logo
Kenya police say lawmaker's killing ‘targeted and premeditated'

Kenya police say lawmaker's killing ‘targeted and premeditated'

CNN01-05-2025

Kenya's police have said the fatal shooting of a lawmaker by a gunman aboard a motorcycle in the capital Nairobi on Wednesday evening appeared to be targeted and premeditated.
Charles Were, a member of parliament representing Kasipul constituency in Kenya's west, was shot dead at around 7:30 p.m. (11.30 a.m. ET) when his vehicle was stopped at a traffic light on Ngong Road, police said in a statement released late on Wednesday.
According to witnesses, the shooter was riding as a passenger on a motorcycle that stopped alongside the car, police said.
'The pillion passenger approached the vehicle and fired shots at the passenger side before jumping back onto the motorcycle and speeding away,' police said. 'The nature of this crime appears to be both targeted and premeditated.'
Political assassinations are unusual in Kenya, a relatively stable country in a region that has experienced several civil conflicts in recent years.
Were was a member of the opposition ODM party led by veteran politician Raila Odinga, who lost to William Ruto in the last election in 2022.
'Were is no more; mercilessly and in cold blood, gunned down by an assassin in Nairobi this evening,' Odinga wrote on X.
Odinga rejected the 2022 election result, alleging irregularities, but Odinga and some of his allies have since struck agreements to work with Ruto to address Kenya's economic and political challenges.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump-Musk meltdown: key moments in the billionaires' spectacular split
Trump-Musk meltdown: key moments in the billionaires' spectacular split

Yahoo

time24 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump-Musk meltdown: key moments in the billionaires' spectacular split

