Friday, 29 July 2016

Seriki Davidwise's Quote 1


Seriki Davidwise's Quote 1


"The world is for great people, but great people aren’t for themselves, but for the world."

Quite importantly, our world is at the feet of her great people. Men and women, who are adored, revered and celebrated. They exist in their thousands across the globe.
The voice of one is the voice of countless thousands that echo their words and speeches and tell their acts on the internet, media, offices and private homes around the world..
Tiny gods, like shooting stars shot into the earth, these ones refused their lights from going out.
Great people they are. Great and mighty, wealthy, influential and powerful, they should all rise and never live for themselves alone but Rise up for the world!
By Seriki Davidwise.

Thursday, 28 July 2016

Kenyan students win award in International Science and Engineering Fair in US


Kenyan students win award in International Science and Engineering Fair in US

The 2016 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair featured more than 1,700 young scientists selected from 419 affiliate fairs in 77 countries, regions and territories, including four from Kenya.
Kenyan students Vishal Vekaria and Mansi Apte, students at Shree Cutchi Leva Patel Samaj School (SCLPS) in Nairobi West, became the first Kenyan winners at the prestigious and competitive Intel International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF) in Phoenix, USA.
The two 15-year-olds brought home an award in the category of Environmental Engineering, sub-category Water Resource Management after emerging third in the category.
Their project was titled Acacia xanthlophloea characterisation and preservation techniques of sapwood (plant xylem) as a low-cost membrane for arid and semi-arid areas in Kenya. The project is focused on water resource management, seeking ways to deal with the lack of safe drinking water in rural and semi-arid areas. They used locally available resources to build a water purifier that is affordable.
The project is focused on water resource management, seeking ways to deal with the lack of safe drinking water in rural and semi-arid areas. They used locally available resources to build a water purifier that is affordable.
The duo also won the First Award of $1000 from the Qatar Foundation, Research and Development and got an honorable mention from the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID).
Kenya had two projects that were showcased at ISEF by another set of students from SCLPS School. The second was by Ramya Yanamandra and Rupal Rabadiya, who presented a project that helps with the detection of Salmonella enterica DT104 and Vibrio cholera O139 using polyclonal antibodies immobilized on polyaniline non-wires.
Simply put, they designed a biosensor that detects bacteria in food. With this, the students were looking for a way to detect the bacteria that causes food borne diseases in order to reduce food borne diseases. This project was inspired after watching the news and seeing the cholera outbreak in Kenya.
Han Jie (Austin) Wang, 18, of Vancouver, Canada, took first-place and the Gordon E. Moore Award taking home US$75,000 for developing microbial fuel cells (MFCs) that more efficiently convert organic waste into electricity.
“Intel congratulates this year’s winners and hopes that their work will inspire other young innovators to apply their curiosity and ingenuity to today’s global challenges,” said Rosalind Hudnell, vice president in Human Resources, director of Corporate Affairs at Intel Corporation, and president of the Intel Foundation.

7th Grade 13 year old Kenyan American boy who won Cool Science Award in Lowell


7th Grade 13 year old Kenyan American boy who won Cool Science Award in Lowell

Sam Mwea Ngare, a 13 year old Kenyan American boy in Lowell Massachusetts
was among 4 students who won the 2013 Cool Science Award for his amazing drawing depicting the effects of science on our future life. The 7th grade student at the Wang Middle school will be awarded the prize Friday April 5 at the Umass Lowell on 61 Wilder, and his drawing will run as a promotional advertisement on all Lowell transit buses for the entire month of April 2013.
The cool science award is a collaborative effort between the University of Massachusetts
Lowell’s Graduate School of Education and the University of Massachusetts Boston's
Department of Environmental, Earth, and Ocean Sciences. The Cool Science team brings an
inter-disciplinary approach to the challenge of improving public understanding of climate change
science.
Cool Science aims to engage students, teachers, parents, and the general public with the
science of climate change.
The award is presented on a monthly basis to top winners, runner ups, and honorable mentions
for various art projects presented by 10th grade students from all over the state of Massachusetts.
"I felt surprised that I won. I really did not think my drawing was that good to win," said Sam
while speaking to AjabuAfrica.com during an interview at his home on Mill street apartments in
Lowell.
According to the young Kenyan, when her teacher, Ms. Magnus, came into the classroom one
day and announced that a competition on climate change was going on, he immediately got curious and decided to take part.
"I thought about how our activities are changing the weather patterns these days."It's like we
Are supposed to be in spring now and we just had a big snow storm several days ago. Ice is
melting in the Artic and disrupting life for everything including penguins. Last year, Halloween
was postponed to a Sunday because there was a storm," he said.
The young man said that if human beings can start using electric cars more often, use solar panel to generate electricity for our houses instead generating it from coal gas or water, then we
can make a big strides towards restoring and conserving the regular weather patterns.
"We can also use windmills more," he quipped.
Sam was then able to translate his exact thoughts into a beautiful drawing that won the April
contest. It was fittingly titled " We can change".
An entry titled "Be a Hero - Plant a Tree" by Reybekah, an eighth grader in Ms. Piekos' class a the Bartlett Community Partnership School in Lowell, Mass. took the runners up position.

