Former US President Bill Clinton, his daughter Chelsea and a team of 20 donors to their Clinton Foundation arrived in Kenya last evening for a three-day tour
There were reports that their plane was forced to make an emergency landing in Tanzania after a mechanical problem but everyone was safe.
Their tour starts this morning with Bill expected to hold talks with government officials, including President Uhuru Kenyatta, as Chelsea visits Mbagathi Hospital Outpatient Clinic at 9am.
Chelsea will be at Mbagathi to see the work of the Clinton Health Access Initiative in educating families about use of Zinc or ORS in treating diarrhoea.
At midday, she will join her father at an undisclosed school where they will convene a conversation of 'No Ceilings: the Full Participation Project', about the participation of women and girls globally.
The school is part of the Collaborative for Harnessing Ambition and Resources for Girls’ Education Initiative, which was announced by Hillary Clinton last year.
On Saturday, Bill and Chelsea will be addressing participants at the Education and Leadership Congress organised under the Equity Group Foundation's Wings to Fly programme.
At midday, they will be at the Starkey Hearing Foundation, a hearing aid fitting facility.
At 2pm, the Clintons and their entourage will see a data mapping project on the effects of climate change, part of the work of the Clinton Climate Initiative.
Mid-morning on Sunday, the visiting team will be at Save the Elephants Research Centre in the Samburu National Reserve.
The Save the Elephants projects uses GPS technology to monitor elephants' movements.
They monitor if the elephant is moving too fast, which could indicate they are being chased by a poacher, or if they have stopped moving which could indicate injury or death.
The Clintons will later Sunday evening depart for Liberia, before moving on to Morocco.