Breaking up is hard to do, and even harder if you are a billionaire who decides to break up with another billionaire on the two social media platforms you own, while the world watches in real time. Here are the key moments as the relationship between the US president, Donald Trump, and his former senior adviser Elon Musk unravelled in spectacular fashion, precipitated by a dispute over a colossal spending bill that could have major consequences for years to come. Tuesday 27 May 2025 Musk criticises Trump's tax and spending bill CBS previewed an interview, scheduled for that weekend, in which Musk said Trump's proposed tax and spending bill 'undermines' the cost-cutting efforts of the 'department of government efficiency' (Doge), which he led. Wednesday 28 May 2025 Musk out of White House Musk announced on social media that he was leaving his role in the Trump administration, a departure that the White House confirmed was in process on the same evening. 'As my scheduled time as a Special Government Employee comes to an end, I would like to thank President @realDonaldTrump for the opportunity to reduce wasteful spending,' the billionaire wrote on X, his social media platform. Friday 30 May Trump's goodbye In the Oval Office, Trump praised Musk for his service, presenting him with a golden key and lauding the 'colossal change' he had brought through Doge – which in four months entered dozens of federal departments, accessed sensitive data and led to the elimination of thousands of jobs, though the ultimate savings were far, far less than Musk had promised. Standing alongside Trump in the Oval Office, Musk, who faced a 130-day limit in his tenure as a special government employee that had ended two days prior, vowed that his departure was 'not the end' of Doge, and that it would 'only strengthen over time'. Tuesday 3 June, 1.31pm ET Musk: 'disgusting abomination' Musk seemed to release a pent-up frustration on X. He said: 'I'm sorry, but I just can't stand it anymore', then derided the administration's One Big Beautiful Bill Act, calling it a 'massive, outrageous, pork-filled Congressional spending bill' that was 'a disgusting abomination'. Wednesday 4 June, 2.07am Musk: bill defeats Doge efforts Musk doubled down in the early hours, claiming the bill 'more than defeats all the cost savings achieved by the Doge team at great personal cost and risk'. Thursday 5 June, 12.01pm ET Trump launches attack at the White House While hosting the freshly appointed German chancellor, Friedrich Merz, Trump skimmed over the diplomatic niceties and instead used the opportunity to engage in a freewheeling discussion about Musk that started positively but got progressively less pleasant. He began by needling Musk for appearing in the Oval Office with a black eye. 'You saw a man who was very happy when he stood behind the Oval desk. And even with the black eye. I said: 'Do you want a little makeup? We'll get you a little makeup.' But he said: 'No, I don't think so.'' (Musk claimed last week that he got the black eye when his five-year-old son, X Æ A-12, punched him in the face.) Trump then said he had 'had' a great relationship with the Tesla boss, but 'I don't know if we will any more', adding: 'I'm very disappointed in Elon. I've helped Elon a lot.' He then accused Musk of being upset that the bill would take away subsidies for electric vehicles. It got worse. 'If you saw the statements he made about me, which I'm sure you can get very easily, it's very fresh on tape, he said the most beautiful things about me, and he hasn't said bad about me personally,' Trump said, but then added, presciently: 'But I'm sure that'll be next.' He went on to accuse Musk of missing the glamour of being in the Oval Office, saying that sometimes people left his administration and became 'hostile' because of 'Trump derangement syndrome'. 'They leave and they wake up in the morning, and the glamour is gone. The whole world is different, and they become hostile, I don't know what it is,' the president said. Merz's face during all of this was a picture. 12.46pm Musk: 'Such ingratitude' Musk, who somehow despite running multiple companies never seems to be offline, was watching the Oval Office meeting and responding in real time. Trump's claim that Musk had known what was in the bill was false, Musk said. He wrote that it 'was passed in the dead of night so fast that almost no one in Congress could even read it'. But what appeared to really get under his skin was Trump saying on Thursday he would have won the presidential election without Musk's help or money. Replying to an X user, Musk said: 'Without me, Trump would have lost the election, Dems would control the House and the Republicans would be 51-49 in the Senate. Such ingratitude.' 1.57pm Time for a new Musk political party? Less than two hours after the White House event, Musk posted a poll on X, asking: 'Is it time to create a new political party in America that actually represents the 80% in the middle?' At the time of writing, 80% of X users who responded had said 'Yes'. 2.16pm Musk says he will be around longer than Trump He then gave us all something to chew on: 'Oh and some food for thought as they ponder this question: Trump has 3.5 years left as President, but I will be around for 40+ years …' Elon Musk is 53 years old. 2.20pm People start offering relationship advice … Ashley St Clair, a rightwing influencer thought to have had a baby called Romulus with Musk, popped up to offer the president some counselling. 2.37pm Trump: 'He just went CRAZY!' Trump was not having any of this: what billionaire narcissist would? He took to the social media platform he owns to claim that he had asked Musk to leave his work with the 'Doge' office because he was, Trump said, 'wearing thin'. 'I asked him to leave, I took away his EV Mandate that forced everyone to buy electric Cars that nobody else wanted … and he just went CRAZY!' Trump wrote, then brazenly suggested he would 'terminate Elon's governmental subsidies and contracts'. Musk immediately responded: 'Such an obvious lie. So sad.' 3.10pm Musk: time to drop the really big Epstein bomb Then he upped the ante. 'Time to drop the really big bomb: Donald Trump is in the Epstein files,' he tweeted, referring to the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. 'That is the real reason they have not been made public,' Musk wrote, adding in a separate post: 'Mark this post for the future. The truth will come out.' Musk, of course, has himself been pictured with the Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell, who was found guilty of sex-trafficking in 2021. (Neither featuring in the files nor being photographed with Maxwell indicates wrongdoing.) 3.33pm Kanye West enters the chat Ye, an erstwhile ally of both men – who has been dropped by sponsors and fans over his antisemitic outbursts – posts: 'Broooos please noooooo,' adding: 'We love you both so much.' 3.45pm House speaker Mike Johnson weighs in Musk had earlier been reposting the House speaker, Mike Johnson, criticising the Joe Biden administration in 2023 for 'an endless cycle of out-of-control deficit spending'. 'Where is the Mike Johnson of 2023!?' Musk asked. Johnson took the bait. 'The Mike Johnson of 2023 is the SAME Mike Johnson who has always been a lifelong fiscal hawk,' he said in a lengthy post. X users were unimpressed and the post wound up with a community note disputing its accuracy. 4.06pm Trump: Musk should have done this months ago Gnomically, the US president wrote: 'I don't mind Elon turning against me, but he should have done so months ago.' 4.09pm Musk: I'm taking my space toys away Musk then threatened to withhold the spacecraft that Nasa has used to travel to and from the International Space Station – which would leave astronauts dependent on Boeing or Russia to get them home. 'SpaceX will begin decommissioning its Dragon spacecraft immediately,' he wrote. As a reminder, Musk is 53. 4.11pm Musk agrees with impeachment call Musk ratcheted things up even further when he amplified a tweet by Gamergater Ian Miles Cheong calling for Trump to be impeached. (If it happened, it would be for a record third time.) 4.26pm Musk says Trump will cause a recession Having backed the US president to the hilt during the election campaign, and joined his administration, Musk then declared: 'The Trump tariffs will cause a recession in the second half of this year.' 4.43pm Musk doubles down on his Epstein line With an 'eyebrow raised' emoji, Musk posted a well-known NBC video of Trump with Epstein at a party in 1992, dancing, joking and making comments about women. 6.48pm 'An unfortunate episode' The White House press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, described the feud as 'an unfortunate episode from Elon'. 9.48pm Musk posts a ketamine meme Musk posted a meme referring to the persistent online suggestions that he uses ketamine and to his associating Trump with Epstein. In 2024, Musk said he used the drug on prescription for medical reasons. The morning after … The opening moves to back down and reconcile seemed to begin … … but then shortly before 7am a reporter asked Trump about the supposed phone call he was going to have with Musk later in the day. 'You mean the man who has lost his mind?' Trump asked. Here we go again …

