When it became obvious that Bitange Ndemo would not be taking over as the Cabinet Secretary in the Ministry of Information and Communication, the ICT community wondered who would wear the giant shoes left by Ndemo. To calm the nerves and prepare for his exit, Ndemo wrote to the ICT industry and you can read it here. So much has been said about Ndemo, both positive and negative but the thing I am most happy about is his easy approach; want to see him, drop him an email, get an appointment at 6 am or earlier. Want to interview him, drop the questions on email, and for some reason I would have answers in 24 hours, on email. No reminder, he will do it. Read more….. http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/09/what-matiangi-can-learn-from-ndemo/ Tel. 254 720 318 925 wanjiku.co.ke
I agree with Wanjiku . Dr Ndema was that available and supportive to everybody. Jane ________________________________ From: Rebecca Wanjiku <rebeccawanjiku@yahoo.com> To: Jane Muriuki <nnfeischools@yahoo.com> Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> Sent: Friday, September 27, 2013 12:25 PM Subject: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo When it became obvious that Bitange Ndemo would not be taking over as the Cabinet Secretary in the Ministry of Information and Communication, the ICT community wondered who would wear the giant shoes left by Ndemo. To calm the nerves and prepare for his exit, Ndemo wrote to the ICT industry and you can read it here. So much has been said about Ndemo, both positive and negative but the thing I am most happy about is his easy approach; want to see him, drop him an email, get an appointment at 6 am or earlier. Want to interview him, drop the questions on email, and for some reason I would have answers in 24 hours, on email. No reminder, he will do it. Read more….. http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/09/what-matiangi-can-learn-from-ndemo/ Tel. 254 720 318 925 wanjiku.co.ke _______________________________________________ kictanet mailing list kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/listinfo/kictanet Unsubscribe or change your options at https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/options/kictanet/nnfeischools%40yahoo.c... The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development. KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
@Becky, @Jane, True that Ndemo was cool like that. But I guess everyone has their own style (remember when Kibaki took over and went quiet in Statehouse and everyone -comparing him to Moi - was asking where is this old man; 10years later the guy showed up with Thika Superhighway +++ One more thing, Matiangi is Cabinet Sec a.k.a Minister so it is abit unfair to compare him with Ndemo who was Permanent Sec (different roles). Perhaps if Becky did an article comparing Matiangi to Pogisho (former Minister) we might get a different picture? That said, I also do miss seeing the "Ndemo effect" at the Ministry...but maybe we should instead target to bringing out the PS Tiampati out of the woods..we could start by giving him a free, lifetime registration to KICTAnet :-) walu. ________________________________ From: Network of non- formal Educational institutions <nnfeischools@yahoo.com> To: jwalu@yahoo.com Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> Sent: Friday, September 27, 2013 12:56 PM Subject: Re: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo I agree with Wanjiku . Dr Ndema was that available and supportive to everybody. Jane ________________________________ From: Rebecca Wanjiku <rebeccawanjiku@yahoo.com> To: Jane Muriuki <nnfeischools@yahoo.com> Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> Sent: Friday, September 27, 2013 12:25 PM Subject: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo When it became obvious that Bitange Ndemo would not be taking over as the Cabinet Secretary in the Ministry of Information and Communication, the ICT community wondered who would wear the giant shoes left by Ndemo. To calm the nerves and prepare for his exit, Ndemo wrote to the ICT industry and you can read it here. So much has been said about Ndemo, both positive and negative but the thing I am most happy about is his easy approach; want to see him, drop him an email, get an appointment at 6 am or earlier. Want to interview him, drop the questions on email, and for some reason I would have answers in 24 hours, on email. No reminder, he will do it. Read more….. http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/09/what-matiangi-can-learn-from-ndemo/ Tel. 254 720 318 925 wanjiku.co.ke _______________________________________________ kictanet mailing list kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/listinfo/kictanet Unsubscribe or change your options at https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/options/kictanet/nnfeischools%40yahoo.c... The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development. KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications. _______________________________________________ kictanet mailing list kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/listinfo/kictanet Unsubscribe or change your options at https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/options/kictanet/jwalu%40yahoo.com The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development. KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
That is a nice angle Walu your bringing into the picture, but don't you think that the Kibaki regime technocrat PS is now the Uhuru regime technocrat CS? Since Cabinet secretaries are not MPs, they have taken over most functions of Principle Secretaries. We've seen in the media PSs complaining that they don't have defined roles since CSs have taken over their functions. Although it's not fair to compare office bearers. Its still too early to judge. Probably after 5years, Matiangi will have made Konza a gold mine, employing thousands of our young men, and raking billions in foreign exchange. Dare to dream Mheshimiwa Matiangi. Regards On 04/10/2013, Walubengo J <jwalu@yahoo.com> wrote:
@Becky, @Jane,
True that Ndemo was cool like that.
But I guess everyone has their own style (remember when Kibaki took over and went quiet in Statehouse and everyone -comparing him to Moi - was asking where is this old man; 10years later the guy showed up with Thika Superhighway +++
One more thing, Matiangi is Cabinet Sec a.k.a Minister so it is abit unfair to compare him with Ndemo who was Permanent Sec (different roles). Perhaps if Becky did an article comparing Matiangi to Pogisho (former Minister) we might get a different picture?
That said, I also do miss seeing the "Ndemo effect" at the Ministry...but maybe we should instead target to bringing out the PS Tiampati out of the woods..we could start by giving him a free, lifetime registration to KICTAnet :-)
walu.
________________________________ From: Network of non- formal Educational institutions <nnfeischools@yahoo.com> To: jwalu@yahoo.com Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> Sent: Friday, September 27, 2013 12:56 PM Subject: Re: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo
I agree with Wanjiku . Dr Ndema was that available and supportive to everybody.
Jane
________________________________ From: Rebecca Wanjiku <rebeccawanjiku@yahoo.com> To: Jane Muriuki <nnfeischools@yahoo.com> Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> Sent: Friday, September 27, 2013 12:25 PM Subject: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo
When it became obvious that Bitange Ndemo would not be taking over as the Cabinet Secretary in the Ministry of Information and Communication, the ICT community wondered who would wear the giant shoes left by Ndemo.
To calm the nerves and prepare for his exit, Ndemo wrote to the ICT industry and you can read it here. So much has been said about Ndemo, both positive and negative but the thing I am most happy about is his easy approach; want to see him, drop him an email, get an appointment at 6 am or earlier. Want to interview him, drop the questions on email, and for some reason I would have answers in 24 hours, on email. No reminder, he will do it. Read more….. http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/09/what-matiangi-can-learn-from-ndemo/
Tel. 254 720 318 925
wanjiku.co.ke
_______________________________________________ kictanet mailing list kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/listinfo/kictanet
Unsubscribe or change your options at https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/options/kictanet/nnfeischools%40yahoo.c...
The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development.
KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
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Unsubscribe or change your options at https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/options/kictanet/jwalu%40yahoo.com
The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development.
KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
-- ______________________ Mwendwa Kivuva twitter.com/lordmwesh kenya.or.ke | The Kenya we know
When I was nominated to Cabinet, last April, several of my friends including Dr. Ndemo, Tom Mshindi, Elijah, Muriuki, and later others I met in policy discussions like Alex and Walu encouraged me to visit, participate and engage as much as humanly possible with the ICT sector in the blogosphere and join KICTANET. The advice given to me was that in all these interactions, I would meet diverse views on various aspects of policy in the ICT sector generally. I try to ‘check in’ from time to time and keenly follow conversations on a number of policy issues. I have learned a lot from some of these exchanges. I have met very insightful and deep thinkers; and interesting others too. I must confess however that in the 5 months I have been in public space, there are times one feels very frustrated and almost like one is being asked to unlearn many things- even about the most basic moral issues like telling simple truths. I read Wanjiku’s post and didn’t know whether to laugh or cry. Why would anybody tell such blatant lies about someone they hardly know? Many of my colleagues at the Ministry told me not to bother to respond, but I think it was too personal not to be commented on. Everyone who was at Connected Kenya early in the year for instance can (if they want to be sincere) recollect that I not only attended the cocktail preceding the dinner in honour of my colleagues, Minister Pogisho and Dr. Ndemo, but spoke at the event. I was introduced by Dr. Ndemo. I actually not only attended and spoke at the dinner but invited 3 colleague Ministers-from Tanzania, Uganda and South Africa- attending the OGP meeting running side by side with Connected Kenya at the Serena. In any case, it wasn’t clear to anyone then that Dr. Ndemo would leave the Ministry -appointments of PSs had not been done. When it was, we held a farewell lunch for him and had such a great time with over 600 colleagues and industry players at the Panafric. In collaboration with colleagues at the Ministry, including Ndemo’s successor, Mr. Tiampati, we have ensured to include, invite and very sincerely acknowledge our preceding colleagues in all activities, especially where we are launching products, reports etc. that are a culmination of efforts they initiated at the Ministry- postal payment gateway switch, the National Broadband Strategy etc. At the main Connected Kenya event, I successfully persuaded Paul Kukubo and other colleagues involved in the planning to allow me to have a generous time on the podium with Minister Pogisho as this was the most public opportunity for handover. There sure is something fundamentally serious with people- adults -who tell lies such are being told here. Where on earth does the allegation that I excused myself to see the Mombasa Governor come from? The meeting Wanjiku refers to held by African Development Bank at the Intercontinental Hotel was not even on PPPs. I was invited to preside over the launch of the report ‘silicon Kenya’- an ICT study commissioned by the African Development Bank. I was there at 9am as advised but the meeting started 1 hour late. I hurriedly made my remarks and had to leave when I was done- at 1105hrs- because we were expected at a cabinet meeting starting at 11am. I very humbly explained this to both the journalists present and all who had questions. I had however promised Michelle Morgan and Mark Okuttah that I would respond to their 2 brief questions which I did. There was no discussion on LTE- Not anything I can remember was meaningful enough to sufficiently demonstrate my shallowness and lack of depth! It is very frustrating to operate in the space of rumour mongering. I sincerely think it is very demeaning for Dr. Ndemo and many of all of us his friends and colleagues to engage in such a cheap discussion as being proposed here about his and my relationship that’s over three decades old and much deeper and more expansive than our interaction at the Ministry of Information or generally in the ICT sector. It is very unfortunate- to say the very least. Hate is a very strong term to use, especially to describe a relationship between two people one of whom you begin by confessing you do not know much of. I will let all readers and serious decent people who interact with this unfortunate discussion be the judges. I try- even with the tyranny of demands on our time to return some of the heavy traffic of e-mails, enquiries etc. that come to the Ministry. I will certainly not lie that I will be able to do every interview, meet every individual or group of people who want to meet or even turn up at every single event I am required to. I try to meet as many people as I humanly can and even try harder to show up for events when we have been invited and advised in good time; but I also delegate in cases I cannot obviously deal with due to various constraints. I am so grateful to God for the wonderful people I found at the Ministry and all the very hardworking and focused Kenyans that work with me in many of our agencies. We try hard and will continue to. Of course we may not satisfy everyone but we promise to do our very best. When we are criticised, however- which we will always expect and take in our stride- we hope people are at least factual- even about reporting events- and more focused on the work we do rather than rumours and gossip. To be insulted is painful. It is even much more painful to be mispresented and for plain lies to be peddled about you. I pray that no Kenyan perpetuates this about a fellow Kenyan, even one they simply just don’t like. Ultimately, the Almighty God knows my heart and my every thought. He knows my thoughts and feelings about fellow men on earth including Dr. Ndemo and I remain accountable to my creator. On Fri, Oct 4, 2013 at 11:55 AM, Walubengo J <jwalu@yahoo.com> wrote:
@Becky, @Jane,
True that Ndemo was cool like that.
But I guess everyone has their own style (remember when Kibaki took over and went quiet in Statehouse and everyone -comparing him to Moi - was asking where is this old man; 10years later the guy showed up with Thika Superhighway +++
One more thing, Matiangi is Cabinet Sec a.k.a Minister so it is abit unfair to compare him with Ndemo who was Permanent Sec (different roles). Perhaps if Becky did an article comparing Matiangi to Pogisho (former Minister) we might get a different picture?
That said, I also do miss seeing the "Ndemo effect" at the Ministry...but maybe we should instead target to bringing out the PS Tiampati out of the woods..we could start by giving him a free, lifetime registration to KICTAnet :-)
walu.
------------------------------ *From:* Network of non- formal Educational institutions < nnfeischools@yahoo.com> *To:* jwalu@yahoo.com *Cc:* KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> *Sent:* Friday, September 27, 2013 12:56 PM *Subject:* Re: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo
I agree with Wanjiku . Dr Ndema was that available and supportive to everybody.
Jane
------------------------------ *From:* Rebecca Wanjiku <rebeccawanjiku@yahoo.com> *To:* Jane Muriuki <nnfeischools@yahoo.com> *Cc:* KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> *Sent:* Friday, September 27, 2013 12:25 PM *Subject:* [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo
When it became obvious that Bitange Ndemo would not be taking over as the Cabinet Secretary in the Ministry of Information and Communication, the ICT community wondered who would wear the giant shoes left by Ndemo. To calm the nerves and prepare for his exit, Ndemo wrote to the ICT industry and you can read it here.<http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/04/ndemo-sees-his-departure-as-imminent/> So much has been said about Ndemo, both positive and negative but the thing I am most happy about is his easy approach; want to see him, drop him an email, get an appointment at 6 am or earlier. Want to interview him, drop the questions on email, and for some reason I would have answers in 24 hours, on email. No reminder, he will do it. Read more….. http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/09/what-matiangi-can-learn-from-ndemo/
Tel. 254 720 318 925
wanjiku.co.ke
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The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development.
KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
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The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development.
KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
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The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development.
KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
Enough said, please focus on substance -- time has an ability to different substance from form..... Great week. Eric here Sent from my iPhone On Oct 7, 2013, at 3:48, Fred Matiangi <fredmatiangi@gmail.com> wrote:
When I was nominated to Cabinet, last April, several of my friends including Dr. Ndemo, Tom Mshindi, Elijah, Muriuki, and later others I met in policy discussions like Alex and Walu encouraged me to visit, participate and engage as much as humanly possible with the ICT sector in the blogosphere and join KICTANET. The advice given to me was that in all these interactions, I would meet diverse views on various aspects of policy in the ICT sector generally. I try to ‘check in’ from time to time and keenly follow conversations on a number of policy issues. I have learned a lot from some of these exchanges. I have met very insightful and deep thinkers; and interesting others too.
I must confess however that in the 5 months I have been in public space, there are times one feels very frustrated and almost like one is being asked to unlearn many things- even about the most basic moral issues like telling simple truths.
I read Wanjiku’s post and didn’t know whether to laugh or cry. Why would anybody tell such blatant lies about someone they hardly know? Many of my colleagues at the Ministry told me not to bother to respond, but I think it was too personal not to be commented on.
Everyone who was at Connected Kenya early in the year for instance can (if they want to be sincere) recollect that I not only attended the cocktail preceding the dinner in honour of my colleagues, Minister Pogisho and Dr. Ndemo, but spoke at the event. I was introduced by Dr. Ndemo. I actually not only attended and spoke at the dinner but invited 3 colleague Ministers-from Tanzania, Uganda and South Africa- attending the OGP meeting running side by side with Connected Kenya at the Serena.
In any case, it wasn’t clear to anyone then that Dr. Ndemo would leave the Ministry -appointments of PSs had not been done. When it was, we held a farewell lunch for him and had such a great time with over 600 colleagues and industry players at the Panafric. In collaboration with colleagues at the Ministry, including Ndemo’s successor, Mr. Tiampati, we have ensured to include, invite and very sincerely acknowledge our preceding colleagues in all activities, especially where we are launching products, reports etc. that are a culmination of efforts they initiated at the Ministry- postal payment gateway switch, the National Broadband Strategy etc.
At the main Connected Kenya event, I successfully persuaded Paul Kukubo and other colleagues involved in the planning to allow me to have a generous time on the podium with Minister Pogisho as this was the most public opportunity for handover.
There sure is something fundamentally serious with people- adults -who tell lies such are being told here. Where on earth does the allegation that I excused myself to see the Mombasa Governor come from?
The meeting Wanjiku refers to held by African Development Bank at the Intercontinental Hotel was not even on PPPs. I was invited to preside over the launch of the report ‘silicon Kenya’- an ICT study commissioned by the African Development Bank. I was there at 9am as advised but the meeting started 1 hour late. I hurriedly made my remarks and had to leave when I was done- at 1105hrs- because we were expected at a cabinet meeting starting at 11am. I very humbly explained this to both the journalists present and all who had questions. I had however promised Michelle Morgan and Mark Okuttah that I would respond to their 2 brief questions which I did. There was no discussion on LTE- Not anything I can remember was meaningful enough to sufficiently demonstrate my shallowness and lack of depth!
It is very frustrating to operate in the space of rumour mongering. I sincerely think it is very demeaning for Dr. Ndemo and many of all of us his friends and colleagues to engage in such a cheap discussion as being proposed here about his and my relationship that’s over three decades old and much deeper and more expansive than our interaction at the Ministry of Information or generally in the ICT sector. It is very unfortunate- to say the very least.
Hate is a very strong term to use, especially to describe a relationship between two people one of whom you begin by confessing you do not know much of. I will let all readers and serious decent people who interact with this unfortunate discussion be the judges.
I try- even with the tyranny of demands on our time to return some of the heavy traffic of e-mails, enquiries etc. that come to the Ministry. I will certainly not lie that I will be able to do every interview, meet every individual or group of people who want to meet or even turn up at every single event I am required to. I try to meet as many people as I humanly can and even try harder to show up for events when we have been invited and advised in good time; but I also delegate in cases I cannot obviously deal with due to various constraints.
I am so grateful to God for the wonderful people I found at the Ministry and all the very hardworking and focused Kenyans that work with me in many of our agencies. We try hard and will continue to. Of course we may not satisfy everyone but we promise to do our very best.
When we are criticised, however- which we will always expect and take in our stride- we hope people are at least factual- even about reporting events- and more focused on the work we do rather than rumours and gossip.
To be insulted is painful. It is even much more painful to be mispresented and for plain lies to be peddled about you. I pray that no Kenyan perpetuates this about a fellow Kenyan, even one they simply just don’t like.
Ultimately, the Almighty God knows my heart and my every thought. He knows my thoughts and feelings about fellow men on earth including Dr. Ndemo and I remain accountable to my creator.
On Fri, Oct 4, 2013 at 11:55 AM, Walubengo J <jwalu@yahoo.com> wrote:
@Becky, @Jane,
True that Ndemo was cool like that.
But I guess everyone has their own style (remember when Kibaki took over and went quiet in Statehouse and everyone -comparing him to Moi - was asking where is this old man; 10years later the guy showed up with Thika Superhighway +++
One more thing, Matiangi is Cabinet Sec a.k.a Minister so it is abit unfair to compare him with Ndemo who was Permanent Sec (different roles). Perhaps if Becky did an article comparing Matiangi to Pogisho (former Minister) we might get a different picture?
That said, I also do miss seeing the "Ndemo effect" at the Ministry...but maybe we should instead target to bringing out the PS Tiampati out of the woods..we could start by giving him a free, lifetime registration to KICTAnet :-)
walu.
From: Network of non- formal Educational institutions <nnfeischools@yahoo.com> To: jwalu@yahoo.com Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> Sent: Friday, September 27, 2013 12:56 PM Subject: Re: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo
I agree with Wanjiku . Dr Ndema was that available and supportive to everybody.
Jane
From: Rebecca Wanjiku <rebeccawanjiku@yahoo.com> To: Jane Muriuki <nnfeischools@yahoo.com> Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> Sent: Friday, September 27, 2013 12:25 PM Subject: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo
When it became obvious that Bitange Ndemo would not be taking over as the Cabinet Secretary in the Ministry of Information and Communication, the ICT community wondered who would wear the giant shoes left by Ndemo. To calm the nerves and prepare for his exit, Ndemo wrote to the ICT industry and you can read it here. So much has been said about Ndemo, both positive and negative but the thing I am most happy about is his easy approach; want to see him, drop him an email, get an appointment at 6 am or earlier. Want to interview him, drop the questions on email, and for some reason I would have answers in 24 hours, on email. No reminder, he will do it. Read more….. http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/09/what-matiangi-can-learn-from-ndemo/
Tel. 254 720 318 925
wanjiku.co.ke
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Unsubscribe or change your options at https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/options/kictanet/nnfeischools%40yahoo.c...
The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development.
KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
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The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development.
KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
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The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development.
KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
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The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development.
KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
Eric, I believe "substance" is the point Becky was ultimately trying to get at, so the discussion she brought up is very important to have. Becky has a great deal of credibility and knowledge in this community, and as a journalist her job is to ask hard questions. Kenya is one of the leading technology countries in Africa largely due to the knowledge and availability of gov't officials in the past 5 years to listen to the greater tech community in-country and then act upon it. They have done a fantastic job over time. The perception is that there has not been a great deal of substance yet from the ICT Ministry since new leadership came into effect. Now, it is still somewhat early days, so that's a hard thing to judge. My takeaway from Becky's article was that the substance of knowledge is a good enough indicator in the first 5 months, and that was what was lacking from ministry leadership right now. For Mr. Matiangi, I'm glad you responded and I hope that we see a lot more of this from you across your many areas of responsibility. With the changes in the way national gov't works at the ministry level, there will be more onus put on yourself to respond. The community does expect a high level of knowledge from gov't leadership on the respective fields of Information, Communication and Technology from the ICT ministry - it is what got us here in the first place. After all, we don't want to just maintain our position on the continent, but to grow it beyond that level and be a world-class hub for tech. Regards, -- Erik Hersman Ushahidi | iHub | BRCK @WhiteAfrican On Oct 7, 2013, at 8:46 AM, Eric Osiakwan <ericosiakwan@me.com> wrote:
Enough said, please focus on substance -- time has an ability to different substance from form.....
Great week.
Eric here
Sent from my iPhone
On Oct 7, 2013, at 3:48, Fred Matiangi <fredmatiangi@gmail.com> wrote:
When I was nominated to Cabinet, last April, several of my friends including Dr. Ndemo, Tom Mshindi, Elijah, Muriuki, and later others I met in policy discussions like Alex and Walu encouraged me to visit, participate and engage as much as humanly possible with the ICT sector in the blogosphere and join KICTANET. The advice given to me was that in all these interactions, I would meet diverse views on various aspects of policy in the ICT sector generally. I try to ‘check in’ from time to time and keenly follow conversations on a number of policy issues. I have learned a lot from some of these exchanges. I have met very insightful and deep thinkers; and interesting others too.
I must confess however that in the 5 months I have been in public space, there are times one feels very frustrated and almost like one is being asked to unlearn many things- even about the most basic moral issues like telling simple truths.