Sam said he will receive a $200 gift card from Amazon that he plans to put towards purchasing a laptop. Born in Lowell on October 4, 1999, the young Kenyan said math is his favorite subject and he "We can Change", by Sam Ngare

Jalen Scott, the Student won international science award


Jalen Scott, the Student won international science award

Jalen Scott, an eight-grader whose research into elevated lead levels in the soil at some Baton Rouge schools secured him an invitation to compete in Africa, has returned from the Golden Climate International Environmental Project Olympiad in Nairobi, Kenya with the top prize for his grade level.
Scott, a student at Kenilworth Science and Technology Charter School in Baton Rouge and the only one from the United States selected to compete, was the junior division winner of the Wangari Maathai Grand Award, which is named for the Kenyan environmentalist who in 2004 became the first African woman to win a Nobel Peace Prize.
When they called my name as the winner, I got real nervous, Scott said in a press release sent by the school on Thursday. My legs started shaking, and I was afraid I couldnt walk.
But Scott, who was accompanied to Kenya by his father and science teacher, managed to make it to the stage to accept the grand award.
Jalen Scotts accomplishments are nothing short of amazing and show the world that we are developing some of the best minds in science fields right here in Baton Rouge, said Mayor-President Melvin L. Kip Holden in the press release. I couldnt be more proud that his innovative ideas not only benefit current students, but will also help him achieve his own dreams.
Scotts 2013 science fair project, which also got him published in an academic journal and allowed him to meet national educational and political leaders, was one of 135 entrants from 31 countries. Kenilworth science teacher Elkhan Akhundov entered Scotts project, which competed against 24 other entrants from junior-high students.
As a seventh-grader, Scott and Desirae Gardner, then a sixth-grader at Kenilworth, produced similar projects studying soil at 11 local schools, using a hand-held X-ray spectrometer provided by LSU associate professor David Weindorf, a soils specialist with the LSU AgCenter. Scott found lead levels above U.S. Environmental Protection Agency screening limits at four of the schools. Gardner found elevated levels of arsenic at seven schools.

Kenya's Kipruto wins Rome marathon


Kenya's Kipruto wins Rome marathon
Amos Kipruto wins the 2016 Rome Marathon on April 10, 2016. PHOTO | IAAF

In Summary
Kipruto weathered a seven-man assault when he broke away at 35km to triumph in more than a minute and effectively ended Ethiopias three-year dominance in the race in his first attempt at marathon.
Kipruto, who arrived in Rome in great form, having paced the Standard Chartered Dubai Marathon through 30km in 1:27:30, edged out Ethiopias Birhanu Addisie to second in 2:09:27.
Kenyas Dominic Ruto sealed the podium place in 2:09:28 as Rahma Tusa of Ethiopia won the womens race in 2:28:49.
Kenyas Amos Kipruto cruised to victory in Rome, clocking 2:08:12 on Sunday.
Kipruto weathered a seven-man assault when he broke away at 35km to triumph in more than a minute to end Ethiopias three-year dominance in the race in his first attempt in marathon.
Luka Kanda was the last Kenyan to have won in 2012 before Kipruto reclaimed the pride.
Kipruto, who arrived in Rome in great form, having paced the Standard Chartered Dubai Marathon through 30km in 1:27:30, edged out Ethiopias Birhanu Addisie to second in 2:09:27.
Kenyas Dominic Ruto sealed the podium place in 2:09:28 in a race where Rahma Tusa, of Ethiopia, won the womens race in 2:28:49. Mulu Diro Melka, also from Ethiopia, was second clocking 2:29:59.
The Ethiopian women maintained their dominance over Kenya for the third year running in the race. Helena Kiprop is the last Kenyan women to have won the race in 2013.