Trump travel ban barring citizens from 12 countries goes into effect
Trump travel ban barring citizens from 12 countries goes into effect

Yahoo

time24 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump travel ban barring citizens from 12 countries goes into effect

Donald Trump's new ban on travel to the US by citizens of a dozen countries, mainly in Africa and the Middle East, went into effect at 12am ET on Monday, more than eight years after Trump's first travel ban sparked chaos, confusion, and months of legal battles. The new proclamation, which Trump signed last week, 'fully' restricts the nationals of Afghanistan, Myanmar, Chad, Republic of the Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen from entering the US. The entry of nationals of Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan and Venezuela will be partially restricted. Unlike Trump's first travel ban in 2017, which initially targeted citizens of seven Muslim-majority countries and was criticized as an unconstitutional 'Muslim ban', the new ban is broader, and legal experts said they expect it to withstand legal challenges. The announcement of the new travel ban was greeted with less outrage and protest than his initial 2017 ban. On Monday, the new ban appeared to be overshadowed by Trump's other immigration battles, including furious protests in Los Angeles over Trump's deportation raids, which were followed by Trump deploying the national guard to the city despite the opposition of California's governor. The newly instituted ban notably includes citizens of Haiti, a majority Christian country. Haitians in the US were demonized by Trump during his presidential campaign, with the president spreading the baseless conspiracy theory that Haitian immigrants in Ohio were eating people's pets. It also imposes heightened travel restrictions on citizens of Venezuela, who have been targeted repeatedly by the White House in recent months, as the Trump administration's sudden deportation of Venezuelans in the US to a notorious prison in El Salvador sparked a massive legal battle. The ban is also expected to have a disproportionate effect on African countries, with some citizens of targeted countries worrying about being cut off from opportunities for education, professional development, and networking. Mikhail Nyamweya, a political and foreign affairs analyst, previously told the Guardian that the new travel bans and restrictions would 'bring about a pattern of exclusion' and 'may also institutionalise a perception of Africans as outsiders in the global order'. 'This policy is not about national security – it is about sowing division and vilifying communities that are seeking safety and opportunity in the United States,' Abby Maxman, president of Oxfam America, a nonprofit international relief organization, said. While five of the countries on the new ban list are not majority-Muslim, including Republic of the Congo, Myanmar, Eritrea and Equatorial Guinea, as well as Haiti, the list does target citizens of non-white countries in the developing world, fueling criticisms that the ban is fundamentally racist and shaped by 'bigotry'. Trump's first travel ban, in 2017, was widely criticized as a fulfillment of Trump's campaign pledge to institute 'a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States'. The Trump administration later added citizens of other non-Muslim countries to the banned list. The new ban does not revoke visas previously issued to people from countries on the list, according to guidance issued Friday to all US diplomatic missions. However, unless an applicant meets narrow criteria for an exemption to the ban, his or her application will be rejected starting Monday. Travelers with previously issued visas should still be able to enter the US even after the ban takes effect. In a video posted Wednesday on social media, Trump said nationals of countries included in the ban pose 'terrorism-related' and 'public-safety' risks, as well as risks of overstaying their visas. He also said some of these countries had 'deficient' screening and vetting or have historically refused to take back their citizens. Trump also tied the new ban to a recent attack in Boulder, Colorado that wounded a dozen people, saying it underscored the dangers posed by some visitors who overstay visas. US officials say the alleged perpetrator overstayed a tourist visa. The man charged in the attack is from Egypt, a country that is not on Trump's restricted list. The Associated Press contributed reporting

