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The 5 birrion
thuks
#91 Posted : Tuesday, November 01, 2016 7:38:37 PM
Rank: Veteran

Joined: 10/8/2008
Posts: 1,575
The bigger scandal will be when the contents will have disappeared ala vehicle parts in police stations
I care!
Angelica _ann
#92 Posted : Tuesday, November 01, 2016 7:41:18 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 12/7/2012
Posts: 11,935
hardwood wrote:
Angelica _ann wrote:
^^^^^^ How are these things called 'mobile' jameni yawa?????????


@Nyandhiwa...according to this my Advanced Oxford Dicsonaary 2016 edition..

mo·bile
adjective
ˈmōbəl,ˈmōˌbīl/
1.
able to move or be moved freely or easily.

2.
of or relating to cellular phones, handheld computers, and similar technology.


Therefore, because the clinic is able to be moved freely or easily, it is mobile. It is mobile as opposed to a clinic with a foundation and concrete walls.

If that clinic had wheels and an engine to propel itself, then it would be an "automobile clinic".smile

Sawa sawa, thank you very much for educating me!!!!!
In the business world, everyone is paid in two coins - cash and experience. Take the experience first; the cash will come later - H Geneen
hardwood
#93 Posted : Tuesday, November 01, 2016 7:53:23 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 7/28/2015
Posts: 9,562
Location: Rodi Kopany, Homa Bay
Angelica _ann wrote:
hardwood wrote:
Angelica _ann wrote:
^^^^^^ How are these things called 'mobile' jameni yawa?????????


@Nyandhiwa...according to this my Advanced Oxford Dicsonaary 2016 edition..

mo·bile
adjective
ˈmōbəl,ˈmōˌbīl/
1.
able to move or be moved freely or easily.

2.
of or relating to cellular phones, handheld computers, and similar technology.


Therefore, because the clinic is able to be moved freely or easily, it is mobile. It is mobile as opposed to a clinic with a foundation and concrete walls.

If that clinic had wheels and an engine to propel itself, then it would be an "automobile clinic".smile

Sawa sawa, thank you very much for educating me!!!!!


I want to add that due to its mobility a clinic can be loaded on a container transport lorry and taken to serve residents of village A, B, C etc within a period of time while it is still resting on a lorry. Alternatively the container clinic can be transported by the lorry to Village A and dropped there to serve residents for eg a month or 2 and then moved to another village or slum if the need arises.
Angelica _ann
#94 Posted : Tuesday, November 01, 2016 7:59:45 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 12/7/2012
Posts: 11,935
hardwood wrote:
Angelica _ann wrote:
hardwood wrote:
Angelica _ann wrote:
^^^^^^ How are these things called 'mobile' jameni yawa?????????


@Nyandhiwa...according to this my Advanced Oxford Dicsonaary 2016 edition..

mo·bile
adjective
ˈmōbəl,ˈmōˌbīl/
1.
able to move or be moved freely or easily.

2.
of or relating to cellular phones, handheld computers, and similar technology.


Therefore, because the clinic is able to be moved freely or easily, it is mobile. It is mobile as opposed to a clinic with a foundation and concrete walls.

If that clinic had wheels and an engine to propel itself, then it would be an "automobile clinic".smile

Sawa sawa, thank you very much for educating me!!!!!


I want to add that due to its mobility a clinic can be loaded on a container transport lorry and taken to serve residents of village A, B, C etc within a period of time while it is still resting on a lorry. Alternatively the container clinic can be transported by the lorry to Village A and dropped there to serve residents for eg a month or 2 and then moved to another village or slum if the need arises.

Thanks again, mobile clinic expert!!!!
In the business world, everyone is paid in two coins - cash and experience. Take the experience first; the cash will come later - H Geneen
Coolio
#95 Posted : Tuesday, November 01, 2016 9:28:55 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 10/28/2008
Posts: 2,276
Location: Kibish
Were the 36 Bloggers responsible for #NMGlies?
Nadondosha meli kubwa seuze ngalawa!
FRM2011
#96 Posted : Tuesday, November 01, 2016 9:38:38 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 11/5/2010
Posts: 2,459
@hardwood, am in evil mode so bear with me.

A close relative of hardwood is driving on mombasa road and gets into a nasty accident. The wallet or handbag gets stolen as usual with the medical insurance card. Ambulance guys show up ( they are available nowadays) and due to the nature of the injury, they decide KNH is their best bet.

Then the drama starts. You may want to refer to the knh thread to know what happens. But every night, the morgue guys show up to collect bodies of patients who never made it past reception. The ones who died groaning in pain on the floor at the casualty. The nurses will be chatting as they take their tea.

They are not evil, but they know they work in a system that collapsed many years ago. One that churns millionaires everyday. Do you know mututho was paid 100mn for curtains by KNH? But they only have 21 ICU beds. And don't have money to hire more doctors and nurses. It's called system ya Majambazi. The one you are defending here.

The day you show up at their morgue demanding to know why they let your relative die, you will remember us. The few of us who refused to worship the tribal gods. Those who called it as it is. The traitors who refused to protect uthamaki.

hardwood
#97 Posted : Tuesday, November 01, 2016 9:51:01 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 7/28/2015
Posts: 9,562
Location: Rodi Kopany, Homa Bay
It's the scandal that never was. No money was stolen.


http://www.standardmedia...-house-scandal/?pageNo=1
Tara
#98 Posted : Tuesday, November 01, 2016 11:17:34 PM
Rank: New-farer

Joined: 12/18/2012
Posts: 94
hardwood wrote:
kaka2za wrote:
Those mobile clinics maybe empty containers. How come information is now flowing freely after the leak?


