On the radar: Kenya Kwanza-Azimio to sign framework for talks at Bomas

Key activities and events lined up for today.

In Summary
  • Army officers have appeared on national television in Gabon to say they have taken power.
  • The bail application for a businesswoman code named Mathe wa Ngara will today proceed for a hearing before the JKIA court.

The talks between Kenya Kwanza and Azimio la Umoja One Kenya coalition will take shape on Wednesday when the 10-member team picked by the two sides will sign a framework for dialogue.

The framework of the talks will be a binding document that will guide the dialogue and provide for the timeframe.

The official signing comes a day after the Senate formally approved the formation of the committee, anchoring its work in law and allowing the team to expend public resources.

Army officers say they are taking power in Gabon

Army officers have appeared on national television in Gabon to say they have taken power.

They said they were annulling the results of Saturday's election, in which President Ali Bongo was declared the winner.

The electoral commission said Mr Bongo had won just under two-thirds of the votes in an election the opposition argued was fraudulent.

Mathe wa Ngara to know bail application fate 

The bail application for a businesswoman code named Mathe wa Ngara will today proceed for a hearing before the JKIA court.

On Monday, Mathee wa Ngara was charged with trafficking drugs worth Sh 18.3 million. She was charged alongside three others among them a minor.

They all denied the charges. The prosecution has opposed their bail on the grounds that they are a flight risk.

Man accused of forging university transcripts to appear in court

In another court, a man accused of forging the Kabarak University transcript will appear in court for a hearing.

The man is accused of committing the offence on Feb 19, at an unknown place.

He has since denied the charges and he is out on bond

Worldcoin probe

Worldcoin probe enters its second, Solicitor General Shadrack Mose scheduled to appear before the MPs.

The Committee began its inquiry Tuesday with representatives from the multi-agency National Computer and Cybercrime Coordination Committee (NC4) being the first to testify.

In its submission, the Committee said thousands of Kenyans who scanned their eyeballs in exchange for Sh7,000 may not have received the money.

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