In 2014 Bishofu Paul Ngarama gave his story.

And in very good engrich if I might add. He didn’t know at the time that 4 years later his family would be headline news.

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Paul Ngarama Kimani, a Kenyan pastor from South Sudan during the interview at Nation Centre on January 22 2014. PHOTO | PHOEBE OKALL
LIFE AND STYLE
TUE FEB 11 04:50:34 EAT 2014
[SIZE=6]A Kenyan in warring Juba: This is home, sweet home[/SIZE]
IN SUMMARY
[ul]
[li]In the eyes of the thousands who gathered to listen to me, I could see the hopelessness, the trauma and the scars that had sent them fleeing across the border.[/li][li]Between 2006 and 2009, Juba was the place to be. The guns had fallen silent after decades and the economy was booming. Kenyans, Tanzanians and Ugandans flocked here to set up all manner of businesses.[/li][/ul]

[ul]
[li]The announcement by Riek Machar that he would be in the presidential race come 2015 was the first pointer to turbulent times ahead. After his shock declaration, there was clear and open bias in how the government was treating some of the leading politicians.[/li][/ul]
Home. Is it where your clothes are? Or where your cat lives? Some think of it as where your loved ones are, others where you can find solace in tough times. I think they are wrong.
Home to me is the place, wherever, where you have people with whom to share the grey and the sunny days, people whose midnight cries of anguish and agony do not bother you a bit because you know that at some point you’ve also cried in your sleep.

Where the people whose sorrows you share live, that is home. For me that place is South Sudan. And I want to go back home. Tomorrow. Or next week. Or next month. I want to go home.
My name is Paul Ngarama Kimani, born in Mbeya, Tanzania in 1967. My parents, George Ngarama and Monica Nyawira, were both Kenyans who had gone to Tanzania as business people back in ’61, but we moved to Kenya soon after my birth, in ‘69, and I grew up here. Now my name is Pastor Paul Ngarama Kimani, and South Sudan, not Kenya, is where my heart is.

PACKED MY BAGS
I will tell you why I love the country many are fleeing, but before we get to that, let me tell you how I ended up there in the first place.
Back in 2004, I packed my bags and found my way across the border into the then Sudan. But, while that was the first time I was really journeying to Juba, I think my journey had actually started way earlier. Back in ’69, to be precise.

My father was a barber, and when we settled in Nairobi he sought — and got — permission to be the Embakasi Garrison barber.
His business saw me through secondary school, so it was only natural that, after studies, I would join him. For another 15 years, I shaved the heads of soldiers in various garrisons across the country. Business was good, but I still needed something stronger on which to tether my life.
The opportunity came in 2003 when, as a lay preacher with the Africa Christian Mission International, I visited Kakuma refugee camp to evangelise. That visit became some sort of an eye-opener to me.

In the eyes of the thousands who gathered to listen to me, I could see the hopelessness, the trauma and the scars that had sent them fleeing across the border.

In those eyes I also saw a desperate cry for love. The brutal nature of war had robbed these people of not only their homes, their villages and their nation, but also of their sense of being, their humanness.
Herded into the camp, they were collateral damage. Children of war. Destitutes. Or, if you want me to be politically correct, refugees.

A year later in 2004, I met a Sudanese soldier who had come to Embakasi for training on demining. At the height of the civil war, militants had planted thousands of mines in the disputed regions, and these were now maiming the civilian population at an alarming rate. His name was Joseph Wanni from Yei, and I told him I wanted to go to Sudan.
Wanni, a likeable fellow, smiled uncomfortably, then told me I must be out of my mind to want to set foot on one of the most mined lands in the world.

Upon my stubborn insistence, he caved in and gave me the contacts of his brother. Deep in his mind, he probably thought I was just joking, that there was no way I was going to leave the relative security of Nairobi and venture into a land where even the most hard-core, wild adventurers dared not venture.
But I did. One day I just woke up, packed a Bible, a notebook and some other religious material, and crossed into Uganda on my way to Yei. Back in the day, when you crossed the border into South Sudan, you immediately started questioning your wits.