I read Wanjiku’s post and didn’t know whether to laugh or cry. Why would anybody tell such blatant lies about someone they hardly know? Many of my colleagues at the Ministry told me not to bother to respond, but I think it was too personal not to be commented on.
Everyone who was at Connected Kenya early in the year for instance can (if they want to be sincere) recollect that I not only attended the cocktail preceding the dinner in honour of my colleagues, Minister Pogisho and Dr. Ndemo, but spoke at the event. I was introduced by Dr. Ndemo. I actually not only attended and spoke at the dinner but invited 3 colleague Ministers-from Tanzania, Uganda and South Africa- attending the OGP meeting running side by side with Connected Kenya at the Serena.
In any case, it wasn’t clear to anyone then that Dr. Ndemo would leave the Ministry -appointments of PSs had not been done. When it was, we held a farewell lunch for him and had such a great time with over 600 colleagues and industry players at the Panafric. In collaboration with colleagues at the Ministry, including Ndemo’s successor, Mr. Tiampati, we have ensured to include, invite and very sincerely acknowledge our preceding colleagues in all activities, especially where we are launching products, reports etc. that are a culmination of efforts they initiated at the Ministry- postal payment gateway switch, the National Broadband Strategy etc.
At the main Connected Kenya event, I successfully persuaded Paul Kukubo and other colleagues involved in the planning to allow me to have a generous time on the podium with Minister Pogisho as this was the most public opportunity for handover.
There sure is something fundamentally serious with people- adults -who tell lies such are being told here. Where on earth does the allegation that I excused myself to see the Mombasa Governor come from?
The meeting Wanjiku refers to held by African Development Bank at the Intercontinental Hotel was not even on PPPs. I was invited to preside over the launch of the report ‘silicon Kenya’- an ICT study commissioned by the African Development Bank. I was there at 9am as advised but the meeting started 1 hour late. I hurriedly made my remarks and had to leave when I was done- at 1105hrs- because we were expected at a cabinet meeting starting at 11am. I very humbly explained this to both the journalists present and all who had questions. I had however promised Michelle Morgan and Mark Okuttah that I would respond to their 2 brief questions which I did. There was no discussion on LTE- Not anything I can remember was meaningful enough to sufficiently demonstrate my shallowness and lack of depth!
It is very frustrating to operate in the space of rumour mongering. I sincerely think it is very demeaning for Dr. Ndemo and many of all of us his friends and colleagues to engage in such a cheap discussion as being proposed here about his and my relationship that’s over three decades old and much deeper and more expansive than our interaction at the Ministry of Information or generally in the ICT sector. It is very unfortunate- to say the very least.
Hate is a very strong term to use, especially to describe a relationship between two people one of whom you begin by confessing you do not know much of. I will let all readers and serious decent people who interact with this unfortunate discussion be the judges.
I try- even with the tyranny of demands on our time to return some of the heavy traffic of e-mails, enquiries etc. that come to the Ministry. I will certainly not lie that I will be able to do every interview, meet every individual or group of people who want to meet or even turn up at every single event I am required to. I try to meet as many people as I humanly can and even try harder to show up for events when we have been invited and advised in good time; but I also delegate in cases I cannot obviously deal with due to various constraints.
I am so grateful to God for the wonderful people I found at the Ministry and all the very hardworking and focused Kenyans that work with me in many of our agencies. We try hard and will continue to. Of course we may not satisfy everyone but we promise to do our very best.
When we are criticised, however- which we will always expect and take in our stride- we hope people are at least factual- even about reporting events- and more focused on the work we do rather than rumours and gossip.
To be insulted is painful. It is even much more painful to be mispresented and for plain lies to be peddled about you. I pray that no Kenyan perpetuates this about a fellow Kenyan, even one they simply just don’t like.
Ultimately, the Almighty God knows my heart and my every thought. He knows my thoughts and feelings about fellow men on earth including Dr. Ndemo and I remain accountable to my creator.
On Fri, Oct 4, 2013 at 11:55 AM, Walubengo J <jwalu@yahoo.com> wrote: @Becky, @Jane,
True that Ndemo was cool like that.
But I guess everyone has their own style (remember when Kibaki took over and went quiet in Statehouse and everyone -comparing him to Moi - was asking where is this old man; 10years later the guy showed up with Thika Superhighway +++
One more thing, Matiangi is Cabinet Sec a.k.a Minister so it is abit unfair to compare him with Ndemo who was Permanent Sec (different roles). Perhaps if Becky did an article comparing Matiangi to Pogisho (former Minister) we might get a different picture?
That said, I also do miss seeing the "Ndemo effect" at the Ministry...but maybe we should instead target to bringing out the PS Tiampati out of the woods..we could start by giving him a free, lifetime registration to KICTAnet :-)
walu.
From: Network of non- formal Educational institutions <nnfeischools@yahoo.com> To: jwalu@yahoo.com Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> Sent: Friday, September 27, 2013 12:56 PM Subject: Re: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo
I agree with Wanjiku . Dr Ndema was that available and supportive to everybody.
Jane
From: Rebecca Wanjiku <rebeccawanjiku@yahoo.com> To: Jane Muriuki <nnfeischools@yahoo.com> Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> Sent: Friday, September 27, 2013 12:25 PM Subject: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo
When it became obvious that Bitange Ndemo would not be taking over as the Cabinet Secretary in the Ministry of Information and Communication, the ICT community wondered who would wear the giant shoes left by Ndemo. To calm the nerves and prepare for his exit, Ndemo wrote to the ICT industry and you can read it here. So much has been said about Ndemo, both positive and negative but the thing I am most happy about is his easy approach; want to see him, drop him an email, get an appointment at 6 am or earlier. Want to interview him, drop the questions on email, and for some reason I would have answers in 24 hours, on email. No reminder, he will do it. Read more….. http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/09/what-matiangi-can-learn-from-ndemo/
Tel. 254 720 318 925
wanjiku.co.ke
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KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
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KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
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KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
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The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development.
KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
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The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development.
KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
Eric & Listers First let me start by quoting a famous line from the movie - The Godfather. 'Its business...it's not personal' ~ Don Corleone I guess the honeymoon is over for the new leadership at the ICT Ministry. Having said that, I want to concur with Eric on Becky's credibility and knowledge in this space and that what she usually says is done after some ground work. She is what I call an 'Equal Opportunity Offender' (and I say this as someone who has been on the wrong side of her pen) :). She usually means well and it's never personal. However, I think that the onus on journalists and bloggers to ensure that they cross their T's and dot their I's before publishing is becoming increasingly more important in this age of hyper connectivity. For Dr. Matiangi, my simple advise to him will be to grow a thick skin because sometimes what is said may not be factual but perceptive. Unfortunately perceptions have a way of becoming self fulfilling prophecies. An observation here worth noting is that in one way you have already emulated Dr. Ndemo in that you are already engaging with the community and giving back as much as you get. This is a good start and can only work towards improving the state of our industry. Sometimes what is said may not be to your liking and may stretch the truth abit. However, it doesn't always mean one is out to get you..but to get you to further improve your engagement. Granted that its difficult to make everyone happy but then I'm sure you were aware of that when you took up this onerous task of heading one of the key ministries in our country. Leaders have different management styles and there is no right or wrong style but the style that works best for each individual. Some key ingredients though (in my humble opinion) is emotional intelligence and self awareness. This I'm seeing as a similarity between the outgoing and incoming leadership. And that's a good thing. What we must guide against is Hubris. And it is our duty as citizens of this country to remind our leadership of that. Ali Hussein +254 0770 906375 / 0713 601113 "Kujikwaa si kuanguka, bali ni kwenda mbele" (To stumble is not to fall but a sign of going forward) - Swahili Proverb Sent from my iPad
On Oct 7, 2013, at 10:28 AM, Erik Hersman <erik@zungu.com> wrote:
Eric, I believe "substance" is the point Becky was ultimately trying to get at, so the discussion she brought up is very important to have. Becky has a great deal of credibility and knowledge in this community, and as a journalist her job is to ask hard questions. Kenya is one of the leading technology countries in Africa largely due to the knowledge and availability of gov't officials in the past 5 years to listen to the greater tech community in-country and then act upon it. They have done a fantastic job over time.
The perception is that there has not been a great deal of substance yet from the ICT Ministry since new leadership came into effect. Now, it is still somewhat early days, so that's a hard thing to judge. My takeaway from Becky's article was that the substance of knowledge is a good enough indicator in the first 5 months, and that was what was lacking from ministry leadership right now.
For Mr. Matiangi, I'm glad you responded and I hope that we see a lot more of this from you across your many areas of responsibility. With the changes in the way national gov't works at the ministry level, there will be more onus put on yourself to respond. The community does expect a high level of knowledge from gov't leadership on the respective fields of Information, Communication and Technology from the ICT ministry - it is what got us here in the first place. After all, we don't want to just maintain our position on the continent, but to grow it beyond that level and be a world-class hub for tech.
Regards,
-- Erik Hersman
Ushahidi | iHub | BRCK @WhiteAfrican
On Oct 7, 2013, at 8:46 AM, Eric Osiakwan <ericosiakwan@me.com> wrote:
Enough said, please focus on substance -- time has an ability to different substance from form.....
Great week.
Eric here
Sent from my iPhone
On Oct 7, 2013, at 3:48, Fred Matiangi <fredmatiangi@gmail.com> wrote:
When I was nominated to Cabinet, last April, several of my friends including Dr. Ndemo, Tom Mshindi, Elijah, Muriuki, and later others I met in policy discussions like Alex and Walu encouraged me to visit, participate and engage as much as humanly possible with the ICT sector in the blogosphere and join KICTANET. The advice given to me was that in all these interactions, I would meet diverse views on various aspects of policy in the ICT sector generally. I try to ‘check in’ from time to time and keenly follow conversations on a number of policy issues. I have learned a lot from some of these exchanges. I have met very insightful and deep thinkers; and interesting others too.
I must confess however that in the 5 months I have been in public space, there are times one feels very frustrated and almost like one is being asked to unlearn many things- even about the most basic moral issues like telling simple truths.
I read Wanjiku’s post and didn’t know whether to laugh or cry. Why would anybody tell such blatant lies about someone they hardly know? Many of my colleagues at the Ministry told me not to bother to respond, but I think it was too personal not to be commented on.
Everyone who was at Connected Kenya early in the year for instance can (if they want to be sincere) recollect that I not only attended the cocktail preceding the dinner in honour of my colleagues, Minister Pogisho and Dr. Ndemo, but spoke at the event. I was introduced by Dr. Ndemo. I actually not only attended and spoke at the dinner but invited 3 colleague Ministers-from Tanzania, Uganda and South Africa- attending the OGP meeting running side by side with Connected Kenya at the Serena.
In any case, it wasn’t clear to anyone then that Dr. Ndemo would leave the Ministry -appointments of PSs had not been done. When it was, we held a farewell lunch for him and had such a great time with over 600 colleagues and industry players at the Panafric. In collaboration with colleagues at the Ministry, including Ndemo’s successor, Mr. Tiampati, we have ensured to include, invite and very sincerely acknowledge our preceding colleagues in all activities, especially where we are launching products, reports etc. that are a culmination of efforts they initiated at the Ministry- postal payment gateway switch, the National Broadband Strategy etc.
At the main Connected Kenya event, I successfully persuaded Paul Kukubo and other colleagues involved in the planning to allow me to have a generous time on the podium with Minister Pogisho as this was the most public opportunity for handover.
There sure is something fundamentally serious with people- adults -who tell lies such are being told here. Where on earth does the allegation that I excused myself to see the Mombasa Governor come from?
The meeting Wanjiku refers to held by African Development Bank at the Intercontinental Hotel was not even on PPPs. I was invited to preside over the launch of the report ‘silicon Kenya’- an ICT study commissioned by the African Development Bank. I was there at 9am as advised but the meeting started 1 hour late. I hurriedly made my remarks and had to leave when I was done- at 1105hrs- because we were expected at a cabinet meeting starting at 11am. I very humbly explained this to both the journalists present and all who had questions. I had however promised Michelle Morgan and Mark Okuttah that I would respond to their 2 brief questions which I did. There was no discussion on LTE- Not anything I can remember was meaningful enough to sufficiently demonstrate my shallowness and lack of depth!
It is very frustrating to operate in the space of rumour mongering. I sincerely think it is very demeaning for Dr. Ndemo and many of all of us his friends and colleagues to engage in such a cheap discussion as being proposed here about his and my relationship that’s over three decades old and much deeper and more expansive than our interaction at the Ministry of Information or generally in the ICT sector. It is very unfortunate- to say the very least.
Hate is a very strong term to use, especially to describe a relationship between two people one of whom you begin by confessing you do not know much of. I will let all readers and serious decent people who interact with this unfortunate discussion be the judges.
I try- even with the tyranny of demands on our time to return some of the heavy traffic of e-mails, enquiries etc. that come to the Ministry. I will certainly not lie that I will be able to do every interview, meet every individual or group of people who want to meet or even turn up at every single event I am required to. I try to meet as many people as I humanly can and even try harder to show up for events when we have been invited and advised in good time; but I also delegate in cases I cannot obviously deal with due to various constraints.
I am so grateful to God for the wonderful people I found at the Ministry and all the very hardworking and focused Kenyans that work with me in many of our agencies. We try hard and will continue to. Of course we may not satisfy everyone but we promise to do our very best.
When we are criticised, however- which we will always expect and take in our stride- we hope people are at least factual- even about reporting events- and more focused on the work we do rather than rumours and gossip.
To be insulted is painful. It is even much more painful to be mispresented and for plain lies to be peddled about you. I pray that no Kenyan perpetuates this about a fellow Kenyan, even one they simply just don’t like.
Ultimately, the Almighty God knows my heart and my every thought. He knows my thoughts and feelings about fellow men on earth including Dr. Ndemo and I remain accountable to my creator.
On Fri, Oct 4, 2013 at 11:55 AM, Walubengo J <jwalu@yahoo.com> wrote: @Becky, @Jane,
True that Ndemo was cool like that.
But I guess everyone has their own style (remember when Kibaki took over and went quiet in Statehouse and everyone -comparing him to Moi - was asking where is this old man; 10years later the guy showed up with Thika Superhighway +++
One more thing, Matiangi is Cabinet Sec a.k.a Minister so it is abit unfair to compare him with Ndemo who was Permanent Sec (different roles). Perhaps if Becky did an article comparing Matiangi to Pogisho (former Minister) we might get a different picture?
That said, I also do miss seeing the "Ndemo effect" at the Ministry...but maybe we should instead target to bringing out the PS Tiampati out of the woods..we could start by giving him a free, lifetime registration to KICTAnet :-)
walu.
From: Network of non- formal Educational institutions <nnfeischools@yahoo.com> To: jwalu@yahoo.com Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> Sent: Friday, September 27, 2013 12:56 PM Subject: Re: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo
I agree with Wanjiku . Dr Ndema was that available and supportive to everybody.
Jane
From: Rebecca Wanjiku <rebeccawanjiku@yahoo.com> To: Jane Muriuki <nnfeischools@yahoo.com> Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> Sent: Friday, September 27, 2013 12:25 PM Subject: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo
When it became obvious that Bitange Ndemo would not be taking over as the Cabinet Secretary in the Ministry of Information and Communication, the ICT community wondered who would wear the giant shoes left by Ndemo. To calm the nerves and prepare for his exit, Ndemo wrote to the ICT industry and you can read it here. So much has been said about Ndemo, both positive and negative but the thing I am most happy about is his easy approach; want to see him, drop him an email, get an appointment at 6 am or earlier. Want to interview him, drop the questions on email, and for some reason I would have answers in 24 hours, on email. No reminder, he will do it. Read more….. http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/09/what-matiangi-can-learn-from-ndemo/
Tel. 254 720 318 925
wanjiku.co.ke
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The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development.
KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
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The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development.
KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
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The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development.
KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
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The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development.
KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
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The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development.
KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
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The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development.
KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
....... in my previous incarnation, I was a junior reporter and these were my eternal guiding lights; 1. the Story is not about You, 2. the Story is about the Story, however in the modern day 21st century information superhighway fast-paced journalism I guess the Style is different but if you look at the ensuing thread, I guess you may pick up on my drift. Eric here On 7 Oct 2013, at 09:28, Erik Hersman <erik@zungu.com> wrote:
Eric, I believe "substance" is the point Becky was ultimately trying to get at, so the discussion she brought up is very important to have. Becky has a great deal of credibility and knowledge in this community, and as a journalist her job is to ask hard questions. Kenya is one of the leading technology countries in Africa largely due to the knowledge and availability of gov't officials in the past 5 years to listen to the greater tech community in-country and then act upon it. They have done a fantastic job over time.
The perception is that there has not been a great deal of substance yet from the ICT Ministry since new leadership came into effect. Now, it is still somewhat early days, so that's a hard thing to judge. My takeaway from Becky's article was that the substance of knowledge is a good enough indicator in the first 5 months, and that was what was lacking from ministry leadership right now.
For Mr. Matiangi, I'm glad you responded and I hope that we see a lot more of this from you across your many areas of responsibility. With the changes in the way national gov't works at the ministry level, there will be more onus put on yourself to respond. The community does expect a high level of knowledge from gov't leadership on the respective fields of Information, Communication and Technology from the ICT ministry - it is what got us here in the first place. After all, we don't want to just maintain our position on the continent, but to grow it beyond that level and be a world-class hub for tech.
Regards,
-- Erik Hersman
Ushahidi | iHub | BRCK @WhiteAfrican
On Oct 7, 2013, at 8:46 AM, Eric Osiakwan <ericosiakwan@me.com> wrote:
Enough said, please focus on substance -- time has an ability to different substance from form.....
Great week.
Eric here
Sent from my iPhone
On Oct 7, 2013, at 3:48, Fred Matiangi <fredmatiangi@gmail.com> wrote:
When I was nominated to Cabinet, last April, several of my friends including Dr. Ndemo, Tom Mshindi, Elijah, Muriuki, and later others I met in policy discussions like Alex and Walu encouraged me to visit, participate and engage as much as humanly possible with the ICT sector in the blogosphere and join KICTANET. The advice given to me was that in all these interactions, I would meet diverse views on various aspects of policy in the ICT sector generally. I try to ‘check in’ from time to time and keenly follow conversations on a number of policy issues. I have learned a lot from some of these exchanges. I have met very insightful and deep thinkers; and interesting others too.
I must confess however that in the 5 months I have been in public space, there are times one feels very frustrated and almost like one is being asked to unlearn many things- even about the most basic moral issues like telling simple truths.
I read Wanjiku’s post and didn’t know whether to laugh or cry. Why would anybody tell such blatant lies about someone they hardly know? Many of my colleagues at the Ministry told me not to bother to respond, but I think it was too personal not to be commented on.
Everyone who was at Connected Kenya early in the year for instance can (if they want to be sincere) recollect that I not only attended the cocktail preceding the dinner in honour of my colleagues, Minister Pogisho and Dr. Ndemo, but spoke at the event. I was introduced by Dr. Ndemo. I actually not only attended and spoke at the dinner but invited 3 colleague Ministers-from Tanzania, Uganda and South Africa- attending the OGP meeting running side by side with Connected Kenya at the Serena.
In any case, it wasn’t clear to anyone then that Dr. Ndemo would leave the Ministry -appointments of PSs had not been done. When it was, we held a farewell lunch for him and had such a great time with over 600 colleagues and industry players at the Panafric. In collaboration with colleagues at the Ministry, including Ndemo’s successor, Mr. Tiampati, we have ensured to include, invite and very sincerely acknowledge our preceding colleagues in all activities, especially where we are launching products, reports etc. that are a culmination of efforts they initiated at the Ministry- postal payment gateway switch, the National Broadband Strategy etc.
At the main Connected Kenya event, I successfully persuaded Paul Kukubo and other colleagues involved in the planning to allow me to have a generous time on the podium with Minister Pogisho as this was the most public opportunity for handover.
There sure is something fundamentally serious with people- adults -who tell lies such are being told here. Where on earth does the allegation that I excused myself to see the Mombasa Governor come from?
The meeting Wanjiku refers to held by African Development Bank at the Intercontinental Hotel was not even on PPPs. I was invited to preside over the launch of the report ‘silicon Kenya’- an ICT study commissioned by the African Development Bank. I was there at 9am as advised but the meeting started 1 hour late. I hurriedly made my remarks and had to leave when I was done- at 1105hrs- because we were expected at a cabinet meeting starting at 11am. I very humbly explained this to both the journalists present and all who had questions. I had however promised Michelle Morgan and Mark Okuttah that I would respond to their 2 brief questions which I did. There was no discussion on LTE- Not anything I can remember was meaningful enough to sufficiently demonstrate my shallowness and lack of depth!
It is very frustrating to operate in the space of rumour mongering. I sincerely think it is very demeaning for Dr. Ndemo and many of all of us his friends and colleagues to engage in such a cheap discussion as being proposed here about his and my relationship that’s over three decades old and much deeper and more expansive than our interaction at the Ministry of Information or generally in the ICT sector. It is very unfortunate- to say the very least.
Hate is a very strong term to use, especially to describe a relationship between two people one of whom you begin by confessing you do not know much of. I will let all readers and serious decent people who interact with this unfortunate discussion be the judges.
I try- even with the tyranny of demands on our time to return some of the heavy traffic of e-mails, enquiries etc. that come to the Ministry. I will certainly not lie that I will be able to do every interview, meet every individual or group of people who want to meet or even turn up at every single event I am required to. I try to meet as many people as I humanly can and even try harder to show up for events when we have been invited and advised in good time; but I also delegate in cases I cannot obviously deal with due to various constraints.
I am so grateful to God for the wonderful people I found at the Ministry and all the very hardworking and focused Kenyans that work with me in many of our agencies. We try hard and will continue to. Of course we may not satisfy everyone but we promise to do our very best.
When we are criticised, however- which we will always expect and take in our stride- we hope people are at least factual- even about reporting events- and more focused on the work we do rather than rumours and gossip.
To be insulted is painful. It is even much more painful to be mispresented and for plain lies to be peddled about you. I pray that no Kenyan perpetuates this about a fellow Kenyan, even one they simply just don’t like.
Ultimately, the Almighty God knows my heart and my every thought. He knows my thoughts and feelings about fellow men on earth including Dr. Ndemo and I remain accountable to my creator.
On Fri, Oct 4, 2013 at 11:55 AM, Walubengo J <jwalu@yahoo.com> wrote: @Becky, @Jane,
True that Ndemo was cool like that.