Monday, 25 July 2016

Kenyan Team Wins 2nd Place, $10,000 in Wege Prize 2016 Michigan, USA


Kenyan Team Wins 2nd Place, $10,000 in Wege Prize 2016 Michigan, USA
Five Kenyan women currently studying abroad at different colleges and universities around the world are working together to improve living conditions in the impoverished urban areas of their home country, and their efforts recently earned them 2nd place and $10,000 in Wege Prize 2016, a global student design competition focused on the circular economy.
Organized by Kendall College of Art and Design of Ferris State Universitys (KCADs) Wege Center for Sustainable Design in Grand Rapids, Michigan, USA, Wege Prize challenges teams of undergraduate students from around the world to work across institutional and disciplinary boundaries, converging their knowledge and perspectives to design a product, service, or business model that can function within and facilitate a paradigm shift toward a circular economy, an economic model in which resources and capital are regenerative.
Named Kenyan Youths for a Circular Economy, or KYCE, the team of Stephanie Agengo, studying Law at Anglia Ruskin University in the United Kingdom; Lavender Micalo, studying Biochemistry at Roanoke College in the United States; Lydiah Mpyisi, studying Environmental Science and Biology at Roanoke College; Kathleen Murarya, studying Mathematics and Science at Westchester Community College in the United States; and Phenny Omondi, studying Agronomy and Environmental Science at EARTH University in Costa Rica, unveiled an ambitious plan to improve the poor economic and sanitary conditions of Kibera, Kenyas largest urban slum, where each of the women were born and have spent a majority of their lives.
In Kibera, overpopulation, poverty, and a lack of proper sanitation facilities has resulted in a number of growing environmental and personal health problems including disease, pollution, and lack of access to clean water.
Our team originally met at the Millennium Campus Conference in New York City at the United Nations headquarters, and during the conference we began talking about how we could come together as Kenyan youths to help our country achieve the sustainability goals that were adopted by the UN in 2015. A few months later we heard about Wege Prize and wanted to get involved, said Micalo.
Mpyisi, who presented her teams solution in the final stage of the competition, added, ““We wanted to integrate existing community-based organizations and work together with the government and the locals to come up with solutions that can disrupt the existing wicked problems in Kenyas urban slums.
By orchestrating a collaboration between Peepoople, a nonprofit that manufactures and distributes portable toilets that transform human waste into valuable fertilizer; The Community Cooker Foundation, a nonprofit that works to provide communities with bio-digesters that can transform environmental waste into energy; and the Kenyan government, KYCE plans to pave the way for a circular system in which Kiberas most formidable problems can become assets for growth and development.
Using the Community Cooker Foundations bio-digesters, Kiberas environmental waste would be upcycled into inexpensive and clean heat energy that would provide residents with a means of cooking food and boiling water for safe consumption. Using Peepooples Pepoo product, a biodegradable and self-sanitizing human waste receptacle that inactivates harmful pathogens, would give Kiberas residents an affordable and sanitary means of relieving themselves and allow human waste that is currently polluting the environment to be upcycled as fertilizer for large community gardens that would take the place of existing urban landfills.
 We really appreciated that team KYCE chose to work on a problem in a context that they had personal connection to, said judge Gretchen Hooker, who works as a Biomimicry Specialist for the Biomimicry Institute. Their system redesign leverages existing resources in the community in new ways and meets an acute need affecting many people.
KYCE has already begun connecting with Peepoople, The Community Cooker, and local Kenyan governments to put their plan into action. They hope to use the funds awarded in Wege Prize 2016 to help officially solidify the necessary partnerships and resources to move their idea forward.
Were now going to start finalizing all of our partnerships on paper, and we also want to take steps to ensure that our project is sustainable, and that the change we want to see happen in Kibera actually does happen, said Mpyisi. Being named a finalist in a global competition like Wege Prize really gave us a voice to approach these organizations and prove to them that our idea is worth listening to.
Other winning solutions in Wege Prize 2016 included a solution that focuses on creating an on-site waste treatment system for hospitals that minimizes environmental impact while maximizing the ability of the system to recover resources, and a solution that would help Technology for Tomorrow Ltd.,  an existing company in Uganda that manufactures sanitary pads out of papyrus, adopt a circular model for meeting the heating and electricity needs of its production facilities through biomass gasification of papyrus and paper waste materials.