I was perched atop a lorry, and every few kilometres we would come across a roadblock manned by either loyalist soldiers or rebels. They would harass us a bit, but all let us through after pocketing a bribe.
“Keep to the beaten tacks,” they would warn us every time they wave us through. “Don’t veer off. If you do, you’ll be blown to smithereens by the mines.” We heeded the advice, and on the dusty, god-forsaken stretch between the Ugandan border crossing and Yei, the consequences of war lay all over the place: blown up trucks, burnt homes, deserted villages, abject want and death mixed promiscuously, creating one of the most distressing scenarios I have ever seen.

After a day on the road soaking in all the desolation, we arrived in Yei, where I stayed for the next six months. Here, I joined the Sudan Pentecostal Church, and with it I moved from one state to the other, preaching and struggling to survive by running small businesses here and there.
Life, to say the least, was hard, but the doors to the future opened in 2005 after the warring parties signed a comprehensive peace agreement that would eventually give rise to Africa’s newest nation, South Sudan.

Juba, the capital-designate, all of a sudden became very attractive, and so I moved there immediately. In between the preaching, business — I dealt in general merchandise, including clothes — was also booming and, within a year, I had saved enough to put up rental houses in the capital and open a better, bigger clothing stall.
Between 2006 and 2009, Juba was the place to be. The guns had fallen silent after decades and the economy was booming. Kenyans, Tanzanians and Ugandans flocked here to set up all manner of businesses.

Curiously, however, the natives showed little interest in entrepreneurship, and so it was only a matter of time before the foreigners started to hog the pie and call the shots.
By the time the locals realised something was amiss, it was too late. There was a Kenyan-run business on every corner, a Tanzanian this and a Ugandan that here and there. We had set up our own little commercial colony in Juba, and the fantastically militarised natives were beginning to get the heebie-jeebies over that.

Tensions rose. Arguments over the price of goods started getting nasty. And then, as if to show us who were the real cow boys here, demobbed soldiers, angry to the marrow, started walking into foreigner-owned shops, picking items and walking away without paying. “Go back to your country!” they would bark if you dared as much as raise a finger.

Juba, then, became a businessman’s nightmare and, in 2008, I packed and left for Rumbek in Lake State. But, just as I was about to set up a life here, clashes among the Dinka erupted over pasture land.
Now, in South Sudan, when neighbours quarrel, a gunfight is never off the limits. So, when the matter is as serious as pasture land, run for your life.
War cometh. Over those few acres of grazing land, several people died, including four foreigners caught in the melee. As church leaders, together with the local leaders, we organised reconciliation meetings and helped bring back the peace.

But, while Rumbek had opened up my eyes to the seriousness with which pasture is taken here, it also showed me how war can ruin, completely, the justice system of a people.
One Ugandan learnt that the most brutal way. The middle-aged man was driving a truck laden with supplies when he ran over a local. Soon, an army of riotous men and women surrounded his truck, baying for his blood. Naturally, he bolted towards a police station, where he was put inside a cell as the police quelled the emotions outside.

We all thought the worst had passed when calm returned to the streets, but a few hours later a man walked to the police station, asked to see the driver and was allowed in.

He said he was the dead man’s brother, and that he wanted to have a word or two with the Ugandan. A few minutes later, shots rang inside the prison. Then the visitor casually walked away, past the reporting desk, through the gate and into the streets. For running over his brother with his foreign truck laden with foreign goods, the foreigner had to die.

Obviously, there was no way I was going to survive here — once, while preaching at a local church, I was slapped for asking a man not to spit inside the building — so I moved to Wau in Western Bahr el Ghazal State, where I stayed for some time before finding my way back to Juba in 2010.
I have been in Juba since 2010. I was there when we got independence in 2011!
In Nairobi, people have been asking me whether we, the Southerners, saw what was coming towards the end of last year. My answer to them has always been the same: “Yes, I think we did.”

The announcement by Riek Machar that he would be in the presidential race come 2015 was the first pointer to turbulent times ahead. After his shock declaration, there was clear and open bias in how the government was treating some of the leading politicians.
When, in July, Machar was sacked from the Cabinet, we all knew it was just a matter of time before he or his supporters schemed something. Even though he told his supporters to stay calm after the boot, it was clear that a political crisis was looming. The sacking was unexpected and it came as a shocker, especially looking at the total number of ministers and deputies who were kicked out.