NTV describes them as fully kitted, fully equipped. The information has always been out there but the journalists had a hidden agenda that has backfired badly. They have shot themselves in the foot. Also our journalists are known to be lazy and never investigate anything before putting it in the papers.

Watch this clip and see how they are praising the sophisticated mobile clinics a day after telling us no clinics were delivered. Jinga kabisa. #HogwashPress






1. If they are fully equipped then they should open one and show us what's inside so we know they aren't lying.

2. Since they are containers, maybe they were to be loaded on a truck of some kind so make them mobile?
murchr
#99 Posted : Wednesday, November 02, 2016 5:31:54 AM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 2/26/2012
Posts: 15,980
Kisero wrote:
I have just gone through a copy of the audit report on the Ministry of Health by Mr Bernard Muchere of the Internal Audit Directorate of the Ministry of Finance, currently posted at Afya House.

The auditor liberally uses phrases such as “red flags”, “possible fraud schemes”, and “possible double payments”.

My honest view is that for an audit as important as this, and considering the political furore it has generated, it falls short of the very high audit thresholds expected, especially when you are alleging the theft of billions of shillings from public coffers.

I expected to see clear statements of findings backed by documentary evidence. For example, when you allege double payment to a supplier, you must show payment vouchers, goods-received notes, or wire transfer instructions to show that the supplier was indeed paid twice.

Still, the auditor has given juicy insights into the shenanigans that go on during end-of-the-year procurements when funds have to be shuffled between votes and the Integrated Financial Management Information System (Ifmis) manipulated to pay well-connected suppliers.

What you see is a mad rugby-style scram to empty the vaults before the end of the financial year. Most revealing in this regard is a payment of Sh200 million that was made to Estama Investments Ltd on the last day of the financial year — June 30, 2016. The LPO was raised on the same day. How can you start and complete such a process in a single day? Incredible.

These are the exploits of a tiny elite in the government that has mastered the game of manipulating Ifmis in order to smash and grab the public purse. In Ifmis jargon, the term used is “procure to pay”, which describes a process that starts from the requisition by user departments and takes you through several stages, each requiring specific passwords — from raising an LPO, raising the so-called goods-received note, matching these documents with supplier invoices, flagging for payment, approving payment, and finally effecting the payment.

The fact that Ministry of Health officials were able to procure to pay in one day shows that what we are dealing with is a clique of individuals who collectively possess multiple passwords to enable them to initiate and complete transactions in Ifmis. Or was it a case where one superuser with a high-level password was allowed to override the whole system?


http://mobile.nation.co....37814-2w03w8z/index.html
"There are only two emotions in the market, hope & fear. The problem is you hope when you should fear & fear when you should hope: - Jesse Livermore
.
Bigchick
#100 Posted : Wednesday, November 02, 2016 8:00:30 AM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 2/8/2013
Posts: 4,068
Location: At Large.
murchr wrote:
[quote=Kisero]I have just gone through a copy of the audit report on the Ministry of Health by Mr Bernard Muchere of the Internal Audit Directorate of the Ministry of Finance, currently posted at Afya House.

The auditor liberally uses phrases such as “red flags”, “possible fraud schemes”, and “possible double payments”.

My honest view is that for an audit as important as this, and considering the political furore it has generated, it falls short of the very high audit thresholds expected, especially when you are alleging the theft of billions of shillings from public coffers.

I expected to see clear statements of findings backed by documentary evidence. For example, when you allege double payment to a supplier, you must show payment vouchers, goods-received notes, or wire transfer instructions to show that the supplier was indeed paid twice.

Still, the auditor has given juicy insights into the shenanigans that go on during end-of-the-year procurements when funds have to be shuffled between votes and the Integrated Financial Management Information System (Ifmis) manipulated to pay well-connected suppliers.

What you see is a mad rugby-style scram to empty the vaults before the end of the financial year. Most revealing in this regard is a payment of Sh200 million that was made to Estama Investments Ltd on the last day of the financial year — June 30, 2016. The LPO was raised on the same day. How can you start and complete such a process in a single day? Incredible.

These are the exploits of a tiny elite in the government that has mastered the game of manipulating Ifmis in order to smash and grab the public purse. In Ifmis jargon, the term used is “procure to pay”, which describes a process that starts from the requisition by user departments and takes you through several stages, each requiring specific passwords — from raising an LPO, raising the so-called goods-received note, matching these documents with supplier invoices, flagging for payment, approving payment, and finally effecting the payment.

The fact that Ministry of Health officials were able to procure to pay in one day shows that what we are dealing with is a clique of individuals who collectively possess multiple passwords to enable them to initiate and complete transactions in Ifmis. Or was it a case where one superuser with a high-level password was allowed to override the whole system?


http://mobile.nation.co....7814-2w03w8z/index.html[/quote]

@Muchr be my Baba. Read it for me and give summary.

Had money been stolen or not?
Love is beautiful and so are those who share it.With Love, Marriage is an amazing event in ones life time, the foundation of joy, happiness and success.
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