Thanks to the generous support of The Wege Foundation, which recently
awarded $444,000 in grant funding to KCADs Wege Center for Sustainable Design to continue running the competition for the next four years, Wege Prize 2017 will be open to any undergraduate student in the world, and will again be focused on the circular economy.
Team registration will open in August 2016, but those interested in participating are encouraged to begin building their teams and brainstorming ideas now. Educators and other professionals who are interested in contributing their expertise are encouraged to contact wicked@wegeprize.org for more information.
Wege Prize - 17 Fountain St. NW, Grand Rapids, MI 49503 - wicked@wegeprize.org
Wege Prize is a West Michigan-born concept developed by
Kendall College of Art and Design of Ferris State University (KCAD) with the support of The Wege Foundation.
May 25, 2016
by
Kyle Austin

 

Young Kenyan researcher wins prestigious international fellowship at UCT


Young Kenyan researcher wins prestigious international fellowship at UCT
Dr Nadia Chanzu will be investigating why HIV-positive pregnant women on antiretroviral therapy are at particular risk of pre-term births, while on a two-year postdoctoral fellowship at UCT, sponsored by the AXA Research Fund.
Nearly one million babies died in 2013 due to complications related to premature (pre-term) birth, according to World Health Organisation (WHO) estimates. For HIV-infected mothers, the risk of giving birth prematurely is extremely high, putting these babies at risk of increased episodes of illness and death. In order to develop alternative therapies to counter this risk, scientists need a better understanding of the delicate immune balance between an HIV-positive mother and her developing baby. It is to do exactly this that the AXA Research Fund awarded Dr Nadia Chanzu, currently a research scientist at the Gertrude's Children's Hospital in Kenya, a prestigious two-year junior (postdoctoral) fellowship at UCT's Institute of Infectious Disease and Molecular Medicine.
The AXA Research Fund, the research-funding branch of the global insurance brand, seeks to contribute to a greater understanding and prevention of risk worldwide, including environmental, life and socio-economic risk. Fellowships are one of the instruments through which they attempt to achieve this aim. Chanzu is the first African researcher at an African university to be awarded this highly competitive and prestigious fellowship.
The AXA Scientific Board, in awarding the fellowship to Chanzu, described her as a "very promising young scientist" with "significant potential".
"It is a great honour," says Chanzu, who graduated among the top of her class in medical biochemistry from the University of Nairobi in Kenya, completed her master's degree in biomedical science at Kingston University in London (UK) and went on to complete her PhD at the University of Nairobi Institute of Tropical and Infectious Diseases with a grant award from the International Development Research Centre (IDRC), Canada. Chanzu is also a graduate of the prestigious Canadian Institutes of Health Research's International Infectious Diseases and Global Health Training Programme (IID & GHTP), which sponsors exceptional PhD trainees across Canada, Colombia, Kenya and India.
"I will use this time to improve my knowledge, skills and experience and eventually contribute towards the advancement of the research agenda in my own country."
Thirty-five million people around the world are HIV positive, according to WHO statistics: of those, nearly 71% live in sub-Saharan Africa, making Chanzu's research particularly relevant on the continent.
Today HIV can be successfully managed with the use of anti-retroviral therapy (ART): however, says Chanzu, the ART exposure, along with the HIV, appears to increase the risk of premature birth.
"The placenta is the only link between the developing child and its mother," she explains. "But because a baby will inherit some components from its father components that are foreign to the mother the baby and the mother are at risk of rejecting one another."
A successful pregnancy therefore requires a delicate immune balance between mother and baby a balance that HIV and ART exposure may disrupt.
"My research aims to identify some of the altered immune mechanisms within the placentae of HIV-infected women, in comparison with those of HIV-negative mothers, to better understand the immune basis of pre-term births in HIV-positive women."
Chanzu's research will have a direct impact on public health, hopefully providing a foundation to inform alternative therapies and alleviate the risks associated with pregnancy in HIV-infected mothers. She says South Africa, and UCT in particular, is the ideal place for her to continue this research.
"South Africa has developed into a hub of groundbreaking HIV-prevention research with some of the leading global infectious diseases experts residing at the University of Cape Town," she says. "Having the opportunity to undertake the AXA Fellowship at UCT at the Division of Immunology, under the mentorship of Professor Clive Gray and Dr Heather Jaspan, will give me access to cutting-edge technology and expertise that is currently lacking in my home country, Kenya."

