Wednesday, April 1, 2015

BEST PHONE DEALS IN KENYA

This is a comprehensive list of mobile phones and prices the best in Kenya might i add.

The below brand and model of our products are the one below 25K with the Best Prices!The Phones come with one Year warranty and Free Countywide delivery.
 Call/Text/Whatsapp 0722984373 to order.Location: Along Lithuli Avenue, Skymall.

 HTC Desire Desire 516 @ Ksh.15999
HTC Desire 620G @18999
HTC Desire 616 @ Ksh,18500
HTC Butterfly (Deluxe) – 16GB, 2GB RAM @Ksh.22999
HTC One Mini @ Ksh.24999


 Sony Xperia V @Ksh.18999
Sony Xperia M2 @Ksh.19499
Sony Xperia T2 Ultra Dual @ Ksh.24999
Sony Xperia C3 @Ksh. 22999

 Huawei Ascend Y550 4G @Ksh. 13999
Huawei Honor 3c Lite (16GB) @Ksh.17499
Huawei Ascend G6 @Ksh. 15500
Huawei Honor 3c @Ksh.19000
Huawei Ascend G615 @Ksh. 13999
Huawei Ascend P6@ksh.21999
Huawei Ascend P7 mini 4G @ Ksh.19999

 BlackBerry Z10 @Ksh.19,999
BlackBerry Z3 @ Ksh.19,999
BlackBerry Q10 @Ksh.19,999

 Samsung Galaxy E5 @Ksh.24,999
Samsung Galaxy Core 2 @ KSh.12,999
Samsung Galaxy J100 @Ksh.11,999
Galaxy Core Prime @Ksh.12,999
Samsung Galaxy Grand neo Prime @Ksh. 16,599
Samsung Galaxy S3 Neo @Ksh. 19,999
Samsung Galaxy Grand prime @Ksh.17,999
Samsung Galaxy Grand 2 @Ksh.21,999
Samsung Galaxy A3 @Ksh.24,999

 Tecno H6 @Ksh. 9499
Tecno Phantom A mini (P6) @Ksh.12999
Tecno M6 @Ksh.11999
Tecno L6 @Ksh.13999
Tecno F6 @ksh.13799
Tecno H7 @Ksh.13999
Tecno Phantom Z mini @Ksh.20999

 Lumia 535 @Ksh.12999
Nokia Lumia 530 @Ksh.9999
Lumia 630 @Ksh.12999
Lumia 730 @Ksh.22999
Nokia Lumia 1320 @Ksh.24999Hi

IF THESE ARE NOT THE BEST PRICES I DON'T KNOW WHAT ARE

Full EACC list of shame

Cabinet Secretaries implicated in corruption
Lands Ministry CS Charity Ngilu:
EACC claims Ngilu colluded with Evason Waitiki who is owner of a disputed 930-acre piece of land in Likoni by inflating the actual price of the land by KES 110 000 000 to be purchased by government for settlement of over 10 000 squatters. Ngilu allegedly targeted to get a kickback of KES 65 000 000 from the sale of the land while a remaining KES 45 000 000 was to be shared among other interested parties in the transaction. She is also linked to allegations of fraudulent land ownership along Statehouse road. The EACC’s investigation in the matter is ongoing.
Transport Ministry CS Michael Kamau:
Kamau is allegedly involved in various roads tender award manipulation cases, for example, he allegedly inflated the Standard Gauge Railway consultancy fees involving billions of Kenya shillings.
Agriculture Ministry CS Felix Koskei:
Koskei is allegedly linked to seceretly allocating permits to some sugar importers without observing open tendering and against the COMESA rule as required by the law. He is also linked to allegations of conflict of interest and abuse of office, intimidation and bribery demands from parastatal heads.
Energy Ministry CS Davis Chirchir:
Chirchir is alleged to be perpetrating corruption in the ministry’s tenders and procurement process. He is implicated in an attempt to influence award of a Kenya Pipeline Company tender worth USD 500 million to SINOPEC firm instead of ZAKHEM. EACC claims the tender was meant to corruptly yield USD 15 million which was to be shared between Chirchir and Nairobi Senator Mike Sonko.
Labor Ministry CS Kazungu Kambi:
Kambi is allegedly linked in corruption deals at NSSF where he strongly supported the NSSF Tassia II project despite clear indications that the Board of Trustees did not approve the project’s revised cost estimate of KES 5 053 billion from KES 3 304 billion as required by the procurement laws.
Principal Secretary Transport Nduva Muli:
Muli is allegedly linked to irregular disposal of Kenya Railways properties in Nairobi and other cities in the country in addition to influencing procurement process. He is also allegedly involved in irregular award of SGR tender to a Chinese company.
Principal Secretary Water James Teko
Principal Secretary Mining Patrick Omutia
Governors implicated in corruption
Nairobi County Governor Evans Kidero
Narok County Governor Samuel Tunai
Machakos County Governor Alfred Mutua
Homa Bay County Governor Hezron Awiti
Turkana County Governor Josephat Nanok
Mombasa County Governor Hassan Joho
Kilifi County Governor Amason Kingi
Isiolo County Governor Godana Doyo
Migori County Governor Okoth Obado
Bomet County Governor Isaac Ruto
Garissa County Governor Nadhif Jama
Marsabit County Governor Yatani Kanacho
Meru County Governor Peter Munya
Other County Officials implicated in corruption
Nairobi County Secretary Lilian Ndegwa
Trans-Nzoia County Secretary Sifuna Wakofula
Trans-Nzoia County Assembly Speaker David Sifuna
Makueni County Assembly Speaker Stephen Mutunga
Makueni County Secretary Rael Muthoka
Former Kiambu County Assembly Speaker Nick Ndichu
Machakos County Secretary Francis Mwaka
Kisumu County Assembly Speaker Anne Atieno
Elgeyo Marakwet County Assembly Speaker Albert Kochei
Isiolo County Secretary Ibrahim Wako
Embu County Secretary Laura Kariuki
Mandera County Secretary Okash Adan
Wajir County Secretary Abdullahi Sheikh
Senators implicated in corruption
Machakos County Senator Johnstone Muthama
Siaya Senator James Orengo
MPs implicated in corruption
Ganze MP Peter Shehe
Lamu West MP, Julius Ndegwa
Nandi Hills MP, Alfred Keter
Nominated MP, Sonia Birdi
Mt. Elgon MP, John Serut
Kitutu Chache MP, Richard Onyonka
Parliamentary committees implicated in corruption
Public Accounts Committee members
The Agriculture committee members
Judiciary officials implicated in corruption
Former Chief Registrar, Gladys Shollei
Former Deputy Chief Registrar, Shollei Kakai
 

