iro othung'i iwuok oko)
 
 
Cheers.

 
 
From: Joyce Akong'o
Sent: Wednesday, 19 June 2013 19:57 PM
To: progressive-kenyans@googlegroups.com
Reply To: progressive-kenyans@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [PK] Kidney for sale...Att.UhuRuto
 
 
 
 
Wacha hata hiyo, the fellow wants to sell his Kidney! Hataki cha bwerere, so he should be left to do exactly that. He has something to offer.
Definitely there is someone, somewhere , out there, who needs a kidney and does not have any laptop to sell in exchange!

Sent from my iPhone
 
 
From: "tomoreje@gmail.com" <tomoreje@gmail.com>
To: progressive-kenyans@googlegroups.com; uchunguzionline@yahoogroups.com
Cc: progressive-kenyans <progressive-kenyans@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Wednesday, June 19, 2013 7:48 PM
Subject: Re: [PK] Kidney for sale...Att.UhuRuto
 
 
Kwani this forum has become for those abroad discussing how to send stuff to Kenya while they have lived there for years.
 
Pretence.
 
 
From: Judy Miriga
Sent: Wednesday, 19 June 2013 19:45 PM
To: uchunguzionline@yahoogroups.com
Reply To: progressive-kenyans@googlegroups.com
Cc: progressive-kenyans
Subject: [PK] Kidney for sale...Att.UhuRuto
 

Maggie,
Let us act professional starting with now. Let us approach the Embassy
to grant us Free from Tax Clearance at the Port of Mombasa. I will officially
request my friend a Clearing Agent in Mombasa to donate her services to
clear some of the shipment that are sent for Donation to the needy people.
We must have a receiving person in Kenya, atleast a Social Worker most
notable and reliable to receive the items and confirm receipt and forwarding
to rightful destination for our records........
We are on board and the work starts now Maggie........
We shall demand Transparency and Accountability from all receiving agents,
and officials. We must make the system to work officially......because, it can
be done!
We dont know how much your lady is going to charge for the shipment. We
can ask the lad to wait a little bit, three months is not long. I will also request
our Maryland Governor's Office and Congress Representative for any legal
authorization needed and the shipping Dept. for certification........
Sounds good ..... and we shall collect donations and forward.


Judy Miriga
Diaspora Spokesperson
Executive Director
Confederation Council Foundation for Africa Inc.,
USA
http://socioeconomicforum50.blogspot.com


--- On Wed, 6/19/13, margaret gichuki <Wams2006@gmail.com> wrote:

From: margaret gichuki <Wams2006@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [uchunguzionline] Kidney for sale...Att.UhuRuto
To: uchunguzionline@yahoogroups.com
Cc: "progressive-kenyans" <progressive-kenyans@googlegroups.com>
Date: Wednesday, June 19, 2013, 12:30 PM

That's true Judy.

laptops are all over.

Do you anyone leaving for Kenya soon who can take it to the kid? I 'm not willing to use middle men again because things never get done and you are lied to like you are an Idiot of sorts.
Plan B.My friend is shipping a container to Kenya end of this month.But a container takes three months.That's forever Judy.

Maoni.?

On Wed, Jun 19, 2013 at 9:09 AM, Judy Miriga <jbatec@yahoo.com> wrote:
Margaret,
I cannot doubt such desparacy in people today. This boy sounds
very genuine.
I believe some of us have some lap-tops in the basement in our
houses doing nothing. Let us be human and think of desparate needy
people amongst us and reciprocate.
Let us unite and support out people. We must begin to share the little
we have and nurture the Spirit of giving to support genuine causes such
as this........Families, Friends, and Sympathizers, lets join hands and
support the poor of Kenya. Life in Kenya is so miserable and pathetic.
These people need us.......
We are able to do greater things when in Partnership for a cause we
share to lighten our peoples load and relieve them from extreme poverty.
Rome was not built in a Day........and a journey begins with one step.
We have many Walter Otieno's in Kenya........so, it is now that we must
begin the journey of Uniting for a worthy cause........and this will go a long
way to improve way of life in Kenya......
Regards,


Judy Miriga
Diaspora Spokesperson
Executive Director
Confederation Council Foundation for Africa Inc.,
USA
http://socioeconomicforum50.blogspot.com