Story by Natalie Simon

Todays news, 22 June 2015




Sunday, 24 July 2016

About us: Breakthru Kenya blog


About us: Breakthru Kenya blog
E-mail: seriking15@gmail.com or davidwise111@yahoo.com; Mobile: +2348091143856

INTRODUCTION
Breakthru Kenya blog identifies and showcases new and progressive feats and advancements in Kenya and by Kenyans.
Breakthru Kenya blog promotes and celebrates remarkable and outstanding exploits and achievements by Kenya and her citizens, irrespective of their place of residence.

Home and abroad, Kenyans are accomplishing unimaginable feats that remain unreported and unknown to their country, government and citizens. The country is equally taking positive development steps which her citizens and the world at large are unaware of. Breakthru Kenya, therefore, records these developments and feats by Kenya and Kenyans with the objective of kindling hope in the citizens as well as inspiring confidence in the nation.

It is:
A Hall of fame
A Library of stories
An Award/Honour/Recognition Platform


HONOUR
Kenya, her governments and citizens as well might not have been able to recognise or honour each individual who have distinguished him/herself and made the country proud across the globe, we (Breakthru Kenya,blogspot) thus, unreservedly recognise and appreciate these category of people and their works, ingenuity and dedication and publish their stories.

COVERAGE
Breakthru Kenya covers all walks of life: science, technology, industry, education, sports, fashion, invention, entertainment, engineering, academics, agriculture, health, communications, etc.
Our aim is to stir a sense of hope and patriotism among Kenyans as well as inspire and hasten developments in our land.

A piece of news, in spite of how old it might appear, remains a news material - if you are yet to hear it or you are just hearing it. We, therefore, publish works on this blog not minding the date, as we intend not only to bring to the fore but also to document and also inform about every breakthrough made by Kenyans and Kenya in and outside their country, particularly as gleaned from various media sources or offered by organisations or individuals.

We urge you, therefore, to follow us on this blog and read our posts as well as also recognise such Kenyan (breakthru) men/women and their works by posting your responses or comments as a mark of honour to these heroes and heroines of our country.

CONTRIBUTE ARTICLES
Based on our discretion, we shall also feature articles, research results, technological breakthroughs and more, which are relevant to our vision. We therefore appeal to individuals, groups, organisations all over the world to intimate us of their successes or anyone else’s.

Please, do feel free to contact us as we draw attention to the achievements, awards, honours, recognitions, victories and triumphs of our country and her citizens.
We welcome your ideas, contributions and support.

VISION STATEMENT:
To track and publicise the progress of the nation and her citizens.

MISSION STATEMENT:
To promote, celebrate and inspire citizens and nation(s) towards developments.

CONTACT US
Have a story, news or link for us? Please, contact us:

E-mail: seriking15@gmail.com or davidwise111@yahoo.com

Mobile: +2348091143856

Thank you.


Saturday, 23 July 2016

Senatla shines in a weekend of ups and downs for Blitzboks


Senatla shines in a weekend of ups and downs for Blitzboks

  • ANTOINETTE MULLER
  • 16 MAY 2016 12:09 (SOUTH AFRICA)