But I guess everyone has their own style (remember when Kibaki took over and went quiet in Statehouse and everyone -comparing him to Moi - was asking where is this old man; 10years later the guy showed up with Thika Superhighway +++
One more thing, Matiangi is Cabinet Sec a.k.a Minister so it is abit unfair to compare him with Ndemo who was Permanent Sec (different roles). Perhaps if Becky did an article comparing Matiangi to Pogisho (former Minister) we might get a different picture?
That said, I also do miss seeing the "Ndemo effect" at the Ministry...but maybe we should instead target to bringing out the PS Tiampati out of the woods..we could start by giving him a free, lifetime registration to KICTAnet :-)
walu.
From: Network of non- formal Educational institutions <nnfeischools@yahoo.com> To: jwalu@yahoo.com Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> Sent: Friday, September 27, 2013 12:56 PM Subject: Re: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo
I agree with Wanjiku . Dr Ndema was that available and supportive to everybody.
Jane
From: Rebecca Wanjiku <rebeccawanjiku@yahoo.com> To: Jane Muriuki <nnfeischools@yahoo.com> Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> Sent: Friday, September 27, 2013 12:25 PM Subject: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo
When it became obvious that Bitange Ndemo would not be taking over as the Cabinet Secretary in the Ministry of Information and Communication, the ICT community wondered who would wear the giant shoes left by Ndemo. To calm the nerves and prepare for his exit, Ndemo wrote to the ICT industry and you can read it here. So much has been said about Ndemo, both positive and negative but the thing I am most happy about is his easy approach; want to see him, drop him an email, get an appointment at 6 am or earlier. Want to interview him, drop the questions on email, and for some reason I would have answers in 24 hours, on email. No reminder, he will do it. Read more….. http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/09/what-matiangi-can-learn-from-ndemo/
Tel. 254 720 318 925
wanjiku.co.ke
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KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
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KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
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KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
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KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
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Eric M.K Osiakwan +233244386792 "Accraboy" 4 Skype about.me/ericosiakwan
Dear Dr.Matiangi, Having read your email it is apparent how much you are affected by Wanjiku's email. I wish to take the liberty to encourage you. This industry (and the world, really) is full of criticism and a lot of harsh, unkind and often untrue words. I have been a victim of it. What is important is that you are giving it your best. Take in what is useful in helping your perform your duties and trash the rest. It is never too easy pleasing everyone, nor can you be someone else. Everyone has his/her own style of working. The key objective is to deliver good results. All the best and lose no more sleep as long as you know you are giving it your best. You took up a position that comes with the good and the bad. Shut out the noise and just get the industry going to the next level. Kind regards, Gilda Odera From: kictanet [mailto:kictanet-bounces+godera=skyweb.co.ke@lists.kictanet.or.ke] On Behalf Of Fred Matiangi Sent: Monday, October 07, 2013 4:48 AM To: godera@skyweb.co.ke Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions Subject: Re: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo When I was nominated to Cabinet, last April, several of my friends including Dr. Ndemo, Tom Mshindi, Elijah, Muriuki, and later others I met in policy discussions like Alex and Walu encouraged me to visit, participate and engage as much as humanly possible with the ICT sector in the blogosphere and join KICTANET. The advice given to me was that in all these interactions, I would meet diverse views on various aspects of policy in the ICT sector generally. I try to 'check in' from time to time and keenly follow conversations on a number of policy issues. I have learned a lot from some of these exchanges. I have met very insightful and deep thinkers; and interesting others too. I must confess however that in the 5 months I have been in public space, there are times one feels very frustrated and almost like one is being asked to unlearn many things- even about the most basic moral issues like telling simple truths. I read Wanjiku's post and didn't know whether to laugh or cry. Why would anybody tell such blatant lies about someone they hardly know? Many of my colleagues at the Ministry told me not to bother to respond, but I think it was too personal not to be commented on. Everyone who was at Connected Kenya early in the year for instance can (if they want to be sincere) recollect that I not only attended the cocktail preceding the dinner in honour of my colleagues, Minister Pogisho and Dr. Ndemo, but spoke at the event. I was introduced by Dr. Ndemo. I actually not only attended and spoke at the dinner but invited 3 colleague Ministers-from Tanzania, Uganda and South Africa- attending the OGP meeting running side by side with Connected Kenya at the Serena. In any case, it wasn't clear to anyone then that Dr. Ndemo would leave the Ministry -appointments of PSs had not been done. When it was, we held a farewell lunch for him and had such a great time with over 600 colleagues and industry players at the Panafric. In collaboration with colleagues at the Ministry, including Ndemo's successor, Mr. Tiampati, we have ensured to include, invite and very sincerely acknowledge our preceding colleagues in all activities, especially where we are launching products, reports etc. that are a culmination of efforts they initiated at the Ministry- postal payment gateway switch, the National Broadband Strategy etc. At the main Connected Kenya event, I successfully persuaded Paul Kukubo and other colleagues involved in the planning to allow me to have a generous time on the podium with Minister Pogisho as this was the most public opportunity for handover. There sure is something fundamentally serious with people- adults -who tell lies such are being told here. Where on earth does the allegation that I excused myself to see the Mombasa Governor come from? The meeting Wanjiku refers to held by African Development Bank at the Intercontinental Hotel was not even on PPPs. I was invited to preside over the launch of the report 'silicon Kenya'- an ICT study commissioned by the African Development Bank. I was there at 9am as advised but the meeting started 1 hour late. I hurriedly made my remarks and had to leave when I was done- at 1105hrs- because we were expected at a cabinet meeting starting at 11am. I very humbly explained this to both the journalists present and all who had questions. I had however promised Michelle Morgan and Mark Okuttah that I would respond to their 2 brief questions which I did. There was no discussion on LTE- Not anything I can remember was meaningful enough to sufficiently demonstrate my shallowness and lack of depth! It is very frustrating to operate in the space of rumour mongering. I sincerely think it is very demeaning for Dr. Ndemo and many of all of us his friends and colleagues to engage in such a cheap discussion as being proposed here about his and my relationship that's over three decades old and much deeper and more expansive than our interaction at the Ministry of Information or generally in the ICT sector. It is very unfortunate- to say the very least. Hate is a very strong term to use, especially to describe a relationship between two people one of whom you begin by confessing you do not know much of. I will let all readers and serious decent people who interact with this unfortunate discussion be the judges. I try- even with the tyranny of demands on our time to return some of the heavy traffic of e-mails, enquiries etc. that come to the Ministry. I will certainly not lie that I will be able to do every interview, meet every individual or group of people who want to meet or even turn up at every single event I am required to. I try to meet as many people as I humanly can and even try harder to show up for events when we have been invited and advised in good time; but I also delegate in cases I cannot obviously deal with due to various constraints. I am so grateful to God for the wonderful people I found at the Ministry and all the very hardworking and focused Kenyans that work with me in many of our agencies. We try hard and will continue to. Of course we may not satisfy everyone but we promise to do our very best. When we are criticised, however- which we will always expect and take in our stride- we hope people are at least factual- even about reporting events- and more focused on the work we do rather than rumours and gossip. To be insulted is painful. It is even much more painful to be mispresented and for plain lies to be peddled about you. I pray that no Kenyan perpetuates this about a fellow Kenyan, even one they simply just don't like. Ultimately, the Almighty God knows my heart and my every thought. He knows my thoughts and feelings about fellow men on earth including Dr. Ndemo and I remain accountable to my creator. On Fri, Oct 4, 2013 at 11:55 AM, Walubengo J <jwalu@yahoo.com> wrote: @Becky, @Jane, True that Ndemo was cool like that. But I guess everyone has their own style (remember when Kibaki took over and went quiet in Statehouse and everyone -comparing him to Moi - was asking where is this old man; 10years later the guy showed up with Thika Superhighway +++ One more thing, Matiangi is Cabinet Sec a.k.a Minister so it is abit unfair to compare him with Ndemo who was Permanent Sec (different roles). Perhaps if Becky did an article comparing Matiangi to Pogisho (former Minister) we might get a different picture? That said, I also do miss seeing the "Ndemo effect" at the Ministry...but maybe we should instead target to bringing out the PS Tiampati out of the woods..we could start by giving him a free, lifetime registration to KICTAnet :-) walu. _____ From: Network of non- formal Educational institutions <nnfeischools@yahoo.com> To: jwalu@yahoo.com Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> Sent: Friday, September 27, 2013 12:56 PM Subject: Re: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo I agree with Wanjiku . Dr Ndema was that available and supportive to everybody. Jane _____ From: Rebecca Wanjiku <rebeccawanjiku@yahoo.com> To: Jane Muriuki <nnfeischools@yahoo.com> Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> Sent: Friday, September 27, 2013 12:25 PM Subject: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo When it became obvious that Bitange Ndemo would not be taking over as the Cabinet Secretary in the Ministry of Information and Communication, the ICT community wondered who would wear the giant shoes left by Ndemo. To calm the nerves and prepare for his exit, Ndemo wrote to the ICT industry and you can read it <http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/04/ndemo-sees-his-departure-as-imminent/> here. So much has been said about Ndemo, both positive and negative but the thing I am most happy about is his easy approach; want to see him, drop him an email, get an appointment at 6 am or earlier. Want to interview him, drop the questions on email, and for some reason I would have answers in 24 hours, on email. No reminder, he will do it. Read more... http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/09/what-matiangi-can-learn-from-ndemo/ Tel. 254 720 318 925 wanjiku.co.ke _______________________________________________ kictanet mailing list kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/listinfo/kictanet Unsubscribe or change your options at https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/options/kictanet/nnfeischools%40yahoo.c om The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development. KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications. _______________________________________________ kictanet mailing list kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/listinfo/kictanet Unsubscribe or change your options at https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/options/kictanet/jwalu%40yahoo.com The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development. KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications. _______________________________________________ kictanet mailing list kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/listinfo/kictanet Unsubscribe or change your options at https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/options/kictanet/fredmatiangi%40gmail.c om The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development. KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
One more thing Dr.Matiangi....it will be important to remain visible on this list. At least no week should pass without getting your comment or input on a relevant topic of discussion, even if it is a two liner, it will help you keep engaged with the industry. Regards, Gilda Odera From: kictanet [mailto:kictanet-bounces+godera=skyweb.co.ke@lists.kictanet.or.ke] On Behalf Of Fred Matiangi Sent: Monday, October 07, 2013 4:48 AM To: godera@skyweb.co.ke Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions Subject: Re: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo When I was nominated to Cabinet, last April, several of my friends including Dr. Ndemo, Tom Mshindi, Elijah, Muriuki, and later others I met in policy discussions like Alex and Walu encouraged me to visit, participate and engage as much as humanly possible with the ICT sector in the blogosphere and join KICTANET. The advice given to me was that in all these interactions, I would meet diverse views on various aspects of policy in the ICT sector generally. I try to 'check in' from time to time and keenly follow conversations on a number of policy issues. I have learned a lot from some of these exchanges. I have met very insightful and deep thinkers; and interesting others too. I must confess however that in the 5 months I have been in public space, there are times one feels very frustrated and almost like one is being asked to unlearn many things- even about the most basic moral issues like telling simple truths. I read Wanjiku's post and didn't know whether to laugh or cry. Why would anybody tell such blatant lies about someone they hardly know? Many of my colleagues at the Ministry told me not to bother to respond, but I think it was too personal not to be commented on. Everyone who was at Connected Kenya early in the year for instance can (if they want to be sincere) recollect that I not only attended the cocktail preceding the dinner in honour of my colleagues, Minister Pogisho and Dr. Ndemo, but spoke at the event. I was introduced by Dr. Ndemo. I actually not only attended and spoke at the dinner but invited 3 colleague Ministers-from Tanzania, Uganda and South Africa- attending the OGP meeting running side by side with Connected Kenya at the Serena. In any case, it wasn't clear to anyone then that Dr. Ndemo would leave the Ministry -appointments of PSs had not been done. When it was, we held a farewell lunch for him and had such a great time with over 600 colleagues and industry players at the Panafric. In collaboration with colleagues at the Ministry, including Ndemo's successor, Mr. Tiampati, we have ensured to include, invite and very sincerely acknowledge our preceding colleagues in all activities, especially where we are launching products, reports etc. that are a culmination of efforts they initiated at the Ministry- postal payment gateway switch, the National Broadband Strategy etc. At the main Connected Kenya event, I successfully persuaded Paul Kukubo and other colleagues involved in the planning to allow me to have a generous time on the podium with Minister Pogisho as this was the most public opportunity for handover. There sure is something fundamentally serious with people- adults -who tell lies such are being told here. Where on earth does the allegation that I excused myself to see the Mombasa Governor come from? The meeting Wanjiku refers to held by African Development Bank at the Intercontinental Hotel was not even on PPPs. I was invited to preside over the launch of the report 'silicon Kenya'- an ICT study commissioned by the African Development Bank. I was there at 9am as advised but the meeting started 1 hour late. I hurriedly made my remarks and had to leave when I was done- at 1105hrs- because we were expected at a cabinet meeting starting at 11am. I very humbly explained this to both the journalists present and all who had questions. I had however promised Michelle Morgan and Mark Okuttah that I would respond to their 2 brief questions which I did. There was no discussion on LTE- Not anything I can remember was meaningful enough to sufficiently demonstrate my shallowness and lack of depth! It is very frustrating to operate in the space of rumour mongering. I sincerely think it is very demeaning for Dr. Ndemo and many of all of us his friends and colleagues to engage in such a cheap discussion as being proposed here about his and my relationship that's over three decades old and much deeper and more expansive than our interaction at the Ministry of Information or generally in the ICT sector. It is very unfortunate- to say the very least. Hate is a very strong term to use, especially to describe a relationship between two people one of whom you begin by confessing you do not know much of. I will let all readers and serious decent people who interact with this unfortunate discussion be the judges. I try- even with the tyranny of demands on our time to return some of the heavy traffic of e-mails, enquiries etc. that come to the Ministry. I will certainly not lie that I will be able to do every interview, meet every individual or group of people who want to meet or even turn up at every single event I am required to. I try to meet as many people as I humanly can and even try harder to show up for events when we have been invited and advised in good time; but I also delegate in cases I cannot obviously deal with due to various constraints. I am so grateful to God for the wonderful people I found at the Ministry and all the very hardworking and focused Kenyans that work with me in many of our agencies. We try hard and will continue to. Of course we may not satisfy everyone but we promise to do our very best. When we are criticised, however- which we will always expect and take in our stride- we hope people are at least factual- even about reporting events- and more focused on the work we do rather than rumours and gossip. To be insulted is painful. It is even much more painful to be mispresented and for plain lies to be peddled about you. I pray that no Kenyan perpetuates this about a fellow Kenyan, even one they simply just don't like. Ultimately, the Almighty God knows my heart and my every thought. He knows my thoughts and feelings about fellow men on earth including Dr. Ndemo and I remain accountable to my creator. On Fri, Oct 4, 2013 at 11:55 AM, Walubengo J <jwalu@yahoo.com> wrote: @Becky, @Jane, True that Ndemo was cool like that. But I guess everyone has their own style (remember when Kibaki took over and went quiet in Statehouse and everyone -comparing him to Moi - was asking where is this old man; 10years later the guy showed up with Thika Superhighway +++ One more thing, Matiangi is Cabinet Sec a.k.a Minister so it is abit unfair to compare him with Ndemo who was Permanent Sec (different roles). Perhaps if Becky did an article comparing Matiangi to Pogisho (former Minister) we might get a different picture? That said, I also do miss seeing the "Ndemo effect" at the Ministry...but maybe we should instead target to bringing out the PS Tiampati out of the woods..we could start by giving him a free, lifetime registration to KICTAnet :-) walu. _____ From: Network of non- formal Educational institutions <nnfeischools@yahoo.com> To: jwalu@yahoo.com Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> Sent: Friday, September 27, 2013 12:56 PM Subject: Re: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo I agree with Wanjiku . Dr Ndema was that available and supportive to everybody. Jane _____ From: Rebecca Wanjiku <rebeccawanjiku@yahoo.com> To: Jane Muriuki <nnfeischools@yahoo.com> Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> Sent: Friday, September 27, 2013 12:25 PM Subject: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo When it became obvious that Bitange Ndemo would not be taking over as the Cabinet Secretary in the Ministry of Information and Communication, the ICT community wondered who would wear the giant shoes left by Ndemo. To calm the nerves and prepare for his exit, Ndemo wrote to the ICT industry and you can read it <http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/04/ndemo-sees-his-departure-as-imminent/> here. So much has been said about Ndemo, both positive and negative but the thing I am most happy about is his easy approach; want to see him, drop him an email, get an appointment at 6 am or earlier. Want to interview him, drop the questions on email, and for some reason I would have answers in 24 hours, on email. No reminder, he will do it. Read more... http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/09/what-matiangi-can-learn-from-ndemo/ Tel. 254 720 318 925 wanjiku.co.ke _______________________________________________ kictanet mailing list kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/listinfo/kictanet Unsubscribe or change your options at https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/options/kictanet/nnfeischools%40yahoo.c om The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development. KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications. _______________________________________________ kictanet mailing list kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/listinfo/kictanet Unsubscribe or change your options at https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/options/kictanet/jwalu%40yahoo.com The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development. KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications. _______________________________________________ kictanet mailing list kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/listinfo/kictanet Unsubscribe or change your options at https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/options/kictanet/fredmatiangi%40gmail.c om The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development. KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
Dr Matiangi, My 2 cents on this issue. First, do not try to be like Dr Ndemo, as there is only but one Dr Ndemo, just as there is only but one Dr Matiangi. Try, however, to create your own path that emulates the good things, and the bad ones, improve on them or scrap them. I will list some good & bad things that happened under Dr Ndemo's leadership Good 1. Dr Ndemo was easily accessible. I think he would probably respond to most relevant mails and would attend most functions that I went to. 2. We had it good for the Telecom sector. This grew in leaps & bounds during his tenure 3. He managed to take get the government to take ICT seriously from a previously non-existent Ministry. Bad 1. Too much focus on Telecoms & BPOs to detriment of other sectors in technology such as software 2. Focus on Mobile development ought to change as this is mostly a dead-end in this market 3. Too much marketing talk, little on delivery! ICT Board should spend a lot more money marketing Kenya's products & services not attending every conference that's happening globally. 4. The one that got away; failed to secure the IP for MPesa. We ought to have had a piece of that and mint Billions, but someone forgot 5. Did not centralize ICT in GoK What you should do: 1. Kill Konza if you can! Grand dream we don't need right now. Money can best be used elsewhere in the same sector. Invest it in Research & local firms and the industry can build itself a Konza if need be in 30 years. 2. Crack the whip on KICT Authority and ensure they walk the talk as regards growth of Kenya ICT Sector. Set clear goals on what they ought to have had done in 5 years. 3. Shift our dream goal of trying to be like India, with their BPOs and to aiming to be the Israel (Highend Technology) as our demographics simply do not allow us to compete with India on cost. 4. Take Kenya Software Industry seriously with less emphasis on Incubation Labs but to delivering solutions that can be sold in the general market. 5. Don't try to be like Dr Ndemo A key achievement that at least you have achieved in your 5 months in office is centralizing ICT in GoK, I want to believe there is more where that came from. Finally, it is important if you would share with us what your 5 year gameplan is ( I don't mean that Kenya ICT Masterplan), so we can judge you fairly. Regards Waithaka Ngigi A1.iO On Mon, Oct 7, 2013 at 4:48 AM, Fred Matiangi <fredmatiangi@gmail.com>wrote:
When I was nominated to Cabinet, last April, several of my friends including Dr. Ndemo, Tom Mshindi, Elijah, Muriuki, and later others I met in policy discussions like Alex and Walu encouraged me to visit, participate and engage as much as humanly possible with the ICT sector in the blogosphere and join KICTANET. The advice given to me was that in all these interactions, I would meet diverse views on various aspects of policy in the ICT sector generally. I try to ‘check in’ from time to time and keenly follow conversations on a number of policy issues. I have learned a lot from some of these exchanges. I have met very insightful and deep thinkers; and interesting others too.
I must confess however that in the 5 months I have been in public space, there are times one feels very frustrated and almost like one is being asked to unlearn many things- even about the most basic moral issues like telling simple truths.
I read Wanjiku’s post and didn’t know whether to laugh or cry. Why would anybody tell such blatant lies about someone they hardly know? Many of my colleagues at the Ministry told me not to bother to respond, but I think it was too personal not to be commented on.
Everyone who was at Connected Kenya early in the year for instance can (if they want to be sincere) recollect that I not only attended the cocktail preceding the dinner in honour of my colleagues, Minister Pogisho and Dr. Ndemo, but spoke at the event. I was introduced by Dr. Ndemo. I actually not only attended and spoke at the dinner but invited 3 colleague Ministers-from Tanzania, Uganda and South Africa- attending the OGP meeting running side by side with Connected Kenya at the Serena.
In any case, it wasn’t clear to anyone then that Dr. Ndemo would leave the Ministry -appointments of PSs had not been done. When it was, we held a farewell lunch for him and had such a great time with over 600 colleagues and industry players at the Panafric. In collaboration with colleagues at the Ministry, including Ndemo’s successor, Mr. Tiampati, we have ensured to include, invite and very sincerely acknowledge our preceding colleagues in all activities, especially where we are launching products, reports etc. that are a culmination of efforts they initiated at the Ministry- postal payment gateway switch, the National Broadband Strategy etc.
At the main Connected Kenya event, I successfully persuaded Paul Kukubo and other colleagues involved in the planning to allow me to have a generous time on the podium with Minister Pogisho as this was the most public opportunity for handover.
There sure is something fundamentally serious with people- adults -who tell lies such are being told here. Where on earth does the allegation that I excused myself to see the Mombasa Governor come from?
The meeting Wanjiku refers to held by African Development Bank at the Intercontinental Hotel was not even on PPPs. I was invited to preside over the launch of the report ‘silicon Kenya’- an ICT study commissioned by the African Development Bank. I was there at 9am as advised but the meeting started 1 hour late. I hurriedly made my remarks and had to leave when I was done- at 1105hrs- because we were expected at a cabinet meeting starting at 11am. I very humbly explained this to both the journalists present and all who had questions. I had however promised Michelle Morgan and Mark Okuttah that I would respond to their 2 brief questions which I did. There was no discussion on LTE- Not anything I can remember was meaningful enough to sufficiently demonstrate my shallowness and lack of depth!
It is very frustrating to operate in the space of rumour mongering. I sincerely think it is very demeaning for Dr. Ndemo and many of all of us his friends and colleagues to engage in such a cheap discussion as being proposed here about his and my relationship that’s over three decades old and much deeper and more expansive than our interaction at the Ministry of Information or generally in the ICT sector. It is very unfortunate- to say the very least.
Hate is a very strong term to use, especially to describe a relationship between two people one of whom you begin by confessing you do not know much of. I will let all readers and serious decent people who interact with this unfortunate discussion be the judges.