Other State officials implicated in corruption
Secretary to Cabinet Francis Kimemia
National Police Service Commission Chairman Johnstone Kavuludi:
EACC claims Kavuludi is linked to financial impropriety, misappropriation, abuse of office and that he made various foreign trips without accounting for money spent.
Auditor General Edward Ouko:
Ouko allegedly defrauded the World Bank, fraudulent budget more than double costs to the tune of KES 500 million. KENAO allegedly paid KES 100 million in advance for the purchase of audit vault through single sourcing procurement.
Former Nairobi City Mayor, George Aladwa
Former Prime Minister’s Chief of staff Caroli Omondi
Former PS Ministry of Information Bitange Ndemo:
Ndemo allegedly involved in irregularities in procurement of Konza Ranch, and other eight accused persons.     
IEBC Chief Executive Officer James Oswago
IEBC Deputy CEO Wilson Shollei
IEBC Director of Finance Edward Karisa
IEBC Head of Procurement Willie Kamanga
Former IIEC senior officials
Parastatal heads implicated in corruption
Geothermal Development Company MD Silas Simiyu
Nzoia Sugar Company MD Francis Oyatsi
NSSF Managing Trustee Richard Langat
Kenya National Examination Council (KNEC) CEO Paul Wasanga
National Water Conservation and Pipeline Corporation acting CEO Evans Ngibuini
KENTRADE CEO Alex Kabuga
Export Processing Authority (EPZ) former CEO Richard Mutule
FKF Secretary General Sam Nyamweya
Kenya Meat Commission former Managing Commissioner Ibrahim Isaac
Kenya Airports Authority MD Lucy Mbugua
Kenya Pipeline Corporation MD Charles Tonui
Mumias Sugar Company former MD Peter Kebati

FINALLY COMBATING CORRUPTION IN KENYA

2015's Most And Least Reliable Countries To Do Business In

Are you looking for new international suppliers for your company? Or thinking about where to open an overseas office? When you evaluate your international customers, do you care about the stability of their business environment? What about government corruption? If you already have foreign offices, have you checked on the risks of natural disasters like floods and earthquakes in those locations? How sound is the infrastructure there?
For country-by-country shortcut answers to those questions, consider the “2015 FM Global Resilience Index,” a ranking of 130 countries by FM Global, the 180-year-old international commercial and industrial insurance company based in Johnston, RI. FM Global’s main business: providing loss prevention services to big companies around the globe.
FM Global puts countries through a rigorous evaluation process and produces a list of the places it deems most resilient. Landing in first place is a country that may not be at the top of your list for opening a subsidiary or factory: Norway (ExxonMobil has operated there for more than 120 years; ConocoPhillips also has longstanding oil fields there). Coming in second is a more obvious choice, given its bank secrecy laws and stable political environment: Switzerland. The Netherlands, with its healthy economy, solid infrastructure, sophisticated ports, extensive offshore wind power system, and secure dyke system, is in third place.
The U.S. doesn’t rank until 10th place and then only for a portion of the country FM Global calls Region 3, made up of 26 states in the Southwest, Midwest, and the South, plus Washington, DC., which FM Global deems safe from wind storms and earthquakes. The U.S.’s Region 1, which includes Florida, Louisiana, New Jersey and New York, is vulnerable to storms and places 16th on the list. U.S. Region 3, threatened by earthquakes, ranks in 21st place, just behind the United Kingdom and above Portugal. Region 3 includes California, Oregon, Hawaii and Alaska.
FM Global’s methodology involves measuring countries’ strength in nine areas, under three rubrics: economic, risk quality and supply chain. It looks at these nine things:
1. GDP per capita
2. Political risk including terrorism
3. “Oil intensity,” meaning the chance the country will experience an oil shortage
4. Exposure to natural hazards
5. “Quality of natural hazard risk management,” meaning the country’s preparedness to deal with a disaster like an earthquake or a flood
6. Quality of fire risk management
7. Control of corruption
8. Quality of the infrastructure
9. Quality of local supplies
FM Global used the following sources: The International Monetary Fund supplies the GDP data, the information about the oil supply is from the U.S. Energy Information Administration, and the data on political risk and corruption comes from the World Bank’s “Worldwide Governance Indicators,” which pulls from 31 data sources. The Global Competitiveness Report, put together by the World Economic Forum and based on its survey of thousands of executives, is the source of the data on infrastructure and local supply chain quality. Finally the data on risks like exposure to natural hazards, readiness to manage natural calamities and ability to fight fires, all come from an algorithm FM Global developed to calculate risk at more than 100,000 commercial properties it insures around the world.
There are no surprises among the top 25 countries, which I’ll list below. They’re mostly European—Ireland, Luxembourg, Germany, Finland, Belgium, Denmark, Sweden, etc. New Zealand and Australia also make the top 25, as do Hong Kong, Singapore and Qatar.