Pepfar and other partners in fight against HIV are working with or under NASCOP.
The point is that the provision of ARVs is almost entirely due to foreign funding (free money) from others, and
most of it from the USA. To claim that as a Jubilee achievement is very funny, given that the funding has been going on for
much longer than Jubilee has been around. To say that Jubilee government is trying to do more is similarly funny; it is those foreign funders that are planning to do more. The only thing Jubilee can say it that it is not getting in the way.
The police leasing arraignment is yet another very great idea. Nowadays police have running vehicles. 2,400 is about a vehicle or two in every police stations..all serviced, motor-able year around..
You missed my point. Here it is explicitly: How many terrorists attacks has Kenya had in the last couple of years? Mpeketoni, Westgate, Mandera, etc. How many people have been killed or displaced through what are normally called "routine tribal clashes"? Tana River, Turkana land, Pokot, etc.? And even cops are not safe: Baragoi. One could go on and on about insecurity in Kenya.
And with all that, the only thing the government can say is that it has bought some cars !?! How would any of those cars help in situations such as the above?
In any case, how do new police cars help when police officers themselves are criminals?
criminal enterprise where tribalism, favouritism and the search for bribes has replaced the vaunted motto of providing service to all, Utumumishi Kwa Wote.
http://www.nation.co.ke/news/Police-Crisis-Security-Reforms-Investigation/-/1056/2776402/-/79r93t/-/index.htmlWhat the Kenyan police force needs is
reform, not cars. What is Jubilee doing about
that? (And, by the way, don't forget the little matter of petrol, which has been a problem, even when/where there were functional cars.)