Man shot dead in street ... and other cautionary tales from Kenya
If there were any questions about the potential danger that awaited them during their week in Nairobi, they were no doubt answered when a man was gunned down outside the Nairobi Hilton where the players were staying.
Some of those in the Island squad heard shots fired and then witnessed the body as police hurriedly cordoned off the area.
GENERALLY, however, Kenyans have been wonderfully hospitable, both in the hotels and at the cricket clubs.
But don’t mention that to New Zealand umpire Tony Hill.
The Kiwi arrived for Sunday’s second one-day international feeling a little queasy and by the sixth over was decidedly off colour.
Communicating with match referee Chris Broad by radio, Hill mentioned that he didn’t think he could continue before abrubtly vomiting over the pitch.
Helped off the ground by players and his fellow umpire Buddhi Pradhan, Hill was taken back to his hotel to be replaced for the rest of the match by a local official.
SO Ewart Brown thinks we’ve got traffic problems in Bermuda. He should spend a day on Mombasa’s pot-holed highways.
Buses, taxis and private cars all weave from one side of the road to the other at breakneck speed, attempting to avoid gaping holes in the tarmac, made worse by the recent rain.
Courtesy on the road? Forget it.
At night, everybody drives with their headlights on full beam, regardless of oncoming traffic, and those unfortunate to break down aren’t likely to get much sympathy.
Stranded vehicles on the roadside are regularly stripped of their wing mirrors and hub caps within minutes.