Adam 'Pacman' Jones arrested, facing multiple charges: What we know
Adam 'Pacman' Jones arrested, facing multiple charges: What we know

USA Today

time2 days ago

  • USA Today

Adam 'Pacman' Jones arrested, facing multiple charges: What we know

Adam 'Pacman' Jones arrested, facing multiple charges: What we know Show Caption Hide Caption NFL players can now partake in Olympic flag football Olympic flag football, which will make it's debut at the 2028 summer games, just got bumped up a level after the NFL agreed to let its players partake. Sports Pulse Former Cincinnati Bengals defensive back Adam "Pacman" Jones is facing new criminal charges in Northern Kentucky, the Cincinnati Enquirer, part of the USA TODAY Network, reports. Jail records show that Jones was booked into Kenton County Jail on June 7 and is facing charges of public intoxication, disorderly conduct and assaulting a police officer. The former Bengals player was arrested by Covington police and booked at 1:51 a.m. ET. Records show that Jones was later released after posting bond at 11:32 a.m. ET. Covington police officers were called to the Second Story Bar on West Sixth Street at approximately 12:44 a.m. on June 7 following a report of a "disturbance involving a customer and an employee," police said in a news release. When police arrived, they were alerted to a car trying to leave the area, per the release. Officers conducted a traffic stop and the 41-year-old Jones was identified as a passenger. Police arrested Jones "on charges related to his level of intoxication and his behavior," according to the release. Officials said he'd been consuming alcohol. Jones was transported to the Kenton County Detention Center and assaulted the arresting officer while being lodged, police say. Officials said it caused a minor injury. "The Covington Police Department takes incidents of this nature very seriously. We are committed to maintaining peace and ensuring the safety of all who live in or visit Covington," the department said. "Adam Jones is being held to the same standard of conduct as any other individual in our community." Jones has a history of legal issues. He was arrested in November for an altercation at a Dallas hotel following the Mike Tyson vs. Jake Paul fight. A year earlier, Jones pleaded guilty to a disorderly conduct charge in Boone County District Court. The former Bengals standout was arrested early Sept. 11 after Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport police responded to a call about an unruly passenger on a United Airlines flight, according to the Cincinnati Enquirer. He was sentenced to 30 days in jail, but that sentence was conditionally discharged for two years, provided Jones avoided new criminal charges. USA TODAY reached out to the Covington Police Department for comment. The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast. Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store