--- On Wed, 6/19/13, margaret gichuki <Wams2006@gmail.com> wrote:
From: margaret gichuki <Wams2006@gmail.com>
Subject: [uchunguzionline] Kidney for sale...Att.UhuRuto
To: "Africa-Oped" <africa-oped@yahoogroups.com>
Cc: "progressive-kenyans" <progressive-kenyans@googlegroups.com>, "uchunguzi online" <uchunguzionline@yahoogroups.com>
Date: Wednesday, June 19, 2013, 8:46 AM

Home / Features / I want to sell my kidney to buy a laptop

I want to sell my kidney to buy a laptop

Posted by: The People in Features June 19, 2013 0 2005 Views
By MWINGIRWA KITHURE
Although he knows the operation to harvest one of his precious kidneys might go horrible wrong and even kill, and regardless of the fact that his torso will forever remain with an ugly 20-inch scar, Walter Otieno is daring any willing buyers to give him a call anytime.
And the young man acknowledges that one of his kidneys he so badly wants to dispose is not in his body as supplementary decorative organ yet he still insists one must go not necessarily at the black-market rates if this is the only way to achieve his dream.
"I know I am young and healthy and my kidney can fetch good money but I won't take that route. I am not a greedy person. I don't want to over quote and scare away potential buyers," a distraught-looking but overtly determined Otieno declares. For only Sh50,000, Otieno is ready to part with his kidney. Right or left, the choice is for the buyer! "It is unfortunate because I never thought I would resort to this kind of business.
Honestly, I have no other decent means to raise the cash to replace my stolen laptop," Otieno, who scored an A- in his KCSE in 2009, narrates. "I am pursuing my dream degree. Bachelor of Science in Computer Science at The University of Eldoret, formerly, Chepkoilel University College. I am so passionate about computers and the entire IT industry.
This is where my future and the ticket from poverty lie," Otieno says, raising his voice animatedly. But he owned a laptop which he had bought with money he saved when he briefly taught as a temporary untrained teacher after his KCSE. "They stole my laptop. Those shameless thieves as I left campus on the night of 11th August last year. I feel so sad.
I miss it dearly but luckily, I only sustained minor injuries" Otieno recalls, his face enveloped in sadness. "My single mother is not in a position to help me out, neither are my relatives and even pleas to Good Samaritans have not borne any fruits. I will never revenge and steal someone's laptop unlike those mean thugs," Otieno says sullenly.
He gives reasons why he badly needs a personal laptop: "Because our university does not have a well equipped Computer Lab and its access is limited. In the past one and a half academic year, we have been to the Computers Lab for less than five times yet Computer Science is more practical than theoretical," Otieno reveals, but he absolves the University from blame because it is young and the initiative is on us students to find solutions to computer scarcity problems. I can't entertain the though of getting into my third year in school without a laptop. It is better I sell what belongs to me.
"It is a difficult decision but I would rather live with a single kidney than live with myself as an incompetent graduate and a failure. I don't want to finish my studies as a half-baked graduate too good in theory but not adept in practical," Otieno vow. He says it was by God's grace and an understanding school Principal that he completed Form Four studies despite having hefty unpaid school fees.
"Luckily, the balance was written off after I broke the school record in KCSE," Otieno, the first born in a family of four explains excitedly. "I will literally run to the buyer even if it is in the middle of the night because, "No pain, no gain," he says. However, Otieno may never sell his kidney without landing into hot soup with Kenyan law enforcers.
Unless one is donating a kidney in Kenya, it is illegal to sell any human part. Although kidney sale is illegal in Pakistan and Philippines, it is a thriving business with a single kidney fetching $3000. Most of the money, however, goes to middle-men.
In Iran where selling a kidney is regulated, a healthy kidney sells for about $6,000 while in China, organs are often procured from executed prisoners. The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that organ-trafficking accounts for 5 percent to 10 percent of all kidney transplants in the world.

--
Send Emails to wanabidii@googlegroups.com
 
Kujiondoa Tuma Email kwenda
wanabidii+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com Utapata Email ya kudhibitisha ukishatuma
 
Disclaimer:
Everyone posting to this Forum bears the sole responsibility for any legal consequences of his or her postings, and hence statements and facts must be presented responsibly. Your continued membership signifies that you agree to this disclaimer and pledge to abide by our Rules and Guidelines.
---
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Wanabidii" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to wanabidii+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.
 
 

1 comments:

  1. what could have happened to this student? Did anyone take advantage of his need or someone donated a computer to him. I sincerely would have hoped that the publisher of the article could have found some alternative instead of bringing to the public such information.

    ReplyDelete