Juba was tense.
ALL HELL BROKE LOOSE
No one knew what Machar was planning. He sort of went underground, but we knew something was coming; we just didn’t know what it was. Then, on December 15, all hell broke loose.
The first round of the anarchy found me at Nyakuron market. We heard gunshots coming from the general direction of a local cultural centre but dismissed them as another price haggle, or quarrel, gone wrong.

Half an hour later, the gunfire became intense. People started running into their homes. My house was located at a place called Jebel, and to reach there I had to follow the gunshots. A woman — Ethiopian or Eritrean — lay dying on the road as I dashed to safety.
By evening, heavy artillery shelling took over from the automatic rifles and, by morning, the place was deserted. Military cars patrolled the streets, but they offered little sense of hope to many.

A day later, the robberies started. Soldiers — or men dressed as soldiers — started making house-to-house calls and taking anything valuable they found before raping women. Three days after Juba started crumbling, we were given two hours to vacate the places we lived in. I took nothing. I just walked out.
At one in the afternoon, I was in a Toyota Landcruiser, together with some eight other people, hurtling towards Uganda through Numule. The road, aside from the newly laid tarmac, looked the same as when I had used it back in 2004: soldiers all over the place, choc-a-bloc roadblocks, and bribery demands for us to be let through.

But, as I sat inside that Landcruiser, my back turned against Juba, I couldn’t help but think of the thousands I had left behind. I had lived among them, with them, for nine years.
I was their church minister, standing before them every Sunday to tell them about God, to teach them forgiveness and hope and perseverance. Yet here I was, hurtling towards the border at their greatest hour of need.
As I crossed into Kenya, I had this nudging feeling to go back to my people, back home. I hear that a ceasefire agreement was signed in Addis Ababa the other day, and that there is some sort of calm, however uneasy, sweeping through Juba now.

I want to go back to South Sudan. I want to go back today. Or tomorrow. Or next week. I want to go back to my people
. For, despite all the differences, they laughed with me.
Yes, I want to go back home.

Monica+Bishop Ngarama+Jowie+Kiir Jnr.+Mike Sonko+drugs= Explosive drama.

I also feel this story has more to it than is in the public.
Really hope someone flips and spills everything.
What was supposed to happen and what happened.

In 2018 he seems a bit fatter. He is now a “Bishop” not a pastor. Hata nywele ame dye. Hata suti ni dotcom sio za kushonewa. Mambo sio mbaya in fact. But he tells a different story. Ati he doesn’t know that S.Sudan general nor does the daughter also know him. The daughter just succeeded by magic… in that very same hostile country he just described above. She succeeded bila mjuano. Hehe.

And today apparently he has no interest in S.Sudan. Mara it’s a family business… mara Monica is running it on her own…

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Bishop Paul Ngarama (left). He reads and watches the news with anxiety these days, afraid of what an excitable media will publish next about his only daughter, Ms Monica Kimani, whose murder has dominated headlines for a week now. PHOTO | EVANS HABIL | NATION MEDIA GROUP
[SIZE=6]Monica was a go-getter, didn’t have a ‘sponsor’, bishop Ngarama insists[/SIZE]

https://mobile.nation.co.ke/image/view/-/1951494/medRes/593420/-/12ubx6dz/-/General+Image.jpg[B]By JACQUELINE KUBANIA[/B]
More by this Author

IN SUMMARY
[ul]
[li]Monica’s murder is the kind of story that appears stranger than fiction and has enthralled the nation.[/li][li]It has all the elements of a blockbuster movie: a beautiful woman, a celebrity couple, a gun, money, cross-border interests.[/li][li]According to Ngarama, General Akot, currently the deputy speaker in South Sudan’s parliament, was not known to Monica.[/li][/ul]
Bishop Paul Ngarama reads and watches the news with anxiety these days, afraid of what an excitable media will publish next about his only daughter, Ms Monica Kimani, whose murder has dominated headlines for a week now.

Monica’s murder is the kind of story that appears stranger than fiction and has enthralled the nation.
It has all the elements of a blockbuster movie: a beautiful woman, a celebrity couple, a gun, money, cross-border interests.
The public cannot seem to get enough.
TRAUMA
But at the centre of all the razzmatazz is a traumatised family who are yet to come to terms with their grief, shocked that life could deal them such a cruel hand.