The World Series Sevens might be coming to an end, but preparation for Rio is only just beginning. Seabelo Senatla was the shining light for the Blitzboks at the weekend, but against a physical Samoan side, South Africa came up well short. It might be just the wake-up call they need to know what part of their game needs some tinkering as Rio begins to loom ever larger. By ANTOINETTE MULLER.
On a weekend that will probably be considered as the most topsy turvy of this season’s World Series Sevens circuit, Seabelo Senatla stole the show, despite the fact that South Africa crashed out in the quarterfinals of the Paris Sevens.
The Blitzboks had to settle for winning the plate final against Australia, and with just one round of matches remaining – to be played in London next weekend – it seems unlikely that they will catch up front runners Fiji who still sit atop the table despite losing to Samoa in the final in Paris.
It was a weekend full of surprises, with Kenya nearly beating New Zealand in the group stages, Samoa beating South Africa in the quarterfinals and Australia running Fiji close, ending off with an incredible 29-26 win for Samoa over Fiji in the final on Sunday evening.
The Blitzboks were electric on the first two days with Senatla particularly impressive across the tournament. On day one against England, Senatala crossed the whitewash four times, and he added two more against Australia on day two. There are not enough words to praise Senatala’s awareness. Having pace is one thing, but knowing how to exploit every nook and cranny of space when you have the ball in hand takes a truly special kind of player and nobody does it better than Senatla.
He is miles ahead for tries scored this season – with 64 to his name. To put that into context, the US’s Perry Baker is second with 40. Senatla also has more points than any other player – 320 – with Canada’s Nathan Hirayama in second with 295. Senatla has also made 70 clean breaks this season, 22 ahead of Perry Baker's 52.
There is no doubt that Senatla is the heartbeat of this South African team. While Cecil Afrika can sidestep a Ferrari, Senatla can tap around the speed of sound. Even more phenomenal is the fact that he is only 23 years old and already sits in the top 10 (ninth) of most tries ever scored in the World Seven series, having gone over the whitewash 155 times in his career. If he is managed correctly and looked after, there is no doubt that Senatla will go down as one of the most incredible players ever to play the Sevens game.
But with great speed comes great responsibility and on Sunday against Samoa, though, things came undone for the South Africans. When a player is so exceptionally talented, it can become a bit of a habit to be overly reliant on him. The Blitzboks seemed almost overly-reliant on their speedster and followed a far too predictable approach of passing the ball to Senatla as often as possible.
While there is nothing wrong with depending on your in-form player, these fixtures are supposed to be the time when South Africa test out new tricks in the lead-up to the Rio Olympics.
When Senatla is out in space, South Africa are superb, but up against more physical teams like Samoa, they struggle to find a way around. On Sunday, this is exactly where they fell short. In the quarterfinal, as frustration grew, they conceded a number of breakdown penalties and had to settle for a 10-21 loss.
In the plate final against Australia, they rekindled their free-flowing play, clinching a 17-7 win to win the plate final. While the loss against Samoa will sting, especially in terms of what that means for the Blitzboks in this season’s World Series tournament, it is not the worst thing that could have happened.
If there is one thing this team has done well since triumphing in Cape Town last year, it’s improving when they get knocked down. Not many teams South Africa will face take as much of a physical approach as Samoa, but at least now they have been there and done that and will know that their fleet-footed approach will not work against a side constantly out to crush bones. DM
Photo: South Africa's Seabelo Senatla scores a try against Samoa during their men's rugby sevens medal semi-final at the 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow, Scotland, July 27, 2014. REUTERS/Russell Cheyne.
  • ANTOINETTE MULLER

Kenya Law Shines at the ICJ Uwazi Football Tournament


Kenya Law Shines at the ICJ Uwazi Football Tournament

JUNE 3, 2016
Kenya Law scooped the 2nd runners up prize during in the 2016 edition of the Annual International Commission of Jurists (ICJ) ‘Uwazi Cup’ tournament held on 14th May 2016 at the  Safaricom Stadium, Kasarani.
The Uwazi Cup brings together teams from various stakeholders involved in the administration of justice, including the judiciary, law schools, the police, parliament, NGOs and the media.
Kenya Law emerged top in the group stages after beating The Senate, The Centre for Rights, Education and Awareness (CREAW) and Independent Medico-Legal Unit (IMLU) teams. At the quarter final stage, the team beat Safaricom Ltd football team, and sailed through to the semifinals where it was humbled by Ghetto radio football team through a penalty shoot-out.
Finally, at the third and fourth play offs, Kenya Law overpowered the Kenya School of Law team to clinch the second runners up position.
Well done Kenya Law team!

Friday, 22 July 2016

Lagos City Marathon 2016: Kenyan athlete, Abraham Kipton emerges winner


Lagos City Marathon 2016:
Kenyan athlete, Abraham Kipton emerges winner 

 Lagos witnessed local and international athletes unite today, February 6, 2016 for the Lagos City Marathon, hosted by the state government.
Abraham Kipton whos from Kenya emerged as the winner, running 2hrs 16mins, 21seconds.
The winner, Abraham Kator of Kenya crossed the finish line @ 2hrs 16mins & 21secs
 Kenyas Hossei and Ethiopias Debebe Ethosa came in second and third respectively, while Emmanuel Gyang, the first Nigerian to cross the finish line came in 7th place.
 The 20,000 participants started the race from the National Stadium in Surulere, BUT not all partakers could make it up to the finish line Eko Atlantic City in Victoria Island as majority backed out before the 3rd mainland bridge. LOL!
See if theres an athlete stuck in front of your house!
Hassan Sanusi, February 06 2016