I try- even with the tyranny of demands on our time to return some of the heavy traffic of e-mails, enquiries etc. that come to the Ministry. I will certainly not lie that I will be able to do every interview, meet every individual or group of people who want to meet or even turn up at every single event I am required to. I try to meet as many people as I humanly can and even try harder to show up for events when we have been invited and advised in good time; but I also delegate in cases I cannot obviously deal with due to various constraints.
I am so grateful to God for the wonderful people I found at the Ministry and all the very hardworking and focused Kenyans that work with me in many of our agencies. We try hard and will continue to. Of course we may not satisfy everyone but we promise to do our very best.
When we are criticised, however- which we will always expect and take in our stride- we hope people are at least factual- even about reporting events- and more focused on the work we do rather than rumours and gossip.
To be insulted is painful. It is even much more painful to be mispresented and for plain lies to be peddled about you. I pray that no Kenyan perpetuates this about a fellow Kenyan, even one they simply just don’t like.
Ultimately, the Almighty God knows my heart and my every thought. He knows my thoughts and feelings about fellow men on earth including Dr. Ndemo and I remain accountable to my creator.
On Fri, Oct 4, 2013 at 11:55 AM, Walubengo J <jwalu@yahoo.com> wrote:
@Becky, @Jane,
True that Ndemo was cool like that.
But I guess everyone has their own style (remember when Kibaki took over and went quiet in Statehouse and everyone -comparing him to Moi - was asking where is this old man; 10years later the guy showed up with Thika Superhighway +++
One more thing, Matiangi is Cabinet Sec a.k.a Minister so it is abit unfair to compare him with Ndemo who was Permanent Sec (different roles). Perhaps if Becky did an article comparing Matiangi to Pogisho (former Minister) we might get a different picture?
That said, I also do miss seeing the "Ndemo effect" at the Ministry...but maybe we should instead target to bringing out the PS Tiampati out of the woods..we could start by giving him a free, lifetime registration to KICTAnet :-)
walu.
------------------------------ *From:* Network of non- formal Educational institutions < nnfeischools@yahoo.com> *To:* jwalu@yahoo.com *Cc:* KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> *Sent:* Friday, September 27, 2013 12:56 PM *Subject:* Re: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo
I agree with Wanjiku . Dr Ndema was that available and supportive to everybody.
Jane
------------------------------ *From:* Rebecca Wanjiku <rebeccawanjiku@yahoo.com> *To:* Jane Muriuki <nnfeischools@yahoo.com> *Cc:* KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> *Sent:* Friday, September 27, 2013 12:25 PM *Subject:* [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo
When it became obvious that Bitange Ndemo would not be taking over as the Cabinet Secretary in the Ministry of Information and Communication, the ICT community wondered who would wear the giant shoes left by Ndemo. To calm the nerves and prepare for his exit, Ndemo wrote to the ICT industry and you can read it here.<http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/04/ndemo-sees-his-departure-as-imminent/> So much has been said about Ndemo, both positive and negative but the thing I am most happy about is his easy approach; want to see him, drop him an email, get an appointment at 6 am or earlier. Want to interview him, drop the questions on email, and for some reason I would have answers in 24 hours, on email. No reminder, he will do it. Read more….. http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/09/what-matiangi-can-learn-from-ndemo/
Tel. 254 720 318 925
wanjiku.co.ke
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KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
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The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development.
KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
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The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development.
KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
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KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
-- *Regards,* *Wait**haka Ngigi* Chief Executive Officer | Alliance Technologies | MCK Nairobi Synod Building T + 254 (0) 20 2333 471 |Office Mobile: +254 786 28 28 28 | M + 254 737 811 000 www.at.co.ke
Mr. Waithaka, Interesting contribution. I am however interested in seeing your views as to why we should kill Konza. I seem to hold them same opinion with Dr. Ndemo that Konza is a great initiative for Kenya. Do I miss something? BTW on that MPESA item, I don't think Kenya is too late. If Dr. Matiangi can provide the right platform for us and grant developers in Kenya the Central Bank support that the creators of MPESA enjoyed (after some challenges) it would be possible for another MPESA to emerge from Kenya. From: kictanet [mailto:kictanet-bounces+bkioko=bernsoft.com@lists.kictanet.or.ke] On Behalf Of Ngigi Waithaka Sent: Monday, October 07, 2013 12:52 PM To: bkioko@bernsoft.com Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions Subject: Re: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo Dr Matiangi, My 2 cents on this issue. First, do not try to be like Dr Ndemo, as there is only but one Dr Ndemo, just as there is only but one Dr Matiangi. Try, however, to create your own path that emulates the good things, and the bad ones, improve on them or scrap them. I will list some good & bad things that happened under Dr Ndemo's leadership Good 1. Dr Ndemo was easily accessible. I think he would probably respond to most relevant mails and would attend most functions that I went to. 2. We had it good for the Telecom sector. This grew in leaps & bounds during his tenure 3. He managed to take get the government to take ICT seriously from a previously non-existent Ministry. Bad 1. Too much focus on Telecoms & BPOs to detriment of other sectors in technology such as software 2. Focus on Mobile development ought to change as this is mostly a dead-end in this market 3. Too much marketing talk, little on delivery! ICT Board should spend a lot more money marketing Kenya's products & services not attending every conference that's happening globally. 4. The one that got away; failed to secure the IP for MPesa. We ought to have had a piece of that and mint Billions, but someone forgot 5. Did not centralize ICT in GoK What you should do: 1. Kill Konza if you can! Grand dream we don't need right now. Money can best be used elsewhere in the same sector. Invest it in Research & local firms and the industry can build itself a Konza if need be in 30 years. 2. Crack the whip on KICT Authority and ensure they walk the talk as regards growth of Kenya ICT Sector. Set clear goals on what they ought to have had done in 5 years. 3. Shift our dream goal of trying to be like India, with their BPOs and to aiming to be the Israel (Highend Technology) as our demographics simply do not allow us to compete with India on cost. 4. Take Kenya Software Industry seriously with less emphasis on Incubation Labs but to delivering solutions that can be sold in the general market. 5. Don't try to be like Dr Ndemo A key achievement that at least you have achieved in your 5 months in office is centralizing ICT in GoK, I want to believe there is more where that came from. Finally, it is important if you would share with us what your 5 year gameplan is ( I don't mean that Kenya ICT Masterplan), so we can judge you fairly. Regards Waithaka Ngigi A1.iO On Mon, Oct 7, 2013 at 4:48 AM, Fred Matiangi <fredmatiangi@gmail.com> wrote: When I was nominated to Cabinet, last April, several of my friends including Dr. Ndemo, Tom Mshindi, Elijah, Muriuki, and later others I met in policy discussions like Alex and Walu encouraged me to visit, participate and engage as much as humanly possible with the ICT sector in the blogosphere and join KICTANET. The advice given to me was that in all these interactions, I would meet diverse views on various aspects of policy in the ICT sector generally. I try to 'check in' from time to time and keenly follow conversations on a number of policy issues. I have learned a lot from some of these exchanges. I have met very insightful and deep thinkers; and interesting others too. I must confess however that in the 5 months I have been in public space, there are times one feels very frustrated and almost like one is being asked to unlearn many things- even about the most basic moral issues like telling simple truths. I read Wanjiku's post and didn't know whether to laugh or cry. Why would anybody tell such blatant lies about someone they hardly know? Many of my colleagues at the Ministry told me not to bother to respond, but I think it was too personal not to be commented on. Everyone who was at Connected Kenya early in the year for instance can (if they want to be sincere) recollect that I not only attended the cocktail preceding the dinner in honour of my colleagues, Minister Pogisho and Dr. Ndemo, but spoke at the event. I was introduced by Dr. Ndemo. I actually not only attended and spoke at the dinner but invited 3 colleague Ministers-from Tanzania, Uganda and South Africa- attending the OGP meeting running side by side with Connected Kenya at the Serena. In any case, it wasn't clear to anyone then that Dr. Ndemo would leave the Ministry -appointments of PSs had not been done. When it was, we held a farewell lunch for him and had such a great time with over 600 colleagues and industry players at the Panafric. In collaboration with colleagues at the Ministry, including Ndemo's successor, Mr. Tiampati, we have ensured to include, invite and very sincerely acknowledge our preceding colleagues in all activities, especially where we are launching products, reports etc. that are a culmination of efforts they initiated at the Ministry- postal payment gateway switch, the National Broadband Strategy etc. At the main Connected Kenya event, I successfully persuaded Paul Kukubo and other colleagues involved in the planning to allow me to have a generous time on the podium with Minister Pogisho as this was the most public opportunity for handover. There sure is something fundamentally serious with people- adults -who tell lies such are being told here. Where on earth does the allegation that I excused myself to see the Mombasa Governor come from? The meeting Wanjiku refers to held by African Development Bank at the Intercontinental Hotel was not even on PPPs. I was invited to preside over the launch of the report 'silicon Kenya'- an ICT study commissioned by the African Development Bank. I was there at 9am as advised but the meeting started 1 hour late. I hurriedly made my remarks and had to leave when I was done- at 1105hrs- because we were expected at a cabinet meeting starting at 11am. I very humbly explained this to both the journalists present and all who had questions. I had however promised Michelle Morgan and Mark Okuttah that I would respond to their 2 brief questions which I did. There was no discussion on LTE- Not anything I can remember was meaningful enough to sufficiently demonstrate my shallowness and lack of depth! It is very frustrating to operate in the space of rumour mongering. I sincerely think it is very demeaning for Dr. Ndemo and many of all of us his friends and colleagues to engage in such a cheap discussion as being proposed here about his and my relationship that's over three decades old and much deeper and more expansive than our interaction at the Ministry of Information or generally in the ICT sector. It is very unfortunate- to say the very least. Hate is a very strong term to use, especially to describe a relationship between two people one of whom you begin by confessing you do not know much of. I will let all readers and serious decent people who interact with this unfortunate discussion be the judges. I try- even with the tyranny of demands on our time to return some of the heavy traffic of e-mails, enquiries etc. that come to the Ministry. I will certainly not lie that I will be able to do every interview, meet every individual or group of people who want to meet or even turn up at every single event I am required to. I try to meet as many people as I humanly can and even try harder to show up for events when we have been invited and advised in good time; but I also delegate in cases I cannot obviously deal with due to various constraints. I am so grateful to God for the wonderful people I found at the Ministry and all the very hardworking and focused Kenyans that work with me in many of our agencies. We try hard and will continue to. Of course we may not satisfy everyone but we promise to do our very best. When we are criticised, however- which we will always expect and take in our stride- we hope people are at least factual- even about reporting events- and more focused on the work we do rather than rumours and gossip. To be insulted is painful. It is even much more painful to be mispresented and for plain lies to be peddled about you. I pray that no Kenyan perpetuates this about a fellow Kenyan, even one they simply just don't like. Ultimately, the Almighty God knows my heart and my every thought. He knows my thoughts and feelings about fellow men on earth including Dr. Ndemo and I remain accountable to my creator. On Fri, Oct 4, 2013 at 11:55 AM, Walubengo J <jwalu@yahoo.com> wrote: @Becky, @Jane, True that Ndemo was cool like that. But I guess everyone has their own style (remember when Kibaki took over and went quiet in Statehouse and everyone -comparing him to Moi - was asking where is this old man; 10years later the guy showed up with Thika Superhighway +++ One more thing, Matiangi is Cabinet Sec a.k.a Minister so it is abit unfair to compare him with Ndemo who was Permanent Sec (different roles). Perhaps if Becky did an article comparing Matiangi to Pogisho (former Minister) we might get a different picture? That said, I also do miss seeing the "Ndemo effect" at the Ministry...but maybe we should instead target to bringing out the PS Tiampati out of the woods..we could start by giving him a free, lifetime registration to KICTAnet :-) walu. _____ From: Network of non- formal Educational institutions <nnfeischools@yahoo.com> To: jwalu@yahoo.com Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> Sent: Friday, September 27, 2013 12:56 PM Subject: Re: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo I agree with Wanjiku . Dr Ndema was that available and supportive to everybody. Jane _____ From: Rebecca Wanjiku <rebeccawanjiku@yahoo.com> To: Jane Muriuki <nnfeischools@yahoo.com> Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> Sent: Friday, September 27, 2013 12:25 PM Subject: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo When it became obvious that Bitange Ndemo would not be taking over as the Cabinet Secretary in the Ministry of Information and Communication, the ICT community wondered who would wear the giant shoes left by Ndemo. To calm the nerves and prepare for his exit, Ndemo wrote to the ICT industry and you can read it <http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/04/ndemo-sees-his-departure-as-imminent/> here. So much has been said about Ndemo, both positive and negative but the thing I am most happy about is his easy approach; want to see him, drop him an email, get an appointment at 6 am or earlier. Want to interview him, drop the questions on email, and for some reason I would have answers in 24 hours, on email. No reminder, he will do it. Read more... http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/09/what-matiangi-can-learn-from-ndemo/ Tel. 254 720 318 925 wanjiku.co.ke _______________________________________________ kictanet mailing list kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/listinfo/kictanet Unsubscribe or change your options at https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/options/kictanet/nnfeischools%40yahoo.c om The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development. KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications. _______________________________________________ kictanet mailing list kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/listinfo/kictanet Unsubscribe or change your options at https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/options/kictanet/jwalu%40yahoo.com The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development. KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications. _______________________________________________ kictanet mailing list kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/listinfo/kictanet Unsubscribe or change your options at https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/options/kictanet/fredmatiangi%40gmail.c om The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development. KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications. _______________________________________________ kictanet mailing list kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/listinfo/kictanet Unsubscribe or change your options at https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/options/kictanet/ngigi%40at.co.ke The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development. KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications. -- Regards, Waithaka Ngigi Chief Executive Officer | Alliance Technologies | MCK Nairobi Synod Building T + 254 (0) 20 2333 471 |Office Mobile: +254 786 28 28 28 | M + 254 737 811 000 www.at.co.ke <http://academia.a1.io/images/a1io_footerlogo.png>
Bernard, IMO a few *want* Konza, an even smaller majority *needs* Konza but generally the majority don't need it. As an example, if you wanted to promote Kenya as a Football destination, would you invest in 100, 80K capacity stadiums first or in youth academies in every village? You want Kenya to be a world-class leader in Athletics, do you first build the Kenya Grand Prix Stadium then convince our Kalenjin brothers to use it, or do you first review what talent you got, help them along in training & attending competitions and ensure they get to Olympics, then when it picks up, you then build that big stadium that you always wanted? So we are ready to invest in building a 10 Billion USD City, and yet we can't even invest 0.01% of that budget in R&D in our universities and / or in local firms. We actually do have a term for such projects that are largely done to make but a few rich, while serving almost no current need for the local populace. White Elephants! I will probably write-up a more detailed blog with my views on this, then maybe we can have varying comments. Meanwhile, I could leave you with a simple question; is there any successful high tech industry globally that started with a city then technology later? And before anyone says Silicon Valley, it was the industry that created the 'valley' not the other way round! Regards Waithaka Ngigi On Mon, Oct 7, 2013 at 1:56 PM, Bernard Kioko [Bernsoft Group] < bkioko@bernsoft.com> wrote:
Mr. Waithaka,****
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Interesting contribution. I am however interested in seeing your views as to why we should kill Konza. I seem to hold them same opinion with Dr. Ndemo that Konza is a great initiative for Kenya. Do I miss something? BTW on that MPESA item, I don’t think Kenya is too late. If Dr. Matiangi can provide the right platform for us and grant developers in Kenya the Central Bank support that the creators of MPESA enjoyed (after some challenges) it would be possible for another MPESA to emerge from Kenya. ****
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*From:* kictanet [mailto:kictanet-bounces+bkioko= bernsoft.com@lists.kictanet.or.ke] *On Behalf Of *Ngigi Waithaka *Sent:* Monday, October 07, 2013 12:52 PM *To:* bkioko@bernsoft.com
*Cc:* KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions *Subject:* Re: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo****
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Dr Matiangi,****
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My 2 cents on this issue.****
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First, do not try to be like Dr Ndemo, as there is only but one Dr Ndemo, just as there is only but one Dr Matiangi. Try, however, to create your own path that emulates the good things, and the bad ones, improve on them or scrap them.****
** **
I will list some good & bad things that happened under Dr Ndemo's leadership****
Good****
1. Dr Ndemo was easily accessible. I think he would probably respond to most relevant mails and would attend most functions that I went to.****
2. We had it good for the Telecom sector. This grew in leaps & bounds during his tenure****
3. He managed to take get the government to take ICT seriously from a previously non-existent Ministry.****
** **
Bad****
1. Too much focus on Telecoms & BPOs to detriment of other sectors in technology such as software****
2. Focus on Mobile development ought to change as this is mostly a dead-end in this market****
3. Too much marketing talk, little on delivery! ICT Board should spend a lot more money marketing Kenya's products & services not attending every conference that's happening globally.****
4. The one that got away; failed to secure the IP for MPesa. We ought to have had a piece of that and mint Billions, but someone forgot****
5. Did not centralize ICT in GoK****
** **
What you should do:****
1. Kill Konza if you can! Grand dream we don't need right now. Money can best be used elsewhere in the same sector. Invest it in Research & local firms and the industry can build itself a Konza if need be in 30 years.*** *
2. Crack the whip on KICT Authority and ensure they walk the talk as regards growth of Kenya ICT Sector. Set clear goals on what they ought to have had done in 5 years.****
3. Shift our dream goal of trying to be like India, with their BPOs and to aiming to be the Israel (Highend Technology) as our demographics simply do not allow us to compete with India on cost.****
4. Take Kenya Software Industry seriously with less emphasis on Incubation Labs but to delivering solutions that can be sold in the general market.** **
5. Don't try to be like Dr Ndemo****
** **
A key achievement that at least you have achieved in your 5 months in office is centralizing ICT in GoK, I want to believe there is more where that came from.****
** **
Finally, it is important if you would share with us what your 5 year gameplan is ( I don't mean that Kenya ICT Masterplan), so we can judge you fairly.****
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Regards****
Waithaka Ngigi****
A1.iO****
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On Mon, Oct 7, 2013 at 4:48 AM, Fred Matiangi <fredmatiangi@gmail.com> wrote:****
When I was nominated to Cabinet, last April, several of my friends including Dr. Ndemo, Tom Mshindi, Elijah, Muriuki, and later others I met in policy discussions like Alex and Walu encouraged me to visit, participate and engage as much as humanly possible with the ICT sector in the blogosphere and join KICTANET. The advice given to me was that in all these interactions, I would meet diverse views on various aspects of policy in the ICT sector generally. I try to ‘check in’ from time to time and keenly follow conversations on a number of policy issues. I have learned a lot from some of these exchanges. I have met very insightful and deep thinkers; and interesting others too.****
I must confess however that in the 5 months I have been in public space, there are times one feels very frustrated and almost like one is being asked to unlearn many things- even about the most basic moral issues like telling simple truths.****
I read Wanjiku’s post and didn’t know whether to laugh or cry. Why would anybody tell such blatant lies about someone they hardly know? Many of my colleagues at the Ministry told me not to bother to respond, but I think it was too personal not to be commented on.****
Everyone who was at Connected Kenya early in the year for instance can (if they want to be sincere) recollect that I not only attended the cocktail preceding the dinner in honour of my colleagues, Minister Pogisho and Dr. Ndemo, but spoke at the event. I was introduced by Dr. Ndemo. I actually not only attended and spoke at the dinner but invited 3 colleague Ministers-from Tanzania, Uganda and South Africa- attending the OGP meeting running side by side with Connected Kenya at the Serena.****
In any case, it wasn’t clear to anyone then that Dr. Ndemo would leave the Ministry -appointments of PSs had not been done. When it was, we held a farewell lunch for him and had such a great time with over 600 colleagues and industry players at the Panafric. In collaboration with colleagues at the Ministry, including Ndemo’s successor, Mr. Tiampati, we have ensured to include, invite and very sincerely acknowledge our preceding colleagues in all activities, especially where we are launching products, reports etc. that are a culmination of efforts they initiated at the Ministry- postal payment gateway switch, the National Broadband Strategy etc.****
At the main Connected Kenya event, I successfully persuaded Paul Kukubo and other colleagues involved in the planning to allow me to have a generous time on the podium with Minister Pogisho as this was the most public opportunity for handover. ****
There sure is something fundamentally serious with people- adults -who tell lies such are being told here. Where on earth does the allegation that I excused myself to see the Mombasa Governor come from?****
The meeting Wanjiku refers to held by African Development Bank at the Intercontinental Hotel was not even on PPPs. I was invited to preside over the launch of the report ‘silicon Kenya’- an ICT study commissioned by the African Development Bank. I was there at 9am as advised but the meeting started 1 hour late. I hurriedly made my remarks and had to leave when I was done- at 1105hrs- because we were expected at a cabinet meeting starting at 11am. I very humbly explained this to both the journalists present and all who had questions. I had however promised Michelle Morgan and Mark Okuttah that I would respond to their 2 brief questions which I did. There was no discussion on LTE- Not anything I can remember was meaningful enough to sufficiently demonstrate my shallowness and lack of depth!****
It is very frustrating to operate in the space of rumour mongering. I sincerely think it is very demeaning for Dr. Ndemo and many of all of us his friends and colleagues to engage in such a cheap discussion as being proposed here about his and my relationship that’s over three decades old and much deeper and more expansive than our interaction at the Ministry of Information or generally in the ICT sector. It is very unfortunate- to say the very least.****
Hate is a very strong term to use, especially to describe a relationship between two people one of whom you begin by confessing you do not know much of. I will let all readers and serious decent people who interact with this unfortunate discussion be the judges. ****
I try- even with the tyranny of demands on our time to return some of the heavy traffic of e-mails, enquiries etc. that come to the Ministry. I will certainly not lie that I will be able to do every interview, meet every individual or group of people who want to meet or even turn up at every single event I am required to. I try to meet as many people as I humanly can and even try harder to show up for events when we have been invited and advised in good time; but I also delegate in cases I cannot obviously deal with due to various constraints. ****
I am so grateful to God for the wonderful people I found at the Ministry and all the very hardworking and focused Kenyans that work with me in many of our agencies. We try hard and will continue to. Of course we may not satisfy everyone but we promise to do our very best. ****
When we are criticised, however- which we will always expect and take in our stride- we hope people are at least factual- even about reporting events- and more focused on the work we do rather than rumours and gossip. ****
To be insulted is painful. It is even much more painful to be mispresented and for plain lies to be peddled about you. I pray that no Kenyan perpetuates this about a fellow Kenyan, even one they simply just don’t like.****
Ultimately, the Almighty God knows my heart and my every thought. He knows my thoughts and feelings about fellow men on earth including Dr. Ndemo and I remain accountable to my creator.****
****
****
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On Fri, Oct 4, 2013 at 11:55 AM, Walubengo J <jwalu@yahoo.com> wrote:****
@Becky, @Jane,
True that Ndemo was cool like that.