“Monica was my heart. She was the flower of our lives; beautiful, intelligent, generous, a peacemaker. It is hard to imagine that she has been taken from us forever and will never come back home,” said Bishop Ngarama.
When the Nation met him in Thika, the 51-year-old preacher was reluctant to give this interview, distressed over what he says are lies that blogs have been publishing about his daughter.

He admits that Monica, who would have turned 28 a week from now, loved the finer things in life but disputes that someone else was funding it.

Yes, it is true that she had a house in Ruaka, drove a flashy BMW X5, was often photographed in expensive clothes and shoes and was a frequent flyer between Nairobi, Juba, Dubai and sometimes China.

THE RECORD
But the bishop wants to set the record straight that his daughter’s wealth came from the business that she ran, and not from shadowy sponsors as per some media reports.
“She was a hard worker with a keen sense for making money. She was involved in interior design and cleaning services and had some lucrative contracts from Unicef and UAP Insurance. She was not living off any man, least of all General Daniel Awet Akot whom she never met,” he said.

According to Ngarama, General Akot, currently the deputy speaker in South Sudan’s parliament, was not known to Monica.
“I am the one who knew the general. I met him when I was chairman of the Kenyan business community in Rumbek and he helped me open churches. That was the extent of our relationship. We lost contact in 2013 when the war broke out and I came back to Kenya,” said Ngarama.

CHOICES
Monica had always chosen the road less travelled.
The first time that she went to South Sudan, she was just 20 years old, and she was interning at the Kenyan Embassy in Juba.
She was a student of International Relations at what is now Technical University of Kenya and was eager to do her compulsory internship in Juba, displaying a stubborn streak and a remarkable sense of adventure for one so young. That was in 2010.

MISSIONARY
Her father had by then lived in South Sudan for five years, establishing himself as a missionary and a businessman.
He sold clothes, car batteries and was also a newspaper vendor.
“Monica would not listen to me when I told her to do her internship locally. I was worried for her safety, but then my daughter has always been headstrong. Once she set her sights on something she found a way to get it,” he said.

Monica excelled at her embassy internship, so much so that she was hired as an employee after she finished her diploma at TUK. She worked there for two years and, according to her father, that job opened up Monica’s world and gave her the connections that would later serve her in business.

INTERIOR DESIGN
“She rubbed shoulders with powerful people both in government and in business as she was responsible for processing their visas. She quit after two years to go into interior design on the advice of an Eritrean friend she had made in Juba,” says Ngarama.

Monica’s foray into business turned the fortunes of the family around.
Her father had registered a company, Millypaul General Trading, which Monica used to import large shipments of interior design materials such as wall paper, tiles and ceilings.
In a few years, she transformed her father’s modest business into a company with sizeable holdings, and expanded it to include cleaning services. She counted UAP Insurance, several banks and Unicef among her clients.

“When the war broke out in 2013, we were among the Kenyans that were airlifted back to Nairobi by the government. But Monica went back when things cooled down to manage the business. Today, I cannot tell you what it is worth because I stopped being involved,” he said.

following

oops is there a sonko angle to this story? Enlighten me

Jowie as described by friends.

https://mobile.nation.co.ke/news/The-deadly-side-of-Jowi-Irungu/1950946-4790636-4oxf0gz/index.html

He is a handsome young man, but Mr Joseph ‘Jowie’ Irungu’s friends have mixed and diametrically opposed emotions about their dashing, “rich” friend.

One woman described his generosity and wealth in one breath — he never drove the same expensive car for long, she said, and no drink was too expensive for him — but another flatly declared that for those who know Mr Irungu, it is no surprise that he is a murder suspect.
“He is creepy,” she said, using a term which in the street captures the aura of menace associated with people you are best advised not to play with.

CHARACTER
Police have been painstakingly trying to piece together Mr Irungu’s character, with sources saying he once worked for two military contract companies in Iraq and Afghanistan. The companies alleged to have employed Mr Irungu include KBR, a US deconstruction and private security firm, and O’Gara Group.
“I still need to confirm that,” Mr George Kinoti, the Director of Criminal Investigations, told the Nation last evening.
From the entertainment spots he frequented in the city and outside the country, it is clear that Jowie has a particularly voracious appetite for the good life.
Locally, Kiza in Kilimani, Jiweke Tavern on Ngong Road, and 1824 on the opposite side of the city on Lang’ata Road are his favourite watering holes. It is here that he enjoyed expensive whiskey and the company of friends before it all came tumbling down.

