Kenyanstar's Posts
Nairaland Forum › Kenyanstar's Profile › Kenyanstar's Posts
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ... 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 (of 57 pages)
Malls with playground parks in Kenya
|
Kisumu airport- Kenya
|
Eldoret airport-Kenya
|
Malindi airport- Little Italy
|
Commuter train stations- Kenya
|
Imara daima train station - Kenya
|
Train stations-Kenya
|
Kenya Random
|
Random- Kenya
|
From this thread the only achievement i have noticed majority of Nigerians take pride in are other peoples money...... the expression that we have billionaires like Dangonte while they themselves cannot even be grouped in the middle class of their poor villages. Or showing us malls patronized by South African investors. The only reason this thread has taken too long to conclude is the fact that no Nigerian has come out to show us the extent that its goverment has tried improving on terms of Infrastructure beyond Lagos or Abuja. The improvement of their health facilities, a reformed education system or a economic growth beyond their natural resources. |
KERICHO TOWN- KENYA
|
MERU COUNTY- KENYA
|
darknetcom:Your level of immaturity and childish tendencies are not only irritating but paints a grim picture of the disillusionment Naija yahoo boys suffer from. This is not a competition about population, its about development!!! |
Kisii level 5 hospital
|
darknetcom:I dont expect any Nigerian would know the difference between any level of health, be it level 1 to 5 or even ref feral hospitals. With the mediocre hospitals you got i know how it pains Naija yahoo boys to see other Africans try improving there country. |
THIKA LEVEL 5 HOSPITAL
|
chebeoc:MACHAKOS LEVEL 5 HOSPITAL
|
Boyedex:I guess you are so proud of your "city" slums... I wonder how people can live in a mega slum with no electricity, sewage system, no water with gutters. I better live in a clean bush rather than a sewage gutter city. RURAL KENYA- "BUSH"
|
68816419:Let me give you a brief description of how my home town of Eldoret has witnessed tremendous change since my first generation great grandfather set foot in Kenya. We live in West indies which is predominantly Indian, I attended UG primary School which was a public Indian school set up in 1955. The neighbouring school was predominantly a white school called Hill school. The black population had several Union primary, Kimalel primary, Racecourse and Sosiani. After Kenyan independence the government allowed free movement of students to various public schools and that's how we ended up being a mixed race family. I have white, Arab and majority black friends that i consider my brothers. The Kenyan society is multi-cultural devoid of racial discrimination. The issue about the slums is that almost 90% of the residents in those slums are urban migrants that come to "hustle" in the city. They only live there since its cheaper compared to other places. |
68816419:What makes you think Kenyans care about the colour of your skin..... Naijans have this stupid blame game of blaming everything on people possessing different skin. My family is bi-racial and multi-religious, so should other Kenyans start abusing me because am not ethnically native like them. |
GIANT OF AFRICA-Nigeria
|
Kenyans and Nigerians, its time we accepted and moved on because the "ANT OF AFRICA" has declared himself the kings of 8 lane roads. Meanwhile.... NIGERIAN 8 LANE ROADS
|
highheybee: ? ID10T |
darknetcom:Another baby jumps on the bandwagon of "we are the giANTS" of Africa(sic)... |
68816419:Tell that to the 1m tourist who visit Kenya every year on their vacation. Or the thousands of Italians in Malindi town who have made Kenya their second home. |
Kenya Nightime
|
Wakenya wenzangu hawa watu si ni mafala ile mbaya..... Nilidhani kimasomo wako juu kumbe wamechapa. I think this Nigerians are now derailing this thread. |
iblawi:Thats why i said i wonder how you survive without a functioning brain.... You should make use of those links we provide at least to avoid making yourself look idiotic. I wont blame you anyway, most Nigerians see electricity like once in a year like the eclipse of the moon. http://ltwp.co.ke/ THE PROJECT OVERVIEW The Lake Turkana Wind Power Project (LTWP) is the single largest private investment in Kenya’s history. The wind farm covers 40,000 acres (162 km²) and is located in Loiyangalani District, Marsabit County. The Ksh70 billion wind farm aims to provide 310MW of reliable, low cost wind power to Kenya’s national grid, equivalent to approximately 18 per cent of the country’s current installed electricity generating capacity. On completion, the project will comprise 365 wind turbines, each with a capacity of 850 kW, the associated overhead electric grid collection system and a high voltage substation that will be connected to the national grid. The power produced will be bought at a fixed price by Kenya Power (KPLC) over a 20-year period in accordance with the Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) with the latter.
|
iblawi:KENYA PRIMARY LEVEL 1. Free primary public education to all school going children from classn 1-8 2. Free laptops to all pupils joining public schools 3. Free electricity supply 24/7 to all public schools 3. Free bursary to pupils in private schools from kitties(CDF) 4. Free syllabus text books and exercise books to all pupils 3.
|
iblawi:http://allafrica.com/stories/201506051626.html Kenya has moved six positions up in this year's ICT Network Readiness Index revealed at this year's World Economic Forum in Cape Town. Last year, Kenya held the 92nd position and moved up to the 85th position , coming in as the fifth country in Africa after South Africa at position, 75, Morocco at 78, Tunisia at 81 and Rwanda at position 83 globally. The report showed that big economies in Africa like South Africa and Nigeria fell in rankings and only Kenya showed yearly improvement. For instance South Africa fell from 70 to 75th position this year and Nigeria lost ground to be 119th position from 112 achieved previously. Kenya's growth has been attributed to the developments that have been witnessed in the country's ICT sector.The Networked Readiness Index (NRI) as well reveals that the almost perfect correlation between a country's level of ICT uptake and the economic and social impacts ICTs have on its economy and society. |
GERALD710:That guy Iblawi is either mentally challenged or immature to uphold any debating conversation without stooping to vulgar responses. 1. Turbines being offloaded at the Mombasa port 2. Construction of the turbines at Turkana wind farm 3. Assembling of the turbines
|
iblawi:40b Naira would have built Nigerians better infrastructures, provision of better healthcare systems. But the culture of waste is part of Nigerias goverment. http://allafrica.com/stories/200811120001.html Nigeria: Country's N40 Billion Satellite Missing From Orbit Lagos — THISDAY gathered last night that with the satellite missing from orbit, the huge amount spent by the Nigerian government, about N40 billion may have gone down the drain. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7726951.stm NigComSat's website The satellite has developed power trouble A multi-million dollar Nigerian satellite launched in May 2007 has been shut down to prevent it spinning out of control and damaging others in orbit. Chinese-built NigComSat-1 cost the African oil producer $340m (£228m). But telecoms experts told the BBC it was a "white elephant in space" and the whole operation was a "debacle". NigComSat-1 was launched 18 months ago to much fanfare from the government, but it has been mired in controversy ever since. On Tuesday, controllers shut the satellite down because it was having problems with its power supply, the government announced. The satellite was meant to provide communications for government agencies and broadband internet. The satellite was found to have run into a technical hitch for some weeks now, according to a source, when it was discovered that it was using a technological standard that was not meant for Africa but Asia. |
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ... 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 (of 57 pages)

? ID10T