But I guess everyone has their own style (remember when Kibaki took over and went quiet in Statehouse and everyone -comparing him to Moi - was asking where is this old man; 10years later the guy showed up with Thika Superhighway +++****
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One more thing, Matiangi is Cabinet Sec a.k.a Minister so it is abit unfair to compare him with Ndemo who was Permanent Sec (different roles). Perhaps if Becky did an article comparing Matiangi to Pogisho (former Minister) we might get a different picture?****
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That said, I also do miss seeing the "Ndemo effect" at the Ministry...but maybe we should instead target to bringing out the PS Tiampati out of the woods..we could start by giving him a free, lifetime registration to KICTAnet :-) ****
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walu.****
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** ** ------------------------------
*From:* Network of non- formal Educational institutions < nnfeischools@yahoo.com> *To:* jwalu@yahoo.com ****
*Cc:* KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> ****
*Sent:* Friday, September 27, 2013 12:56 PM *Subject:* Re: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo****
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I agree with Wanjiku . Dr Ndema was that available and supportive to everybody.
Jane****
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*From:* Rebecca Wanjiku <rebeccawanjiku@yahoo.com> *To:* Jane Muriuki <nnfeischools@yahoo.com> *Cc:* KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> *Sent:* Friday, September 27, 2013 12:25 PM *Subject:* [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo****
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When it became obvious that Bitange Ndemo would not be taking over as the Cabinet Secretary in the Ministry of Information and Communication, the ICT community wondered who would wear the giant shoes left by Ndemo.****
To calm the nerves and prepare for his exit, Ndemo wrote to the ICT industry and you can read it here.<http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/04/ndemo-sees-his-departure-as-imminent/> ****
So much has been said about Ndemo, both positive and negative but the thing I am most happy about is his easy approach; want to see him, drop him an email, get an appointment at 6 am or earlier. Want to interview him, drop the questions on email, and for some reason I would have answers in 24 hours, on email. No reminder, he will do it.****
Read more…..****
http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/09/what-matiangi-can-learn-from-ndemo/****
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****
Tel. 254 720 318 925****
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wanjiku.co.ke****
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****
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-- ****
*Regards,*****
** **
*Wait**haka Ngigi*****
Chief Executive Officer | Alliance Technologies | MCK Nairobi Synod Building****
T + 254 (0) 20 2333 471 |Office Mobile: +254 786 28 28 28 | M + 254 737 811 000****
www.at.co.ke****
** **
****
-- *Regards,* *Wait**haka Ngigi* Chief Executive Officer | Alliance Technologies | MCK Nairobi Synod Building T + 254 (0) 20 2333 471 |Office Mobile: +254 786 28 28 28 | M + 254 737 811 000 www.at.co.ke
Listers, I think it is pointless to keep making comparisons between incumbents and their predecessors. Dr. Ndemo has left, a new team has come in. 1. When Dr. Ndemo joined ICT ministry, he seemed even less qualified than his predecessor Engineer James Rege and first made news when he came back from South Africa to announce that Kenya would go it alone on the submarine cable if Eassy did not get its act together. 2. Dr. Ndemo may have pushed hard for many initiatives, but there is a technical team at the ministry that executed this at implementation level. That team is still there, it has not gone. Surely, we are not saying that Dr. Ndemo did everything there? If you guys recall, actually the most strides were made when Ndemo operated as a dynamic duo with Mutahi Kagwe as the minister. Things significantly slowed down after that. 3. Let us not have unrealistic expectations: You cannot expect a Cabinet Secretary at the drop of the hat to have details of where we are with consortia and that kind of thing. He's operating at a policy level. There are laws that are pending to be passed, Data Protection etc, there are anti-terrorism initiatives requiring ICT involvement, there are county plans, there is Free laptops etc etc. To expect the CS to have the intricacies of certain projects down to the T is a bit naive. 4. If Tiampati is not as busy as previous PSs then he should be availing himself to talk specifics. 5. Eng. Kamau of Treasury is perhaps better placed to speak about PPPs as he is the one running that show. 6. As one lister noted, there are many big issues we need to deal with not least the Mobile Financial Services. I have indicated my discomfort with M-Pesa having so much control of economic transactions in this country and would 100% support a neutral, Central Bank backed mobile money platform which is carrier neutral and also allows easy interface for payments. 8. There is also the issue of last mile connectivity which I believe government with a Rural Electrification Authority kind of approach should take up and foot the cost to prevent providers from charging so much to recover their costs. 7. Just like Bangalore, Konza City can become the Silicon Valley of Kenya. Regards James On Mon, Oct 7, 2013 at 2:22 PM, Ngigi Waithaka <ngigi@at.co.ke> wrote:
Bernard,
IMO a few *want* Konza, an even smaller majority *needs* Konza but generally the majority don't need it. As an example, if you wanted to promote Kenya as a Football destination, would you invest in 100, 80K capacity stadiums first or in youth academies in every village?
You want Kenya to be a world-class leader in Athletics, do you first build the Kenya Grand Prix Stadium then convince our Kalenjin brothers to use it, or do you first review what talent you got, help them along in training & attending competitions and ensure they get to Olympics, then when it picks up, you then build that big stadium that you always wanted?
So we are ready to invest in building a 10 Billion USD City, and yet we can't even invest 0.01% of that budget in R&D in our universities and / or in local firms.
We actually do have a term for such projects that are largely done to make but a few rich, while serving almost no current need for the local populace. White Elephants!
I will probably write-up a more detailed blog with my views on this, then maybe we can have varying comments.
Meanwhile, I could leave you with a simple question; is there any successful high tech industry globally that started with a city then technology later? And before anyone says Silicon Valley, it was the industry that created the 'valley' not the other way round!
Regards Waithaka Ngigi
On Mon, Oct 7, 2013 at 1:56 PM, Bernard Kioko [Bernsoft Group] < bkioko@bernsoft.com> wrote:
Mr. Waithaka,****
** **
Interesting contribution. I am however interested in seeing your views as to why we should kill Konza. I seem to hold them same opinion with Dr. Ndemo that Konza is a great initiative for Kenya. Do I miss something? BTW on that MPESA item, I don’t think Kenya is too late. If Dr. Matiangi can provide the right platform for us and grant developers in Kenya the Central Bank support that the creators of MPESA enjoyed (after some challenges) it would be possible for another MPESA to emerge from Kenya. ****
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*From:* kictanet [mailto:kictanet-bounces+bkioko= bernsoft.com@lists.kictanet.or.ke] *On Behalf Of *Ngigi Waithaka *Sent:* Monday, October 07, 2013 12:52 PM *To:* bkioko@bernsoft.com
*Cc:* KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions *Subject:* Re: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo****
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Dr Matiangi,****
** **
My 2 cents on this issue.****
** **
First, do not try to be like Dr Ndemo, as there is only but one Dr Ndemo, just as there is only but one Dr Matiangi. Try, however, to create your own path that emulates the good things, and the bad ones, improve on them or scrap them.****
** **
I will list some good & bad things that happened under Dr Ndemo's leadership****
Good****
1. Dr Ndemo was easily accessible. I think he would probably respond to most relevant mails and would attend most functions that I went to.****
2. We had it good for the Telecom sector. This grew in leaps & bounds during his tenure****
3. He managed to take get the government to take ICT seriously from a previously non-existent Ministry.****
** **
Bad****
1. Too much focus on Telecoms & BPOs to detriment of other sectors in technology such as software****
2. Focus on Mobile development ought to change as this is mostly a dead-end in this market****
3. Too much marketing talk, little on delivery! ICT Board should spend a lot more money marketing Kenya's products & services not attending every conference that's happening globally.****
4. The one that got away; failed to secure the IP for MPesa. We ought to have had a piece of that and mint Billions, but someone forgot****
5. Did not centralize ICT in GoK****
** **
What you should do:****
1. Kill Konza if you can! Grand dream we don't need right now. Money can best be used elsewhere in the same sector. Invest it in Research & local firms and the industry can build itself a Konza if need be in 30 years.** **
2. Crack the whip on KICT Authority and ensure they walk the talk as regards growth of Kenya ICT Sector. Set clear goals on what they ought to have had done in 5 years.****
3. Shift our dream goal of trying to be like India, with their BPOs and to aiming to be the Israel (Highend Technology) as our demographics simply do not allow us to compete with India on cost.****
4. Take Kenya Software Industry seriously with less emphasis on Incubation Labs but to delivering solutions that can be sold in the general market.****
5. Don't try to be like Dr Ndemo****
** **
A key achievement that at least you have achieved in your 5 months in office is centralizing ICT in GoK, I want to believe there is more where that came from.****
** **
Finally, it is important if you would share with us what your 5 year gameplan is ( I don't mean that Kenya ICT Masterplan), so we can judge you fairly.****
** **
Regards****
Waithaka Ngigi****
A1.iO****
** **
On Mon, Oct 7, 2013 at 4:48 AM, Fred Matiangi <fredmatiangi@gmail.com> wrote:****
When I was nominated to Cabinet, last April, several of my friends including Dr. Ndemo, Tom Mshindi, Elijah, Muriuki, and later others I met in policy discussions like Alex and Walu encouraged me to visit, participate and engage as much as humanly possible with the ICT sector in the blogosphere and join KICTANET. The advice given to me was that in all these interactions, I would meet diverse views on various aspects of policy in the ICT sector generally. I try to ‘check in’ from time to time and keenly follow conversations on a number of policy issues. I have learned a lot from some of these exchanges. I have met very insightful and deep thinkers; and interesting others too.****
I must confess however that in the 5 months I have been in public space, there are times one feels very frustrated and almost like one is being asked to unlearn many things- even about the most basic moral issues like telling simple truths.****
I read Wanjiku’s post and didn’t know whether to laugh or cry. Why would anybody tell such blatant lies about someone they hardly know? Many of my colleagues at the Ministry told me not to bother to respond, but I think it was too personal not to be commented on.****
Everyone who was at Connected Kenya early in the year for instance can (if they want to be sincere) recollect that I not only attended the cocktail preceding the dinner in honour of my colleagues, Minister Pogisho and Dr. Ndemo, but spoke at the event. I was introduced by Dr. Ndemo. I actually not only attended and spoke at the dinner but invited 3 colleague Ministers-from Tanzania, Uganda and South Africa- attending the OGP meeting running side by side with Connected Kenya at the Serena.****
In any case, it wasn’t clear to anyone then that Dr. Ndemo would leave the Ministry -appointments of PSs had not been done. When it was, we held a farewell lunch for him and had such a great time with over 600 colleagues and industry players at the Panafric. In collaboration with colleagues at the Ministry, including Ndemo’s successor, Mr. Tiampati, we have ensured to include, invite and very sincerely acknowledge our preceding colleagues in all activities, especially where we are launching products, reports etc. that are a culmination of efforts they initiated at the Ministry- postal payment gateway switch, the National Broadband Strategy etc.****
At the main Connected Kenya event, I successfully persuaded Paul Kukubo and other colleagues involved in the planning to allow me to have a generous time on the podium with Minister Pogisho as this was the most public opportunity for handover. ****
There sure is something fundamentally serious with people- adults -who tell lies such are being told here. Where on earth does the allegation that I excused myself to see the Mombasa Governor come from?****
The meeting Wanjiku refers to held by African Development Bank at the Intercontinental Hotel was not even on PPPs. I was invited to preside over the launch of the report ‘silicon Kenya’- an ICT study commissioned by the African Development Bank. I was there at 9am as advised but the meeting started 1 hour late. I hurriedly made my remarks and had to leave when I was done- at 1105hrs- because we were expected at a cabinet meeting starting at 11am. I very humbly explained this to both the journalists present and all who had questions. I had however promised Michelle Morgan and Mark Okuttah that I would respond to their 2 brief questions which I did. There was no discussion on LTE- Not anything I can remember was meaningful enough to sufficiently demonstrate my shallowness and lack of depth!****
It is very frustrating to operate in the space of rumour mongering. I sincerely think it is very demeaning for Dr. Ndemo and many of all of us his friends and colleagues to engage in such a cheap discussion as being proposed here about his and my relationship that’s over three decades old and much deeper and more expansive than our interaction at the Ministry of Information or generally in the ICT sector. It is very unfortunate- to say the very least.****
Hate is a very strong term to use, especially to describe a relationship between two people one of whom you begin by confessing you do not know much of. I will let all readers and serious decent people who interact with this unfortunate discussion be the judges. ****
I try- even with the tyranny of demands on our time to return some of the heavy traffic of e-mails, enquiries etc. that come to the Ministry. I will certainly not lie that I will be able to do every interview, meet every individual or group of people who want to meet or even turn up at every single event I am required to. I try to meet as many people as I humanly can and even try harder to show up for events when we have been invited and advised in good time; but I also delegate in cases I cannot obviously deal with due to various constraints. ****
I am so grateful to God for the wonderful people I found at the Ministry and all the very hardworking and focused Kenyans that work with me in many of our agencies. We try hard and will continue to. Of course we may not satisfy everyone but we promise to do our very best. ****
When we are criticised, however- which we will always expect and take in our stride- we hope people are at least factual- even about reporting events- and more focused on the work we do rather than rumours and gossip. ****
To be insulted is painful. It is even much more painful to be mispresented and for plain lies to be peddled about you. I pray that no Kenyan perpetuates this about a fellow Kenyan, even one they simply just don’t like.****
Ultimately, the Almighty God knows my heart and my every thought. He knows my thoughts and feelings about fellow men on earth including Dr. Ndemo and I remain accountable to my creator.****
****
****
** **
On Fri, Oct 4, 2013 at 11:55 AM, Walubengo J <jwalu@yahoo.com> wrote:****
@Becky, @Jane,
True that Ndemo was cool like that.
But I guess everyone has their own style (remember when Kibaki took over and went quiet in Statehouse and everyone -comparing him to Moi - was asking where is this old man; 10years later the guy showed up with Thika Superhighway +++****
** **
One more thing, Matiangi is Cabinet Sec a.k.a Minister so it is abit unfair to compare him with Ndemo who was Permanent Sec (different roles). Perhaps if Becky did an article comparing Matiangi to Pogisho (former Minister) we might get a different picture?****
** **
That said, I also do miss seeing the "Ndemo effect" at the Ministry...but maybe we should instead target to bringing out the PS Tiampati out of the woods..we could start by giving him a free, lifetime registration to KICTAnet :-) ****
** **
walu.****
** **
** ** ------------------------------
*From:* Network of non- formal Educational institutions < nnfeischools@yahoo.com> *To:* jwalu@yahoo.com ****
*Cc:* KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> *** *
*Sent:* Friday, September 27, 2013 12:56 PM *Subject:* Re: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo****
** **
I agree with Wanjiku . Dr Ndema was that available and supportive to everybody.
Jane****
** **
** ** ------------------------------
*From:* Rebecca Wanjiku <rebeccawanjiku@yahoo.com> *To:* Jane Muriuki <nnfeischools@yahoo.com> *Cc:* KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> *Sent:* Friday, September 27, 2013 12:25 PM *Subject:* [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo****
** **
When it became obvious that Bitange Ndemo would not be taking over as the Cabinet Secretary in the Ministry of Information and Communication, the ICT community wondered who would wear the giant shoes left by Ndemo.****
To calm the nerves and prepare for his exit, Ndemo wrote to the ICT industry and you can read it here.<http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/04/ndemo-sees-his-departure-as-imminent/> ****
So much has been said about Ndemo, both positive and negative but the thing I am most happy about is his easy approach; want to see him, drop him an email, get an appointment at 6 am or earlier. Want to interview him, drop the questions on email, and for some reason I would have answers in 24 hours, on email. No reminder, he will do it.****
Read more…..****
http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/09/what-matiangi-can-learn-from-ndemo/****
** **
****
Tel. 254 720 318 925****
** **
wanjiku.co.ke****
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** **
*Wait**haka Ngigi*****
Chief Executive Officer | Alliance Technologies | MCK Nairobi Synod Building****
T + 254 (0) 20 2333 471 |Office Mobile: +254 786 28 28 28 | M + 254 737 811 000****
www.at.co.ke****
** **
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One question to all those complaining about Dr. Matiangi - and more specifically to Becky: How much engagement did you have with Poghisio, Matiangi's predecessor? Enough said... Mblayo On Mon, Oct 7, 2013 at 3:34 PM, James Mbugua <jgmbugua@gmail.com> wrote:
Listers,
I think it is pointless to keep making comparisons between incumbents and their predecessors. Dr. Ndemo has left, a new team has come in.
1. When Dr. Ndemo joined ICT ministry, he seemed even less qualified than his predecessor Engineer James Rege and first made news when he came back from South Africa to announce that Kenya would go it alone on the submarine cable if Eassy did not get its act together.
2. Dr. Ndemo may have pushed hard for many initiatives, but there is a technical team at the ministry that executed this at implementation level. That team is still there, it has not gone. Surely, we are not saying that Dr. Ndemo did everything there? If you guys recall, actually the most strides were made when Ndemo operated as a dynamic duo with Mutahi Kagwe as the minister. Things significantly slowed down after that.
3. Let us not have unrealistic expectations: You cannot expect a Cabinet Secretary at the drop of the hat to have details of where we are with consortia and that kind of thing. He's operating at a policy level. There are laws that are pending to be passed, Data Protection etc, there are anti-terrorism initiatives requiring ICT involvement, there are county plans, there is Free laptops etc etc. To expect the CS to have the intricacies of certain projects down to the T is a bit naive.
4. If Tiampati is not as busy as previous PSs then he should be availing himself to talk specifics.
5. Eng. Kamau of Treasury is perhaps better placed to speak about PPPs as he is the one running that show.
6. As one lister noted, there are many big issues we need to deal with not least the Mobile Financial Services. I have indicated my discomfort with M-Pesa having so much control of economic transactions in this country and would 100% support a neutral, Central Bank backed mobile money platform which is carrier neutral and also allows easy interface for payments.
8. There is also the issue of last mile connectivity which I believe government with a Rural Electrification Authority kind of approach should take up and foot the cost to prevent providers from charging so much to recover their costs.
7. Just like Bangalore, Konza City can become the Silicon Valley of Kenya.
Regards
James
On Mon, Oct 7, 2013 at 2:22 PM, Ngigi Waithaka <ngigi@at.co.ke> wrote:
Bernard,
IMO a few *want* Konza, an even smaller majority *needs* Konza but generally the majority don't need it. As an example, if you wanted to promote Kenya as a Football destination, would you invest in 100, 80K capacity stadiums first or in youth academies in every village?
You want Kenya to be a world-class leader in Athletics, do you first build the Kenya Grand Prix Stadium then convince our Kalenjin brothers to use it, or do you first review what talent you got, help them along in training & attending competitions and ensure they get to Olympics, then when it picks up, you then build that big stadium that you always wanted?
So we are ready to invest in building a 10 Billion USD City, and yet we can't even invest 0.01% of that budget in R&D in our universities and / or in local firms.
We actually do have a term for such projects that are largely done to make but a few rich, while serving almost no current need for the local populace. White Elephants!
I will probably write-up a more detailed blog with my views on this, then maybe we can have varying comments.
Meanwhile, I could leave you with a simple question; is there any successful high tech industry globally that started with a city then technology later? And before anyone says Silicon Valley, it was the industry that created the 'valley' not the other way round!