VENERATED PATRON
Partying in such joints comes at a premium, but going by the tens of photos of him and other revellers posted by Jiweke Tavern on its Facebook page, for instance, it is clear that Jowie was a venerated patron and a regular.
His manner of dressing, mostly cool jackets, fancy shoes and T-shirts, oozes extravagance and fine taste.
A friend and former classmate, who did not wish to be named because of Mr Irungu’s newfound notoriety, described him as a “mysterious” person. He said that Mr Irungu had a lot of money, but no one questioned its source because he had worked abroad.
“I have known him for more than 10 years,” he said. “We all knew he was working as a professional bouncer in the Middle East but did not go beyond that.”

EXPENSIVE LIFESTYLE
Mr Irungu is a man who is not shy about showing his expensive lifestyle on social media. Pictures on his Instagram account, where he has more than 18,000 followers, speak volumes about his lavish experiences.
His love of socialising with women, his friends said, is legend. A young city woman who said she went out with Mr Irungu and his clique on different occasions described him as “quite the marauding bull”.
She claimed Mr Irungu is in the habit of dating women and dumping them quite fast. She also described him as an “overprotective” boyfriend who generously treats women.

WILD MERRYMAKER
According to our informer, the suspected murderer is a wild merrymaker, a lifestyle that is supported by his pockets, which apparently run deep.
“There is no drink Jowie cannot afford. He drinks whatever he wants. He is free with his money,” she said.
“Before he broke up with one of his girlfriends, Jowie would take her on vacation to the Middle East, where they obviously seemed to have a good time together.”
Over time, though, the trips took a slump, and it is rumoured that Mr Irungu had been banned from travelling to the United Arab Emirates for unknown reasons.

OUT OF BOUNDS
The suspect allows very few people into his apartment in Buru Buru Phase Two.
Until recently, he was staying with a man named Mark Kaloki before they fell out.
“Jowie started living alone after Mr Kaloki left. Very few of his friends go to his house,” she said.
Mr Kaloki worked for Kenya Airways as a member of cabin crew. His Instagram account is private while his Facebook page has been deactivated.
The informer also told the Nation that Mr Irungu hardly used one car for long. He preferred top-of-the-range cars; one day driving a Mercedes Benz, the other a sleek Toyota Land Cruiser Prado.

PRIVATE LIFE
According to the woman, who requested not to be named for fear of being associated with a murder suspect, Mr Irungu is very guarded about his private life, scarcely discusses his dealings, and has the mannerisms of a “hunted animal”.
He always carries a gun, tucked under his jacket,” she said. “I have seen him with a gun on at least two occasions.”
According to her, nearly every member of the group knew that Mr Irungu worked in the military and, therefore, “asked few questions”.
“He does not appear suspicious in any way, unless you are very close to him,” she said.

If, indeed, Mr Irungu worked for KBR, then he was a member of a large network of private soldiers working for the US government as private armies run by security companies.

SECURITY CONTRACTOR
At the time he is said to have been working for the security contractor, The Financial Times estimates, the US spent at least $138 billion on security contractors in Iraq, with KBR getting the lion’s share, with a contract value of at least $39.5 billion — equivalent to Kenya’s budget.
KBR has been stalked by scandals that range from bribery in Nigeria to sexual harassment of its female workers in Iraq, Kuwait and Afghanistan, and in all areas where President George W Bush’s ‘War on Terror’ was taken after the 911 Al-Qaeda attack on New York.
It has also been accused of exposing its workers to “burn pits” in Afghanistan and Iraq, where human corpses, animal carcasses and tyres were burnt.

SUIT
Although KBR dismissed as “unfounded” the general assertion that it “knowingly harmed soldiers or contractors”, a class-action suit was later filed and a judge in February this year decreed that that the open-air burn pits, where thousands of chemicals were released into the air after trash and other waste were incinerated, are linked to a lung disease outbreak there.
Whether Mr Irungu worked for O’Gara group could not be independently confirmed, but the group’s president, Mr Bill O’gara, has been quoted as saying that the group provides training in explosives ordnance disposal “that is purely defensive in nature and for the sole purpose of antiterrorism and protection of personnel and facilities”.

Additional reporting by John Kamau