Regards Waithaka Ngigi
On Mon, Oct 7, 2013 at 1:56 PM, Bernard Kioko [Bernsoft Group] < bkioko@bernsoft.com> wrote:
Mr. Waithaka,****
** **
Interesting contribution. I am however interested in seeing your views as to why we should kill Konza. I seem to hold them same opinion with Dr. Ndemo that Konza is a great initiative for Kenya. Do I miss something? BTW on that MPESA item, I don’t think Kenya is too late. If Dr. Matiangi can provide the right platform for us and grant developers in Kenya the Central Bank support that the creators of MPESA enjoyed (after some challenges) it would be possible for another MPESA to emerge from Kenya. ****
** **
** **
** **
*From:* kictanet [mailto:kictanet-bounces+bkioko= bernsoft.com@lists.kictanet.or.ke] *On Behalf Of *Ngigi Waithaka *Sent:* Monday, October 07, 2013 12:52 PM *To:* bkioko@bernsoft.com
*Cc:* KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions *Subject:* Re: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo****
** **
Dr Matiangi,****
** **
My 2 cents on this issue.****
** **
First, do not try to be like Dr Ndemo, as there is only but one Dr Ndemo, just as there is only but one Dr Matiangi. Try, however, to create your own path that emulates the good things, and the bad ones, improve on them or scrap them.****
** **
I will list some good & bad things that happened under Dr Ndemo's leadership****
Good****
1. Dr Ndemo was easily accessible. I think he would probably respond to most relevant mails and would attend most functions that I went to.****
2. We had it good for the Telecom sector. This grew in leaps & bounds during his tenure****
3. He managed to take get the government to take ICT seriously from a previously non-existent Ministry.****
** **
Bad****
1. Too much focus on Telecoms & BPOs to detriment of other sectors in technology such as software****
2. Focus on Mobile development ought to change as this is mostly a dead-end in this market****
3. Too much marketing talk, little on delivery! ICT Board should spend a lot more money marketing Kenya's products & services not attending every conference that's happening globally.****
4. The one that got away; failed to secure the IP for MPesa. We ought to have had a piece of that and mint Billions, but someone forgot****
5. Did not centralize ICT in GoK****
** **
What you should do:****
1. Kill Konza if you can! Grand dream we don't need right now. Money can best be used elsewhere in the same sector. Invest it in Research & local firms and the industry can build itself a Konza if need be in 30 years.* ***
2. Crack the whip on KICT Authority and ensure they walk the talk as regards growth of Kenya ICT Sector. Set clear goals on what they ought to have had done in 5 years.****
3. Shift our dream goal of trying to be like India, with their BPOs and to aiming to be the Israel (Highend Technology) as our demographics simply do not allow us to compete with India on cost.****
4. Take Kenya Software Industry seriously with less emphasis on Incubation Labs but to delivering solutions that can be sold in the general market.****
5. Don't try to be like Dr Ndemo****
** **
A key achievement that at least you have achieved in your 5 months in office is centralizing ICT in GoK, I want to believe there is more where that came from.****
** **
Finally, it is important if you would share with us what your 5 year gameplan is ( I don't mean that Kenya ICT Masterplan), so we can judge you fairly.****
** **
Regards****
Waithaka Ngigi****
A1.iO****
** **
On Mon, Oct 7, 2013 at 4:48 AM, Fred Matiangi <fredmatiangi@gmail.com> wrote:****
When I was nominated to Cabinet, last April, several of my friends including Dr. Ndemo, Tom Mshindi, Elijah, Muriuki, and later others I met in policy discussions like Alex and Walu encouraged me to visit, participate and engage as much as humanly possible with the ICT sector in the blogosphere and join KICTANET. The advice given to me was that in all these interactions, I would meet diverse views on various aspects of policy in the ICT sector generally. I try to ‘check in’ from time to time and keenly follow conversations on a number of policy issues. I have learned a lot from some of these exchanges. I have met very insightful and deep thinkers; and interesting others too.****
I must confess however that in the 5 months I have been in public space, there are times one feels very frustrated and almost like one is being asked to unlearn many things- even about the most basic moral issues like telling simple truths.****
I read Wanjiku’s post and didn’t know whether to laugh or cry. Why would anybody tell such blatant lies about someone they hardly know? Many of my colleagues at the Ministry told me not to bother to respond, but I think it was too personal not to be commented on.****
Everyone who was at Connected Kenya early in the year for instance can (if they want to be sincere) recollect that I not only attended the cocktail preceding the dinner in honour of my colleagues, Minister Pogisho and Dr. Ndemo, but spoke at the event. I was introduced by Dr. Ndemo. I actually not only attended and spoke at the dinner but invited 3 colleague Ministers-from Tanzania, Uganda and South Africa- attending the OGP meeting running side by side with Connected Kenya at the Serena.****
In any case, it wasn’t clear to anyone then that Dr. Ndemo would leave the Ministry -appointments of PSs had not been done. When it was, we held a farewell lunch for him and had such a great time with over 600 colleagues and industry players at the Panafric. In collaboration with colleagues at the Ministry, including Ndemo’s successor, Mr. Tiampati, we have ensured to include, invite and very sincerely acknowledge our preceding colleagues in all activities, especially where we are launching products, reports etc. that are a culmination of efforts they initiated at the Ministry- postal payment gateway switch, the National Broadband Strategy etc.****
At the main Connected Kenya event, I successfully persuaded Paul Kukubo and other colleagues involved in the planning to allow me to have a generous time on the podium with Minister Pogisho as this was the most public opportunity for handover. ****
There sure is something fundamentally serious with people- adults -who tell lies such are being told here. Where on earth does the allegation that I excused myself to see the Mombasa Governor come from?****
The meeting Wanjiku refers to held by African Development Bank at the Intercontinental Hotel was not even on PPPs. I was invited to preside over the launch of the report ‘silicon Kenya’- an ICT study commissioned by the African Development Bank. I was there at 9am as advised but the meeting started 1 hour late. I hurriedly made my remarks and had to leave when I was done- at 1105hrs- because we were expected at a cabinet meeting starting at 11am. I very humbly explained this to both the journalists present and all who had questions. I had however promised Michelle Morgan and Mark Okuttah that I would respond to their 2 brief questions which I did. There was no discussion on LTE- Not anything I can remember was meaningful enough to sufficiently demonstrate my shallowness and lack of depth!****
It is very frustrating to operate in the space of rumour mongering. I sincerely think it is very demeaning for Dr. Ndemo and many of all of us his friends and colleagues to engage in such a cheap discussion as being proposed here about his and my relationship that’s over three decades old and much deeper and more expansive than our interaction at the Ministry of Information or generally in the ICT sector. It is very unfortunate- to say the very least.****
Hate is a very strong term to use, especially to describe a relationship between two people one of whom you begin by confessing you do not know much of. I will let all readers and serious decent people who interact with this unfortunate discussion be the judges. ****
I try- even with the tyranny of demands on our time to return some of the heavy traffic of e-mails, enquiries etc. that come to the Ministry. I will certainly not lie that I will be able to do every interview, meet every individual or group of people who want to meet or even turn up at every single event I am required to. I try to meet as many people as I humanly can and even try harder to show up for events when we have been invited and advised in good time; but I also delegate in cases I cannot obviously deal with due to various constraints. ****
I am so grateful to God for the wonderful people I found at the Ministry and all the very hardworking and focused Kenyans that work with me in many of our agencies. We try hard and will continue to. Of course we may not satisfy everyone but we promise to do our very best. ****
When we are criticised, however- which we will always expect and take in our stride- we hope people are at least factual- even about reporting events- and more focused on the work we do rather than rumours and gossip. ****
To be insulted is painful. It is even much more painful to be mispresented and for plain lies to be peddled about you. I pray that no Kenyan perpetuates this about a fellow Kenyan, even one they simply just don’t like.****
Ultimately, the Almighty God knows my heart and my every thought. He knows my thoughts and feelings about fellow men on earth including Dr. Ndemo and I remain accountable to my creator.****
****
****
** **
On Fri, Oct 4, 2013 at 11:55 AM, Walubengo J <jwalu@yahoo.com> wrote:*** *
@Becky, @Jane,
True that Ndemo was cool like that.
But I guess everyone has their own style (remember when Kibaki took over and went quiet in Statehouse and everyone -comparing him to Moi - was asking where is this old man; 10years later the guy showed up with Thika Superhighway +++****
** **
One more thing, Matiangi is Cabinet Sec a.k.a Minister so it is abit unfair to compare him with Ndemo who was Permanent Sec (different roles). Perhaps if Becky did an article comparing Matiangi to Pogisho (former Minister) we might get a different picture?****
** **
That said, I also do miss seeing the "Ndemo effect" at the Ministry...but maybe we should instead target to bringing out the PS Tiampati out of the woods..we could start by giving him a free, lifetime registration to KICTAnet :-) ****
** **
walu.****
** **
** ** ------------------------------
*From:* Network of non- formal Educational institutions < nnfeischools@yahoo.com> *To:* jwalu@yahoo.com ****
*Cc:* KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> ** **
*Sent:* Friday, September 27, 2013 12:56 PM *Subject:* Re: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo****
** **
I agree with Wanjiku . Dr Ndema was that available and supportive to everybody.
Jane****
** **
** ** ------------------------------
*From:* Rebecca Wanjiku <rebeccawanjiku@yahoo.com> *To:* Jane Muriuki <nnfeischools@yahoo.com> *Cc:* KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> *Sent:* Friday, September 27, 2013 12:25 PM *Subject:* [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo****
** **
When it became obvious that Bitange Ndemo would not be taking over as the Cabinet Secretary in the Ministry of Information and Communication, the ICT community wondered who would wear the giant shoes left by Ndemo.****
To calm the nerves and prepare for his exit, Ndemo wrote to the ICT industry and you can read it here.<http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/04/ndemo-sees-his-departure-as-imminent/> ****
So much has been said about Ndemo, both positive and negative but the thing I am most happy about is his easy approach; want to see him, drop him an email, get an appointment at 6 am or earlier. Want to interview him, drop the questions on email, and for some reason I would have answers in 24 hours, on email. No reminder, he will do it.****
Read more…..****
http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/09/what-matiangi-can-learn-from-ndemo/****
** **
****
Tel. 254 720 318 925****
** **
wanjiku.co.ke****
** **
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*Regards,*****
** **
*Wait**haka Ngigi*****
Chief Executive Officer | Alliance Technologies | MCK Nairobi Synod Building****
T + 254 (0) 20 2333 471 |Office Mobile: +254 786 28 28 28 | M + 254 737 811 000****
www.at.co.ke****
** **
****
-- *Regards,*
*Wait**haka Ngigi* Chief Executive Officer | Alliance Technologies | MCK Nairobi Synod Building T + 254 (0) 20 2333 471 |Office Mobile: +254 786 28 28 28 | M + 254 737 811 000 www.at.co.ke
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Brian, that is the killer question. I never attended an ICT function where Poghisio was present. As for Matiangi, let him not concentrate on what others are saying, we want to feel the impact of ICTs and how we can improve our lot with it. ______________________ Mwendwa Kivuva twitter.com/lordmwesh google ID | Skype ID: lordmwesh On 7 October 2013 04:59, Brian Munyao Longwe <blongwe@gmail.com> wrote:
One question to all those complaining about Dr. Matiangi - and more specifically to Becky:
How much engagement did you have with Poghisio, Matiangi's predecessor?
Enough said...
Mblayo
On Mon, Oct 7, 2013 at 3:34 PM, James Mbugua <jgmbugua@gmail.com> wrote:
Listers,
I think it is pointless to keep making comparisons between incumbents and their predecessors. Dr. Ndemo has left, a new team has come in.
1. When Dr. Ndemo joined ICT ministry, he seemed even less qualified than his predecessor Engineer James Rege and first made news when he came back from South Africa to announce that Kenya would go it alone on the submarine cable if Eassy did not get its act together.
2. Dr. Ndemo may have pushed hard for many initiatives, but there is a technical team at the ministry that executed this at implementation level. That team is still there, it has not gone. Surely, we are not saying that Dr. Ndemo did everything there? If you guys recall, actually the most strides were made when Ndemo operated as a dynamic duo with Mutahi Kagwe as the minister. Things significantly slowed down after that.
3. Let us not have unrealistic expectations: You cannot expect a Cabinet Secretary at the drop of the hat to have details of where we are with consortia and that kind of thing. He's operating at a policy level. There are laws that are pending to be passed, Data Protection etc, there are anti-terrorism initiatives requiring ICT involvement, there are county plans, there is Free laptops etc etc. To expect the CS to have the intricacies of certain projects down to the T is a bit naive.
4. If Tiampati is not as busy as previous PSs then he should be availing himself to talk specifics.
5. Eng. Kamau of Treasury is perhaps better placed to speak about PPPs as he is the one running that show.
6. As one lister noted, there are many big issues we need to deal with not least the Mobile Financial Services. I have indicated my discomfort with M-Pesa having so much control of economic transactions in this country and would 100% support a neutral, Central Bank backed mobile money platform which is carrier neutral and also allows easy interface for payments.
8. There is also the issue of last mile connectivity which I believe government with a Rural Electrification Authority kind of approach should take up and foot the cost to prevent providers from charging so much to recover their costs.
7. Just like Bangalore, Konza City can become the Silicon Valley of Kenya.
Regards
James
On Mon, Oct 7, 2013 at 2:22 PM, Ngigi Waithaka <ngigi@at.co.ke> wrote:
Bernard,
IMO a few *want* Konza, an even smaller majority *needs* Konza but generally the majority don't need it. As an example, if you wanted to promote Kenya as a Football destination, would you invest in 100, 80K capacity stadiums first or in youth academies in every village?
You want Kenya to be a world-class leader in Athletics, do you first build the Kenya Grand Prix Stadium then convince our Kalenjin brothers to use it, or do you first review what talent you got, help them along in training & attending competitions and ensure they get to Olympics, then when it picks up, you then build that big stadium that you always wanted?
So we are ready to invest in building a 10 Billion USD City, and yet we can't even invest 0.01% of that budget in R&D in our universities and / or in local firms.
We actually do have a term for such projects that are largely done to make but a few rich, while serving almost no current need for the local populace. White Elephants!
I will probably write-up a more detailed blog with my views on this, then maybe we can have varying comments.
Meanwhile, I could leave you with a simple question; is there any successful high tech industry globally that started with a city then technology later? And before anyone says Silicon Valley, it was the industry that created the 'valley' not the other way round!
Regards Waithaka Ngigi
On Mon, Oct 7, 2013 at 1:56 PM, Bernard Kioko [Bernsoft Group] < bkioko@bernsoft.com> wrote:
Mr. Waithaka,****
** **
Interesting contribution. I am however interested in seeing your views as to why we should kill Konza. I seem to hold them same opinion with Dr. Ndemo that Konza is a great initiative for Kenya. Do I miss something? BTW on that MPESA item, I don’t think Kenya is too late. If Dr. Matiangi can provide the right platform for us and grant developers in Kenya the Central Bank support that the creators of MPESA enjoyed (after some challenges) it would be possible for another MPESA to emerge from Kenya. ****
** **
** **
** **
*From:* kictanet [mailto:kictanet-bounces+bkioko= bernsoft.com@lists.kictanet.or.ke] *On Behalf Of *Ngigi Waithaka *Sent:* Monday, October 07, 2013 12:52 PM *To:* bkioko@bernsoft.com
*Cc:* KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions *Subject:* Re: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo****
** **
Dr Matiangi,****
** **
My 2 cents on this issue.****
** **
First, do not try to be like Dr Ndemo, as there is only but one Dr Ndemo, just as there is only but one Dr Matiangi. Try, however, to create your own path that emulates the good things, and the bad ones, improve on them or scrap them.****
** **
I will list some good & bad things that happened under Dr Ndemo's leadership****
Good****
1. Dr Ndemo was easily accessible. I think he would probably respond to most relevant mails and would attend most functions that I went to.****
2. We had it good for the Telecom sector. This grew in leaps & bounds during his tenure****
3. He managed to take get the government to take ICT seriously from a previously non-existent Ministry.****
** **
Bad****
1. Too much focus on Telecoms & BPOs to detriment of other sectors in technology such as software****
2. Focus on Mobile development ought to change as this is mostly a dead-end in this market****
3. Too much marketing talk, little on delivery! ICT Board should spend a lot more money marketing Kenya's products & services not attending every conference that's happening globally.****
4. The one that got away; failed to secure the IP for MPesa. We ought to have had a piece of that and mint Billions, but someone forgot****
5. Did not centralize ICT in GoK****
** **
What you should do:****
1. Kill Konza if you can! Grand dream we don't need right now. Money can best be used elsewhere in the same sector. Invest it in Research & local firms and the industry can build itself a Konza if need be in 30 years.****
2. Crack the whip on KICT Authority and ensure they walk the talk as regards growth of Kenya ICT Sector. Set clear goals on what they ought to have had done in 5 years.****
3. Shift our dream goal of trying to be like India, with their BPOs and to aiming to be the Israel (Highend Technology) as our demographics simply do not allow us to compete with India on cost.****
4. Take Kenya Software Industry seriously with less emphasis on Incubation Labs but to delivering solutions that can be sold in the general market.****
5. Don't try to be like Dr Ndemo****
** **
A key achievement that at least you have achieved in your 5 months in office is centralizing ICT in GoK, I want to believe there is more where that came from.****
** **
Finally, it is important if you would share with us what your 5 year gameplan is ( I don't mean that Kenya ICT Masterplan), so we can judge you fairly.****
** **
Regards****
Waithaka Ngigi****
A1.iO****
** **
On Mon, Oct 7, 2013 at 4:48 AM, Fred Matiangi <fredmatiangi@gmail.com> wrote:****
When I was nominated to Cabinet, last April, several of my friends including Dr. Ndemo, Tom Mshindi, Elijah, Muriuki, and later others I met in policy discussions like Alex and Walu encouraged me to visit, participate and engage as much as humanly possible with the ICT sector in the blogosphere and join KICTANET. The advice given to me was that in all these interactions, I would meet diverse views on various aspects of policy in the ICT sector generally. I try to ‘check in’ from time to time and keenly follow conversations on a number of policy issues. I have learned a lot from some of these exchanges. I have met very insightful and deep thinkers; and interesting others too.****
I must confess however that in the 5 months I have been in public space, there are times one feels very frustrated and almost like one is being asked to unlearn many things- even about the most basic moral issues like telling simple truths.****
I read Wanjiku’s post and didn’t know whether to laugh or cry. Why would anybody tell such blatant lies about someone they hardly know? Many of my colleagues at the Ministry told me not to bother to respond, but I think it was too personal not to be commented on.****
Everyone who was at Connected Kenya early in the year for instance can (if they want to be sincere) recollect that I not only attended the cocktail preceding the dinner in honour of my colleagues, Minister Pogisho and Dr. Ndemo, but spoke at the event. I was introduced by Dr. Ndemo. I actually not only attended and spoke at the dinner but invited 3 colleague Ministers-from Tanzania, Uganda and South Africa- attending the OGP meeting running side by side with Connected Kenya at the Serena.****
In any case, it wasn’t clear to anyone then that Dr. Ndemo would leave the Ministry -appointments of PSs had not been done. When it was, we held a farewell lunch for him and had such a great time with over 600 colleagues and industry players at the Panafric. In collaboration with colleagues at the Ministry, including Ndemo’s successor, Mr. Tiampati, we have ensured to include, invite and very sincerely acknowledge our preceding colleagues in all activities, especially where we are launching products, reports etc. that are a culmination of efforts they initiated at the Ministry- postal payment gateway switch, the National Broadband Strategy etc.****
At the main Connected Kenya event, I successfully persuaded Paul Kukubo and other colleagues involved in the planning to allow me to have a generous time on the podium with Minister Pogisho as this was the most public opportunity for handover. ****
There sure is something fundamentally serious with people- adults -who tell lies such are being told here. Where on earth does the allegation that I excused myself to see the Mombasa Governor come from?****
The meeting Wanjiku refers to held by African Development Bank at the Intercontinental Hotel was not even on PPPs. I was invited to preside over the launch of the report ‘silicon Kenya’- an ICT study commissioned by the African Development Bank. I was there at 9am as advised but the meeting started 1 hour late. I hurriedly made my remarks and had to leave when I was done- at 1105hrs- because we were expected at a cabinet meeting starting at 11am. I very humbly explained this to both the journalists present and all who had questions. I had however promised Michelle Morgan and Mark Okuttah that I would respond to their 2 brief questions which I did. There was no discussion on LTE- Not anything I can remember was meaningful enough to sufficiently demonstrate my shallowness and lack of depth!****
It is very frustrating to operate in the space of rumour mongering. I sincerely think it is very demeaning for Dr. Ndemo and many of all of us his friends and colleagues to engage in such a cheap discussion as being proposed here about his and my relationship that’s over three decades old and much deeper and more expansive than our interaction at the Ministry of Information or generally in the ICT sector. It is very unfortunate- to say the very least.****
Hate is a very strong term to use, especially to describe a relationship between two people one of whom you begin by confessing you do not know much of. I will let all readers and serious decent people who interact with this unfortunate discussion be the judges. ****
I try- even with the tyranny of demands on our time to return some of the heavy traffic of e-mails, enquiries etc. that come to the Ministry. I will certainly not lie that I will be able to do every interview, meet every individual or group of people who want to meet or even turn up at every single event I am required to. I try to meet as many people as I humanly can and even try harder to show up for events when we have been invited and advised in good time; but I also delegate in cases I cannot obviously deal with due to various constraints. ****
I am so grateful to God for the wonderful people I found at the Ministry and all the very hardworking and focused Kenyans that work with me in many of our agencies. We try hard and will continue to. Of course we may not satisfy everyone but we promise to do our very best. ****
When we are criticised, however- which we will always expect and take in our stride- we hope people are at least factual- even about reporting events- and more focused on the work we do rather than rumours and gossip. ****
To be insulted is painful. It is even much more painful to be mispresented and for plain lies to be peddled about you. I pray that no Kenyan perpetuates this about a fellow Kenyan, even one they simply just don’t like.****
Ultimately, the Almighty God knows my heart and my every thought. He knows my thoughts and feelings about fellow men on earth including Dr. Ndemo and I remain accountable to my creator.****
****
****
** **
On Fri, Oct 4, 2013 at 11:55 AM, Walubengo J <jwalu@yahoo.com> wrote:** **
@Becky, @Jane,
True that Ndemo was cool like that.
But I guess everyone has their own style (remember when Kibaki took over and went quiet in Statehouse and everyone -comparing him to Moi - was asking where is this old man; 10years later the guy showed up with Thika Superhighway +++****
** **
One more thing, Matiangi is Cabinet Sec a.k.a Minister so it is abit unfair to compare him with Ndemo who was Permanent Sec (different roles). Perhaps if Becky did an article comparing Matiangi to Pogisho (former Minister) we might get a different picture?****
** **
That said, I also do miss seeing the "Ndemo effect" at the Ministry...but maybe we should instead target to bringing out the PS Tiampati out of the woods..we could start by giving him a free, lifetime registration to KICTAnet :-) ****
** **
walu.****
** **
** ** ------------------------------
*From:* Network of non- formal Educational institutions < nnfeischools@yahoo.com> *To:* jwalu@yahoo.com ****
*Cc:* KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> * ***
*Sent:* Friday, September 27, 2013 12:56 PM *Subject:* Re: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo****
** **
I agree with Wanjiku . Dr Ndema was that available and supportive to everybody.
Jane****
** **
** ** ------------------------------
*From:* Rebecca Wanjiku <rebeccawanjiku@yahoo.com> *To:* Jane Muriuki <nnfeischools@yahoo.com> *Cc:* KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> *Sent:* Friday, September 27, 2013 12:25 PM *Subject:* [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo****
** **
When it became obvious that Bitange Ndemo would not be taking over as the Cabinet Secretary in the Ministry of Information and Communication, the ICT community wondered who would wear the giant shoes left by Ndemo.*** *
To calm the nerves and prepare for his exit, Ndemo wrote to the ICT industry and you can read it here.<http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/04/ndemo-sees-his-departure-as-imminent/> ****
So much has been said about Ndemo, both positive and negative but the thing I am most happy about is his easy approach; want to see him, drop him an email, get an appointment at 6 am or earlier. Want to interview him, drop the questions on email, and for some reason I would have answers in 24 hours, on email. No reminder, he will do it.****
Read more…..****
http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/09/what-matiangi-can-learn-from-ndemo/*** *
** **
****
Tel. 254 720 318 925****
** **
wanjiku.co.ke****
** **
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-- ****
*Regards,*****
** **
*Wait**haka Ngigi*****
Chief Executive Officer | Alliance Technologies | MCK Nairobi Synod Building****
T + 254 (0) 20 2333 471 |Office Mobile: +254 786 28 28 28 | M + 254 737 811 000****
www.at.co.ke****
** **
****
-- *Regards,*
*Wait**haka Ngigi* Chief Executive Officer | Alliance Technologies | MCK Nairobi Synod Building T + 254 (0) 20 2333 471 |Office Mobile: +254 786 28 28 28 | M + 254 737 811 000 www.at.co.ke
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We simply need to make it easier to do business in Kenya, the rest will follow. I don't understand why we are creating SEZ's whilst we are failing at delivering even the most basic services to citizens/entrepreneurs. The process of registering a business is difficult. Transacting is difficult (government and large corporations have unrealistic requirements for tender participation etc). Energy costs are ridiculous. The tax regime is ridiculous. For example, off KPMG's analysis, on the VAT applicable to services which leaves a grey area that can be easily exploited by KRA. If you are buying bandwidth from a foreign entity, if the bandwidth terminates in Kenya, you should pay VAT. The same thing applies to TV signals etc. Bangalore/Silicon Valley etc did not happen due to government planning. Planned economies never work. The best example of a planned economy is not Bangalore, it's the Soviet Union, and if people recall, the Soviet Union became so inefficient at manufacturing that the manufacturing process at some point was net value subtracting. What actually led to *BOTH* Bangalore and Silicon Valley was increased government spending that was targeted at local companies (which does not exactly happen in Kenya). -- Warm Regards, Phares Kariuki | T: +254 720 406 093 | E: pkariuki@gmail.com | Twitter: kaboro | Skype: kariukiphares | B: http://www.kaboro.com/ | On Monday, October 7, 2013 at 4:41 PM, Kivuva wrote:
Brian, that is the killer question. I never attended an ICT function where Poghisio was present.
As for Matiangi, let him not concentrate on what others are saying, we want to feel the impact of ICTs and how we can improve our lot with it.
______________________ Mwendwa Kivuva twitter.com/lordmwesh (http://twitter.com/lordmwesh) google ID | Skype ID: lordmwesh
On 7 October 2013 04:59, Brian Munyao Longwe <blongwe@gmail.com (mailto:blongwe@gmail.com)> wrote:
One question to all those complaining about Dr. Matiangi - and more specifically to Becky:
How much engagement did you have with Poghisio, Matiangi's predecessor?
Enough said...
Mblayo
On Mon, Oct 7, 2013 at 3:34 PM, James Mbugua <jgmbugua@gmail.com (mailto:jgmbugua@gmail.com)> wrote:
Listers,
I think it is pointless to keep making comparisons between incumbents and their predecessors. Dr. Ndemo has left, a new team has come in.
1. When Dr. Ndemo joined ICT ministry, he seemed even less qualified than his predecessor Engineer James Rege and first made news when he came back from South Africa to announce that Kenya would go it alone on the submarine cable if Eassy did not get its act together.
2. Dr. Ndemo may have pushed hard for many initiatives, but there is a technical team at the ministry that executed this at implementation level. That team is still there, it has not gone. Surely, we are not saying that Dr. Ndemo did everything there? If you guys recall, actually the most strides were made when Ndemo operated as a dynamic duo with Mutahi Kagwe as the minister. Things significantly slowed down after that.
3. Let us not have unrealistic expectations: You cannot expect a Cabinet Secretary at the drop of the hat to have details of where we are with consortia and that kind of thing. He's operating at a policy level. There are laws that are pending to be passed, Data Protection etc, there are anti-terrorism initiatives requiring ICT involvement, there are county plans, there is Free laptops etc etc. To expect the CS to have the intricacies of certain projects down to the T is a bit naive.
4. If Tiampati is not as busy as previous PSs then he should be availing himself to talk specifics.
5. Eng. Kamau of Treasury is perhaps better placed to speak about PPPs as he is the one running that show.
6. As one lister noted, there are many big issues we need to deal with not least the Mobile Financial Services. I have indicated my discomfort with M-Pesa having so much control of economic transactions in this country and would 100% support a neutral, Central Bank backed mobile money platform which is carrier neutral and also allows easy interface for payments.
8. There is also the issue of last mile connectivity which I believe government with a Rural Electrification Authority kind of approach should take up and foot the cost to prevent providers from charging so much to recover their costs.
7. Just like Bangalore, Konza City can become the Silicon Valley of Kenya.
Regards
James
On Mon, Oct 7, 2013 at 2:22 PM, Ngigi Waithaka <ngigi@at.co.ke (mailto:ngigi@at.co.ke)> wrote:
Bernard,
IMO a few *want* Konza, an even smaller majority *needs* Konza but generally the majority don't need it. As an example, if you wanted to promote Kenya as a Football destination, would you invest in 100, 80K capacity stadiums first or in youth academies in every village?
You want Kenya to be a world-class leader in Athletics, do you first build the Kenya Grand Prix Stadium then convince our Kalenjin brothers to use it, or do you first review what talent you got, help them along in training & attending competitions and ensure they get to Olympics, then when it picks up, you then build that big stadium that you always wanted?
So we are ready to invest in building a 10 Billion USD City, and yet we can't even invest 0.01% of that budget in R&D in our universities and / or in local firms.
We actually do have a term for such projects that are largely done to make but a few rich, while serving almost no current need for the local populace. White Elephants!
I will probably write-up a more detailed blog with my views on this, then maybe we can have varying comments.
Meanwhile, I could leave you with a simple question; is there any successful high tech industry globally that started with a city then technology later? And before anyone says Silicon Valley, it was the industry that created the 'valley' not the other way round!
Regards Waithaka Ngigi
On Mon, Oct 7, 2013 at 1:56 PM, Bernard Kioko [Bernsoft Group] <bkioko@bernsoft.com (mailto:bkioko@bernsoft.com)> wrote:
Mr. Waithaka,
Interesting contribution. I am however interested in seeing your views as to why we should kill Konza. I seem to hold them same opinion with Dr. Ndemo that Konza is a great initiative for Kenya. Do I miss something? BTW on that MPESA item, I don’t think Kenya is too late. If Dr. Matiangi can provide the right platform for us and grant developers in Kenya the Central Bank support that the creators of MPESA enjoyed (after some challenges) it would be possible for another MPESA to emerge from Kenya.
From: kictanet [mailto:kictanet-bounces+bkioko (mailto:kictanet-bounces%2Bbkioko)=bernsoft.com@lists.kictanet.or.ke (mailto:bernsoft.com@lists.kictanet.or.ke)] On Behalf Of Ngigi Waithaka Sent: Monday, October 07, 2013 12:52 PM To: bkioko@bernsoft.com (mailto:bkioko@bernsoft.com)
Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions Subject: Re: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo
Dr Matiangi,
My 2 cents on this issue.
First, do not try to be like Dr Ndemo, as there is only but one Dr Ndemo, just as there is only but one Dr Matiangi. Try, however, to create your own path that emulates the good things, and the bad ones, improve on them or scrap them.
I will list some good & bad things that happened under Dr Ndemo's leadership
Good
1. Dr Ndemo was easily accessible. I think he would probably respond to most relevant mails and would attend most functions that I went to.
2. We had it good for the Telecom sector. This grew in leaps & bounds during his tenure
3. He managed to take get the government to take ICT seriously from a previously non-existent Ministry.
Bad
1. Too much focus on Telecoms & BPOs to detriment of other sectors in technology such as software
2. Focus on Mobile development ought to change as this is mostly a dead-end in this market
3. Too much marketing talk, little on delivery! ICT Board should spend a lot more money marketing Kenya's products & services not attending every conference that's happening globally.
4. The one that got away; failed to secure the IP for MPesa. We ought to have had a piece of that and mint Billions, but someone forgot
5. Did not centralize ICT in GoK
What you should do:
1. Kill Konza if you can! Grand dream we don't need right now. Money can best be used elsewhere in the same sector. Invest it in Research & local firms and the industry can build itself a Konza if need be in 30 years.
2. Crack the whip on KICT Authority and ensure they walk the talk as regards growth of Kenya ICT Sector. Set clear goals on what they ought to have had done in 5 years.
3. Shift our dream goal of trying to be like India, with their BPOs and to aiming to be the Israel (Highend Technology) as our demographics simply do not allow us to compete with India on cost.
4. Take Kenya Software Industry seriously with less emphasis on Incubation Labs but to delivering solutions that can be sold in the general market.
5. Don't try to be like Dr Ndemo
A key achievement that at least you have achieved in your 5 months in office is centralizing ICT in GoK, I want to believe there is more where that came from.
Finally, it is important if you would share with us what your 5 year gameplan is ( I don't mean that Kenya ICT Masterplan), so we can judge you fairly.
Regards
Waithaka Ngigi
A1.iO
On Mon, Oct 7, 2013 at 4:48 AM, Fred Matiangi <fredmatiangi@gmail.com (mailto:fredmatiangi@gmail.com)> wrote:
When I was nominated to Cabinet, last April, several of my friends including Dr. Ndemo, Tom Mshindi, Elijah, Muriuki, and later others I met in policy discussions like Alex and Walu encouraged me to visit, participate and engage as much as humanly possible with the ICT sector in the blogosphere and join KICTANET. The advice given to me was that in all these interactions, I would meet diverse views on various aspects of policy in the ICT sector generally. I try to ‘check in’ from time to time and keenly follow conversations on a number of policy issues. I have learned a lot from some of these exchanges. I have met very insightful and deep thinkers; and interesting others too.
I must confess however that in the 5 months I have been in public space, there are times one feels very frustrated and almost like one is being asked to unlearn many things- even about the most basic moral issues like telling simple truths.
I read Wanjiku’s post and didn’t know whether to laugh or cry. Why would anybody tell such blatant lies about someone they hardly know? Many of my colleagues at the Ministry told me not to bother to respond, but I think it was too personal not to be commented on.
Everyone who was at Connected Kenya early in the year for instance can (if they want to be sincere) recollect that I not only attended the cocktail preceding the dinner in honour of my colleagues, Minister Pogisho and Dr. Ndemo, but spoke at the event. I was introduced by Dr. Ndemo. I actually not only attended and spoke at the dinner but invited 3 colleague Ministers-from Tanzania, Uganda and South Africa- attending the OGP meeting running side by side with Connected Kenya at the Serena.
In any case, it wasn’t clear to anyone then that Dr. Ndemo would leave the Ministry -appointments of PSs had not been done. When it was, we held a farewell lunch for him and had such a great time with over 600 colleagues and industry players at the Panafric. In collaboration with colleagues at the Ministry, including Ndemo’s successor, Mr. Tiampati, we have ensured to include, invite and very sincerely acknowledge our preceding colleagues in all activities, especially where we are launching products, reports etc. that are a culmination of efforts they initiated at the Ministry- postal payment gateway switch, the National Broadband Strategy etc.
At the main Connected Kenya event, I successfully persuaded Paul Kukubo and other colleagues involved in the planning to allow me to have a generous time on the podium with Minister Pogisho as this was the most public opportunity for handover.
There sure is something fundamentally serious with people- adults -who tell lies such are being told here. Where on earth does the allegation that I excused myself to see the Mombasa Governor come from?
The meeting Wanjiku refers to held by African Development Bank at the Intercontinental Hotel was not even on PPPs. I was invited to preside over the launch of the report ‘silicon Kenya’- an ICT study commissioned by the African Development Bank. I was there at 9am as advised but the meeting started 1 hour late. I hurriedly made my remarks and had to leave when I was done- at 1105hrs- because we were expected at a cabinet meeting starting at 11am. I very humbly explained this to both the journalists present and all who had questions. I had however promised Michelle Morgan and Mark Okuttah that I would respond to their 2 brief questions which I did. There was no discussion on LTE- Not anything I can remember was meaningful enough to sufficiently demonstrate my shallowness and lack of depth!
It is very frustrating to operate in the space of rumour mongering. I sincerely think it is very demeaning for Dr. Ndemo and many of all of us his friends and colleagues to engage in such a cheap discussion as being proposed here about his and my relationship that’s over three decades old and much deeper and more expansive than our interaction at the Ministry of Information or generally in the ICT sector. It is very unfortunate- to say the very least.
Hate is a very strong term to use, especially to describe a relationship between two people one of whom you begin by confessing you do not know much of. I will let all readers and serious decent people who interact with this unfortunate discussion be the judges.
I try- even with the tyranny of demands on our time to return some of the heavy traffic of e-mails, enquiries etc. that come to the Ministry. I will certainly not lie that I will be able to do every interview, meet every individual or group of people who want to meet or even turn up at every single event I am required to. I try to meet as many people as I humanly can and even try harder to show up for events when we have been invited and advised in good time; but I also delegate in cases I cannot obviously deal with due to various constraints.
I am so grateful to God for the wonderful people I found at the Ministry and all the very hardworking and focused Kenyans that work with me in many of our agencies. We try hard and will continue to. Of course we may not satisfy everyone but we promise to do our very best.
When we are criticised, however- which we will always expect and take in our stride- we hope people are at least factual- even about reporting events- and more focused on the work we do rather than rumours and gossip.
To be insulted is painful. It is even much more painful to be mispresented and for plain lies to be peddled about you. I pray that no Kenyan perpetuates this about a fellow Kenyan, even one they simply just don’t like.
Ultimately, the Almighty God knows my heart and my every thought. He knows my thoughts and feelings about fellow men on earth including Dr. Ndemo and I remain accountable to my creator.
On Fri, Oct 4, 2013 at 11:55 AM, Walubengo J <jwalu@yahoo.com (mailto:jwalu@yahoo.com)> wrote:
@Becky, @Jane,
True that Ndemo was cool like that.
But I guess everyone has their own style (remember when Kibaki took over and went quiet in Statehouse and everyone -comparing him to Moi - was asking where is this old man; 10years later the guy showed up with Thika Superhighway +++
One more thing, Matiangi is Cabinet Sec a.k.a Minister so it is abit unfair to compare him with Ndemo who was Permanent Sec (different roles). Perhaps if Becky did an article comparing Matiangi to Pogisho (former Minister) we might get a different picture?
That said, I also do miss seeing the "Ndemo effect" at the Ministry...but maybe we should instead target to bringing out the PS Tiampati out of the woods..we could start by giving him a free, lifetime registration to KICTAnet :-)
walu.
From: Network of non- formal Educational institutions <nnfeischools@yahoo.com (mailto:nnfeischools@yahoo.com)> To: jwalu@yahoo.com (mailto:jwalu@yahoo.com) Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke (mailto:kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke)>
Sent: Friday, September 27, 2013 12:56 PM Subject: Re: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo
I agree with Wanjiku . Dr Ndema was that available and supportive to everybody.
Jane
From: Rebecca Wanjiku <rebeccawanjiku@yahoo.com (mailto:rebeccawanjiku@yahoo.com)> To: Jane Muriuki <nnfeischools@yahoo.com (mailto:nnfeischools@yahoo.com)> Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke (mailto:kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke)> Sent: Friday, September 27, 2013 12:25 PM Subject: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo
When it became obvious that Bitange Ndemo would not be taking over as the Cabinet Secretary in the Ministry of Information and Communication, the ICT community wondered who would wear the giant shoes left by Ndemo.
To calm the nerves and prepare for his exit, Ndemo wrote to the ICT industry and you can read it here. (http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/04/ndemo-sees-his-departure-as-imminent/)
So much has been said about Ndemo, both positive and negative but the thing I am most happy about is his easy approach; want to see him, drop him an email, get an appointment at 6 am or earlier. Want to interview him, drop the questions on email, and for some reason I would have answers in 24 hours, on email. No reminder, he will do it.
Read more…..
http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/09/what-matiangi-can-learn-from-ndemo/
Tel. 254 720 318 925 (tel:254%20720%20318%20925)
wanjiku.co.ke (http://wanjiku.co.ke)
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Good People, Many things said here. Does the Principle Secretary hand around these streets? He just might be able ease off the pressure from his senior. But accessibility and visibility of both would be a good promise at these early stages. Warm regards On Mon, Oct 7, 2013 at 6:13 PM, Phares Kariuki <pkariuki@gmail.com> wrote:
We simply need to make it easier to do business in Kenya, the rest will follow.
I don't understand why we are creating SEZ's whilst we are failing at delivering even the most basic services to citizens/entrepreneurs.
The process of registering a business is difficult. Transacting is difficult (government and large corporations have unrealistic requirements for tender participation etc). Energy costs are ridiculous. The tax regime is ridiculous. For example, off KPMG's analysis, on the VAT applicable to services which leaves a grey area that can be easily exploited by KRA. If you are buying bandwidth from a foreign entity, if the bandwidth terminates in Kenya, you should pay VAT. The same thing applies to TV signals etc.
Bangalore/Silicon Valley etc did not happen due to government planning. Planned economies never work. The best example of a planned economy is not Bangalore, it's the Soviet Union, and if people recall, the Soviet Union became so inefficient at manufacturing that the manufacturing process at some point was net value subtracting.
What actually led to *BOTH* Bangalore and Silicon Valley was increased government spending that was targeted at local companies (which does not exactly happen in Kenya).
-- Warm Regards, Phares Kariuki
| T: +254 720 406 093 | E: pkariuki@gmail.com | Twitter: kaboro | Skype: kariukiphares | B: http://www.kaboro.com/ |
On Monday, October 7, 2013 at 4:41 PM, Kivuva wrote:
Brian, that is the killer question. I never attended an ICT function where Poghisio was present.
As for Matiangi, let him not concentrate on what others are saying, we want to feel the impact of ICTs and how we can improve our lot with it.
______________________ Mwendwa Kivuva twitter.com/lordmwesh google ID | Skype ID: lordmwesh
On 7 October 2013 04:59, Brian Munyao Longwe <blongwe@gmail.com> wrote:
One question to all those complaining about Dr. Matiangi - and more specifically to Becky:
How much engagement did you have with Poghisio, Matiangi's predecessor?
Enough said...
Mblayo
On Mon, Oct 7, 2013 at 3:34 PM, James Mbugua <jgmbugua@gmail.com> wrote:
Listers,
I think it is pointless to keep making comparisons between incumbents and their predecessors. Dr. Ndemo has left, a new team has come in.
1. When Dr. Ndemo joined ICT ministry, he seemed even less qualified than his predecessor Engineer James Rege and first made news when he came back from South Africa to announce that Kenya would go it alone on the submarine cable if Eassy did not get its act together.
2. Dr. Ndemo may have pushed hard for many initiatives, but there is a technical team at the ministry that executed this at implementation level. That team is still there, it has not gone. Surely, we are not saying that Dr. Ndemo did everything there? If you guys recall, actually the most strides were made when Ndemo operated as a dynamic duo with Mutahi Kagwe as the minister. Things significantly slowed down after that.
3. Let us not have unrealistic expectations: You cannot expect a Cabinet Secretary at the drop of the hat to have details of where we are with consortia and that kind of thing. He's operating at a policy level. There are laws that are pending to be passed, Data Protection etc, there are anti-terrorism initiatives requiring ICT involvement, there are county plans, there is Free laptops etc etc. To expect the CS to have the intricacies of certain projects down to the T is a bit naive.
4. If Tiampati is not as busy as previous PSs then he should be availing himself to talk specifics.
5. Eng. Kamau of Treasury is perhaps better placed to speak about PPPs as he is the one running that show.
6. As one lister noted, there are many big issues we need to deal with not least the Mobile Financial Services. I have indicated my discomfort with M-Pesa having so much control of economic transactions in this country and would 100% support a neutral, Central Bank backed mobile money platform which is carrier neutral and also allows easy interface for payments.
8. There is also the issue of last mile connectivity which I believe government with a Rural Electrification Authority kind of approach should take up and foot the cost to prevent providers from charging so much to recover their costs.
7. Just like Bangalore, Konza City can become the Silicon Valley of Kenya.
Regards
James
On Mon, Oct 7, 2013 at 2:22 PM, Ngigi Waithaka <ngigi@at.co.ke> wrote:
Bernard,
IMO a few *want* Konza, an even smaller majority *needs* Konza but generally the majority don't need it. As an example, if you wanted to promote Kenya as a Football destination, would you invest in 100, 80K capacity stadiums first or in youth academies in every village?
You want Kenya to be a world-class leader in Athletics, do you first build the Kenya Grand Prix Stadium then convince our Kalenjin brothers to use it, or do you first review what talent you got, help them along in training & attending competitions and ensure they get to Olympics, then when it picks up, you then build that big stadium that you always wanted?
So we are ready to invest in building a 10 Billion USD City, and yet we can't even invest 0.01% of that budget in R&D in our universities and / or in local firms.
We actually do have a term for such projects that are largely done to make but a few rich, while serving almost no current need for the local populace. White Elephants!
I will probably write-up a more detailed blog with my views on this, then maybe we can have varying comments.
Meanwhile, I could leave you with a simple question; is there any successful high tech industry globally that started with a city then technology later? And before anyone says Silicon Valley, it was the industry that created the 'valley' not the other way round!
Regards Waithaka Ngigi
On Mon, Oct 7, 2013 at 1:56 PM, Bernard Kioko [Bernsoft Group] < bkioko@bernsoft.com> wrote:
Mr. Waithaka,****
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Interesting contribution. I am however interested in seeing your views as to why we should kill Konza. I seem to hold them same opinion with Dr. Ndemo that Konza is a great initiative for Kenya. Do I miss something? BTW on that MPESA item, I don’t think Kenya is too late. If Dr. Matiangi can provide the right platform for us and grant developers in Kenya the Central Bank support that the creators of MPESA enjoyed (after some challenges) it would be possible for another MPESA to emerge from Kenya. ****
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** **
** **
*From:* kictanet [mailto:kictanet-bounces+bkioko= bernsoft.com@lists.kictanet.or.ke] *On Behalf Of *Ngigi Waithaka *Sent:* Monday, October 07, 2013 12:52 PM *To:* bkioko@bernsoft.com
*Cc:* KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions *Subject:* Re: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo****
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Dr Matiangi,****
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My 2 cents on this issue.****
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First, do not try to be like Dr Ndemo, as there is only but one Dr Ndemo, just as there is only but one Dr Matiangi. Try, however, to create your own path that emulates the good things, and the bad ones, improve on them or scrap them.****
** **
I will list some good & bad things that happened under Dr Ndemo's leadership****
Good****
1. Dr Ndemo was easily accessible. I think he would probably respond to most relevant mails and would attend most functions that I went to.****
2. We had it good for the Telecom sector. This grew in leaps & bounds during his tenure****
3. He managed to take get the government to take ICT seriously from a previously non-existent Ministry.****
** **
Bad****
1. Too much focus on Telecoms & BPOs to detriment of other sectors in technology such as software****
2. Focus on Mobile development ought to change as this is mostly a dead-end in this market****
3. Too much marketing talk, little on delivery! ICT Board should spend a lot more money marketing Kenya's products & services not attending every conference that's happening globally.****
4. The one that got away; failed to secure the IP for MPesa. We ought to have had a piece of that and mint Billions, but someone forgot****
5. Did not centralize ICT in GoK****
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What you should do:****
1. Kill Konza if you can! Grand dream we don't need right now. Money can best be used elsewhere in the same sector. Invest it in Research & local firms and the industry can build itself a Konza if need be in 30 years.*** *
2. Crack the whip on KICT Authority and ensure they walk the talk as regards growth of Kenya ICT Sector. Set clear goals on what they ought to have had done in 5 years.****
3. Shift our dream goal of trying to be like India, with their BPOs and to aiming to be the Israel (Highend Technology) as our demographics simply do not allow us to compete with India on cost.****
4. Take Kenya Software Industry seriously with less emphasis on Incubation Labs but to delivering solutions that can be sold in the general market.** **
5. Don't try to be like Dr Ndemo****
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A key achievement that at least you have achieved in your 5 months in office is centralizing ICT in GoK, I want to believe there is more where that came from.****
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Finally, it is important if you would share with us what your 5 year gameplan is ( I don't mean that Kenya ICT Masterplan), so we can judge you fairly.****
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Regards****
Waithaka Ngigi****
A1.iO****
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On Mon, Oct 7, 2013 at 4:48 AM, Fred Matiangi <fredmatiangi@gmail.com> wrote:****
When I was nominated to Cabinet, last April, several of my friends including Dr. Ndemo, Tom Mshindi, Elijah, Muriuki, and later others I met in policy discussions like Alex and Walu encouraged me to visit, participate and engage as much as humanly possible with the ICT sector in the blogosphere and join KICTANET. The advice given to me was that in all these interactions, I would meet diverse views on various aspects of policy in the ICT sector generally. I try to ‘check in’ from time to time and keenly follow conversations on a number of policy issues. I have learned a lot from some of these exchanges. I have met very insightful and deep thinkers; and interesting others too.****
I must confess however that in the 5 months I have been in public space, there are times one feels very frustrated and almost like one is being asked to unlearn many things- even about the most basic moral issues like telling simple truths.****
I read Wanjiku’s post and didn’t know whether to laugh or cry. Why would anybody tell such blatant lies about someone they hardly know? Many of my colleagues at the Ministry told me not to bother to respond, but I think it was too personal not to be commented on.****
Everyone who was at Connected Kenya early in the year for instance can (if they want to be sincere) recollect that I not only attended the cocktail preceding the dinner in honour of my colleagues, Minister Pogisho and Dr. Ndemo, but spoke at the event. I was introduced by Dr. Ndemo. I actually not only attended and spoke at the dinner but invited 3 colleague Ministers-from Tanzania, Uganda and South Africa- attending the OGP meeting running side by side with Connected Kenya at the Serena.****
In any case, it wasn’t clear to anyone then that Dr. Ndemo would leave the Ministry -appointments of PSs had not been done. When it was, we held a farewell lunch for him and had such a great time with over 600 colleagues and industry players at the Panafric. In collaboration with colleagues at the Ministry, including Ndemo’s successor, Mr. Tiampati, we have ensured to include, invite and very sincerely acknowledge our preceding colleagues in all activities, especially where we are launching products, reports etc. that are a culmination of efforts they initiated at the Ministry- postal payment gateway switch, the National Broadband Strategy etc.****
At the main Connected Kenya event, I successfully persuaded Paul Kukubo and other colleagues involved in the planning to allow me to have a generous time on the podium with Minister Pogisho as this was the most public opportunity for handover. ****
There sure is something fundamentally serious with people- adults -who tell lies such are being told here. Where on earth does the allegation that I excused myself to see the Mombasa Governor come from?****
The meeting Wanjiku refers to held by African Development Bank at the Intercontinental Hotel was not even on PPPs. I was invited to preside over the launch of the report ‘silicon Kenya’- an ICT study commissioned by the African Development Bank. I was there at 9am as advised but the meeting started 1 hour late. I hurriedly made my remarks and had to leave when I was done- at 1105hrs- because we were expected at a cabinet meeting starting at 11am. I very humbly explained this to both the journalists present and all who had questions. I had however promised Michelle Morgan and Mark Okuttah that I would respond to their 2 brief questions which I did. There was no discussion on LTE- Not anything I can remember was meaningful enough to sufficiently demonstrate my shallowness and lack of depth!****
It is very frustrating to operate in the space of rumour mongering. I sincerely think it is very demeaning for Dr. Ndemo and many of all of us his friends and colleagues to engage in such a cheap discussion as being proposed here about his and my relationship that’s over three decades old and much deeper and more expansive than our interaction at the Ministry of Information or generally in the ICT sector. It is very unfortunate- to say the very least.****
Hate is a very strong term to use, especially to describe a relationship between two people one of whom you begin by confessing you do not know much of. I will let all readers and serious decent people who interact with this unfortunate discussion be the judges. ****
I try- even with the tyranny of demands on our time to return some of the heavy traffic of e-mails, enquiries etc. that come to the Ministry. I will certainly not lie that I will be able to do every interview, meet every individual or group of people who want to meet or even turn up at every single event I am required to. I try to meet as many people as I humanly can and even try harder to show up for events when we have been invited and advised in good time; but I also delegate in cases I cannot obviously deal with due to various constraints. ****
I am so grateful to God for the wonderful people I found at the Ministry and all the very hardworking and focused Kenyans that work with me in many of our agencies. We try hard and will continue to. Of course we may not satisfy everyone but we promise to do our very best. ****
When we are criticised, however- which we will always expect and take in our stride- we hope people are at least factual- even about reporting events- and more focused on the work we do rather than rumours and gossip. ****
To be insulted is painful. It is even much more painful to be mispresented and for plain lies to be peddled about you. I pray that no Kenyan perpetuates this about a fellow Kenyan, even one they simply just don’t like.****
Ultimately, the Almighty God knows my heart and my every thought. He knows my thoughts and feelings about fellow men on earth including Dr. Ndemo and I remain accountable to my creator.****
****
****
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On Fri, Oct 4, 2013 at 11:55 AM, Walubengo J <jwalu@yahoo.com> wrote:****
@Becky, @Jane,
True that Ndemo was cool like that.
But I guess everyone has their own style (remember when Kibaki took over and went quiet in Statehouse and everyone -comparing him to Moi - was asking where is this old man; 10years later the guy showed up with Thika Superhighway +++****
** **
One more thing, Matiangi is Cabinet Sec a.k.a Minister so it is abit unfair to compare him with Ndemo who was Permanent Sec (different roles). Perhaps if Becky did an article comparing Matiangi to Pogisho (former Minister) we might get a different picture?****
** **
That said, I also do miss seeing the "Ndemo effect" at the Ministry...but maybe we should instead target to bringing out the PS Tiampati out of the woods..we could start by giving him a free, lifetime registration to KICTAnet :-) ****
** **
walu.****
** **
** ** ------------------------------
*From:* Network of non- formal Educational institutions < nnfeischools@yahoo.com> *To:* jwalu@yahoo.com ****
*Cc:* KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> ****
*Sent:* Friday, September 27, 2013 12:56 PM *Subject:* Re: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo****
** **
I agree with Wanjiku . Dr Ndema was that available and supportive to everybody.
Jane****
** **
** ** ------------------------------
*From:* Rebecca Wanjiku <rebeccawanjiku@yahoo.com> *To:* Jane Muriuki <nnfeischools@yahoo.com> *Cc:* KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> *Sent:* Friday, September 27, 2013 12:25 PM *Subject:* [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo****
** **
When it became obvious that Bitange Ndemo would not be taking over as the Cabinet Secretary in the Ministry of Information and Communication, the ICT community wondered who would wear the giant shoes left by Ndemo.****
To calm the nerves and prepare for his exit, Ndemo wrote to the ICT industry and you can read it here.<http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/04/ndemo-sees-his-departure-as-imminent/> ****
So much has been said about Ndemo, both positive and negative but the thing I am most happy about is his easy approach; want to see him, drop him an email, get an appointment at 6 am or earlier. Want to interview him, drop the questions on email, and for some reason I would have answers in 24 hours, on email. No reminder, he will do it.****
Read more…..****
http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/09/what-matiangi-can-learn-from-ndemo/****
** **
****
Tel. 254 720 318 925****
** **
wanjiku.co.ke****
** **
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-- ****
*Regards,*****
** **
*Wait**haka Ngigi*****
Chief Executive Officer | Alliance Technologies | MCK Nairobi Synod Building****
T + 254 (0) 20 2333 471 |Office Mobile: +254 786 28 28 28 | M + 254 737 811 000****
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** **
****
-- *Regards,*
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-- My Blog - www.gmeltdown.com ''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''' The ordinary just won't do
Dr. Matiangi, Sincerely hope your substantial experience with Parliaments will help change our procurement laws. Would appreciate if you would let us know about and help you lobby the relevant authorities for the same. Regards Murigi / Stanley Muraya On Oct 7, 2013 4:49 AM, "Fred Matiangi" <fredmatiangi@gmail.com> wrote:
When I was nominated to Cabinet, last April, several of my friends including Dr. Ndemo, Tom Mshindi, Elijah, Muriuki, and later others I met in policy discussions like Alex and Walu encouraged me to visit, participate and engage as much as humanly possible with the ICT sector in the blogosphere and join KICTANET. The advice given to me was that in all these interactions, I would meet diverse views on various aspects of policy in the ICT sector generally. I try to ‘check in’ from time to time and keenly follow conversations on a number of policy issues. I have learned a lot from some of these exchanges. I have met very insightful and deep thinkers; and interesting others too.
I must confess however that in the 5 months I have been in public space, there are times one feels very frustrated and almost like one is being asked to unlearn many things- even about the most basic moral issues like telling simple truths.
I read Wanjiku’s post and didn’t know whether to laugh or cry. Why would anybody tell such blatant lies about someone they hardly know? Many of my colleagues at the Ministry told me not to bother to respond, but I think it was too personal not to be commented on.
Everyone who was at Connected Kenya early in the year for instance can (if they want to be sincere) recollect that I not only attended the cocktail preceding the dinner in honour of my colleagues, Minister Pogisho and Dr. Ndemo, but spoke at the event. I was introduced by Dr. Ndemo. I actually not only attended and spoke at the dinner but invited 3 colleague Ministers-from Tanzania, Uganda and South Africa- attending the OGP meeting running side by side with Connected Kenya at the Serena.
In any case, it wasn’t clear to anyone then that Dr. Ndemo would leave the Ministry -appointments of PSs had not been done. When it was, we held a farewell lunch for him and had such a great time with over 600 colleagues and industry players at the Panafric. In collaboration with colleagues at the Ministry, including Ndemo’s successor, Mr. Tiampati, we have ensured to include, invite and very sincerely acknowledge our preceding colleagues in all activities, especially where we are launching products, reports etc. that are a culmination of efforts they initiated at the Ministry- postal payment gateway switch, the National Broadband Strategy etc.
At the main Connected Kenya event, I successfully persuaded Paul Kukubo and other colleagues involved in the planning to allow me to have a generous time on the podium with Minister Pogisho as this was the most public opportunity for handover.
There sure is something fundamentally serious with people- adults -who tell lies such are being told here. Where on earth does the allegation that I excused myself to see the Mombasa Governor come from?
The meeting Wanjiku refers to held by African Development Bank at the Intercontinental Hotel was not even on PPPs. I was invited to preside over the launch of the report ‘silicon Kenya’- an ICT study commissioned by the African Development Bank. I was there at 9am as advised but the meeting started 1 hour late. I hurriedly made my remarks and had to leave when I was done- at 1105hrs- because we were expected at a cabinet meeting starting at 11am. I very humbly explained this to both the journalists present and all who had questions. I had however promised Michelle Morgan and Mark Okuttah that I would respond to their 2 brief questions which I did. There was no discussion on LTE- Not anything I can remember was meaningful enough to sufficiently demonstrate my shallowness and lack of depth!
It is very frustrating to operate in the space of rumour mongering. I sincerely think it is very demeaning for Dr. Ndemo and many of all of us his friends and colleagues to engage in such a cheap discussion as being proposed here about his and my relationship that’s over three decades old and much deeper and more expansive than our interaction at the Ministry of Information or generally in the ICT sector. It is very unfortunate- to say the very least.
Hate is a very strong term to use, especially to describe a relationship between two people one of whom you begin by confessing you do not know much of. I will let all readers and serious decent people who interact with this unfortunate discussion be the judges.
I try- even with the tyranny of demands on our time to return some of the heavy traffic of e-mails, enquiries etc. that come to the Ministry. I will certainly not lie that I will be able to do every interview, meet every individual or group of people who want to meet or even turn up at every single event I am required to. I try to meet as many people as I humanly can and even try harder to show up for events when we have been invited and advised in good time; but I also delegate in cases I cannot obviously deal with due to various constraints.
I am so grateful to God for the wonderful people I found at the Ministry and all the very hardworking and focused Kenyans that work with me in many of our agencies. We try hard and will continue to. Of course we may not satisfy everyone but we promise to do our very best.
When we are criticised, however- which we will always expect and take in our stride- we hope people are at least factual- even about reporting events- and more focused on the work we do rather than rumours and gossip.
To be insulted is painful. It is even much more painful to be mispresented and for plain lies to be peddled about you. I pray that no Kenyan perpetuates this about a fellow Kenyan, even one they simply just don’t like.
Ultimately, the Almighty God knows my heart and my every thought. He knows my thoughts and feelings about fellow men on earth including Dr. Ndemo and I remain accountable to my creator.
On Fri, Oct 4, 2013 at 11:55 AM, Walubengo J <jwalu@yahoo.com> wrote:
@Becky, @Jane,
True that Ndemo was cool like that.
But I guess everyone has their own style (remember when Kibaki took over and went quiet in Statehouse and everyone -comparing him to Moi - was asking where is this old man; 10years later the guy showed up with Thika Superhighway +++
One more thing, Matiangi is Cabinet Sec a.k.a Minister so it is abit unfair to compare him with Ndemo who was Permanent Sec (different roles). Perhaps if Becky did an article comparing Matiangi to Pogisho (former Minister) we might get a different picture?
That said, I also do miss seeing the "Ndemo effect" at the Ministry...but maybe we should instead target to bringing out the PS Tiampati out of the woods..we could start by giving him a free, lifetime registration to KICTAnet :-)
walu.
------------------------------ *From:* Network of non- formal Educational institutions < nnfeischools@yahoo.com> *To:* jwalu@yahoo.com *Cc:* KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> *Sent:* Friday, September 27, 2013 12:56 PM *Subject:* Re: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo
I agree with Wanjiku . Dr Ndema was that available and supportive to everybody.
Jane
------------------------------ *From:* Rebecca Wanjiku <rebeccawanjiku@yahoo.com> *To:* Jane Muriuki <nnfeischools@yahoo.com> *Cc:* KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> *Sent:* Friday, September 27, 2013 12:25 PM *Subject:* [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo
When it became obvious that Bitange Ndemo would not be taking over as the Cabinet Secretary in the Ministry of Information and Communication, the ICT community wondered who would wear the giant shoes left by Ndemo. To calm the nerves and prepare for his exit, Ndemo wrote to the ICT industry and you can read it here.<http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/04/ndemo-sees-his-departure-as-imminent/> So much has been said about Ndemo, both positive and negative but the thing I am most happy about is his easy approach; want to see him, drop him an email, get an appointment at 6 am or earlier. Want to interview him, drop the questions on email, and for some reason I would have answers in 24 hours, on email. No reminder, he will do it. Read more….. http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/09/what-matiangi-can-learn-from-ndemo/
Tel. 254 720 318 925
wanjiku.co.ke
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KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
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KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
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KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
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KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
@CS Dr. Matiangi, Am glad you joined KICTAnet...what I forgot to tell you is that it is rough neighbourhood - though Yawe did give big hints on this :-) But on a more serious note, what you are going through is known as the hazards of leadership. At your position, plse expect some more. Just grow a thick skin, put on your helmet and you will enjoy the ride. Journalists have this mantra- if it is not "bleeding" then it is NOT "leading" (news). They are trained to tweak and twist in order to draw blood. Blood sells...facts? Rarely. walu. nb: am glad you exercised your right of reply. At least now, we have the benefit of choosing which story to believe :-) ________________________________ From: Fred Matiangi <fredmatiangi@gmail.com> To: Walubengo J <jwalu@yahoo.com> Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> Sent: Monday, October 7, 2013 4:48 AM Subject: Re: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo When I was nominated to Cabinet, last April, several of my friends including Dr. Ndemo, Tom Mshindi, Elijah, Muriuki, and later others I met in policy discussions like Alex and Walu encouraged me to visit, participate and engage as much as humanly possible with the ICT sector in the blogosphere and join KICTANET. The advice given to me was that in all these interactions, I would meet diverse views on various aspects of policy in the ICT sector generally. I try to ‘check in’ from time to time and keenly follow conversations on a number of policy issues. I have learned a lot from some of these exchanges. I have met very insightful and deep thinkers; and interesting others too. I must confess however that in the 5 months I have been in public space, there are times one feels very frustrated and almost like one is being asked to unlearn many things- even about the most basic moral issues like telling simple truths. I read Wanjiku’s post and didn’t know whether to laugh or cry. Why would anybody tell such blatant lies about someone they hardly know? Many of my colleagues at the Ministry told me not to bother to respond, but I think it was too personal not to be commented on. Everyone who was at Connected Kenya early in the year for instance can (if they want to be sincere) recollect that I not only attended the cocktail preceding the dinner in honour of my colleagues, Minister Pogisho and Dr. Ndemo, but spoke at the event. I was introduced by Dr. Ndemo. I actually not only attended and spoke at the dinner but invited 3 colleague Ministers-from Tanzania, Uganda and South Africa- attending the OGP meeting running side by side with Connected Kenya at the Serena. In any case, it wasn’t clear to anyone then that Dr. Ndemo would leave the Ministry -appointments of PSs had not been done. When it was, we held a farewell lunch for him and had such a great time with over 600 colleagues and industry players at the Panafric. In collaboration with colleagues at the Ministry, including Ndemo’s successor, Mr. Tiampati, we have ensured to include, invite and very sincerely acknowledge our preceding colleagues in all activities, especially where we are launching products, reports etc. that are a culmination of efforts they initiated at the Ministry- postal payment gateway switch, the National Broadband Strategy etc. At the main Connected Kenya event, I successfully persuaded Paul Kukubo and other colleagues involved in the planning to allow me to have a generous time on the podium with Minister Pogisho as this was the most public opportunity for handover. There sure is something fundamentally serious with people- adults -who tell lies such are being told here. Where on earth does the allegation that I excused myself to see the Mombasa Governor come from? The meeting Wanjiku refers to held by African Development Bank at the Intercontinental Hotel was not even on PPPs. I was invited to preside over the launch of the report ‘silicon Kenya’- an ICT study commissioned by the African Development Bank. I was there at 9am as advised but the meeting started 1 hour late. I hurriedly made my remarks and had to leave when I was done- at 1105hrs- because we were expected at a cabinet meeting starting at 11am. I very humbly explained this to both the journalists present and all who had questions. I had however promised Michelle Morgan and Mark Okuttah that I would respond to their 2 brief questions which I did. There was no discussion on LTE- Not anything I can remember was meaningful enough to sufficiently demonstrate my shallowness and lack of depth! It is very frustrating to operate in the space of rumour mongering. I sincerely think it is very demeaning for Dr. Ndemo and many of all of us his friends and colleagues to engage in such a cheap discussion as being proposed here about his and my relationship that’s over three decades old and much deeper and more expansive than our interaction at the Ministry of Information or generally in the ICT sector. It is very unfortunate- to say the very least. Hate is a very strong term to use, especially to describe a relationship between two people one of whom you begin by confessing you do not know much of. I will let all readers and serious decent people who interact with this unfortunate discussion be the judges. I try- even with the tyranny of demands on our time to return some of the heavy traffic of e-mails, enquiries etc. that come to the Ministry. I will certainly not lie that I will be able to do every interview, meet every individual or group of people who want to meet or even turn up at every single event I am required to. I try to meet as many people as I humanly can and even try harder to show up for events when we have been invited and advised in good time; but I also delegate in cases I cannot obviously deal with due to various constraints. I am so grateful to God for the wonderful people I found at the Ministry and all the very hardworking and focused Kenyans that work with me in many of our agencies. We try hard and will continue to. Of course we may not satisfy everyone but we promise to do our very best. When we are criticised, however- which we will always expect and take in our stride- we hope people are at least factual- even about reporting events- and more focused on the work we do rather than rumours and gossip. To be insulted is painful. It is even much more painful to be mispresented and for plain lies to be peddled about you. I pray that no Kenyan perpetuates this about a fellow Kenyan, even one they simply just don’t like. Ultimately, the Almighty God knows my heart and my every thought. He knows my thoughts and feelings about fellow men on earth including Dr. Ndemo and I remain accountable to my creator. On Fri, Oct 4, 2013 at 11:55 AM, Walubengo J <jwalu@yahoo.com> wrote: @Becky, @Jane,
True that Ndemo was cool like that.
But
I guess everyone has their own style (remember when Kibaki took over and went quiet in Statehouse and everyone -comparing him to Moi - was asking where is this old man; 10years later the guy showed up with Thika Superhighway +++
One more thing, Matiangi is Cabinet Sec a.k.a Minister so it is abit unfair to compare him with Ndemo who was Permanent Sec (different roles).
Perhaps if Becky did an article comparing Matiangi to Pogisho (former Minister) we might get a different picture?
That said, I also do miss seeing the "Ndemo effect" at the Ministry...but
maybe we should instead target to bringing out the PS Tiampati out of the woods..we could start by giving him a free, lifetime registration to KICTAnet :-)
walu.
________________________________ From: Network of non- formal Educational institutions <nnfeischools@yahoo.com> To: jwalu@yahoo.com
Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> Sent: Friday, September 27, 2013 12:56 PM Subject: Re: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo
I agree with Wanjiku . Dr Ndema was that available and supportive to everybody.
Jane
________________________________ From: Rebecca Wanjiku <rebeccawanjiku@yahoo.com> To: Jane Muriuki <nnfeischools@yahoo.com> Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> Sent: Friday, September 27, 2013 12:25 PM Subject: [kictanet] What Matiangi can learn from Ndemo
When it became obvious that Bitange Ndemo would not be taking over as the Cabinet Secretary in the Ministry of Information and Communication, the ICT community wondered who would wear the giant shoes left by Ndemo.
To calm the nerves and prepare for his exit, Ndemo wrote to the ICT industry and you can read it here. So much has been said about Ndemo, both positive and negative but the thing I am most happy about is his easy approach; want to see him, drop him an email, get an appointment at 6 am or earlier. Want to interview him, drop the questions on email, and for some reason I would have answers in 24 hours, on email. No reminder, he will do it. Read more….. http://www.wanjiku.co.ke/2013/09/what-matiangi-can-learn-from-ndemo/
Tel. 254 720 318 925
wanjiku.co.ke
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The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development.
KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize,
respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
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The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder
platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development.
KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
_______________________________________________ kictanet mailing list kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/listinfo/kictanet
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The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development.
KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
participants (16)
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Ali Hussein
-
Bernard Kioko [Bernsoft Group]
-
Brian Munyao Longwe
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Eric Osiakwan
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Erik Hersman
-
Fred Matiangi
-
Gilda Odera
-
James Mbugua
-
John Kieti
-
Kivuva
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Network of non- formal Educational institutions
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Ngigi Waithaka
-
Phares Kariuki
-
Rebecca Wanjiku
-
S.M. Muraya
-
Walubengo J