UPDATE: The Pattern Behind Kenya's Manufactured Unrest
Information I’ve received points to a disturbing but familiar pattern of organised political goonism, ethnic profiling and manufactured chaos aimed at destabilising the country ahead of 2027. The pattern stretches from the matatu strike to planned chaos in parts of Mount Kenya, inflammatory remarks meant to provoke ethnic anger, the All Saints Cathedral attack and the recent Kuresoi violence. Taken together, these events raise serious questions about a wider operation by people seeking power by hook or crook, using communities as raw material for their ambitions. I call on patriotic citizens to come forward with information about planned mayhem, ethnic mobilisation, hired goons, suspicious meetings, payments and instructions meant to destabilise Kenya.
During the matatu strike, my sources say a plan was set in motion to create chaos in Murang'a, Nyeri and Kirinyaga, then blame the Kikuyu community, while deliberately sparing Meru, Tharaka Nithi and Embu. The alleged goal was to divide Mount Kenya East and West and manufacture political animosity. First the chaos is organised, then the blame is ethnicised, then the same people who lit the fire pretend to be shocked by the smoke.
The strike was allegedly organised by three political leaders, with about 40 kamageras selected to implement parts of the operation and seven Mount Kenya leaders acting as back-stoppers. My sources name Muge, Farouk and Sudi as ring leaders, with Muge described as a key planner, and allege the involvement of senior civil servants, including figures in the OP and Interior ministry, and senior security officials. These are extremely serious claims that must be investigated urgently.
My sources further alleged the same group scripted Hassan Omar's remarks at Kericho Tea Hotel, not as genuine historical debate but to provoke anger and shift political heat onto one community, 40 vs 1, and that he was paid for it. Sudi's remarks about Kenyatta and land were allegedly part of the same messaging.
The Cathedral attack fits this pattern: when goons can storm a civic forum in broad daylight, the intention goes beyond disrupting one meeting, they are sending a message. Kuresoi exposes the same disease. Political actors increasingly use gangs as instruments of power while hiding behind community narratives, money and possible state protection. For them it is business; for ordinary Kenyans it can become displacement, death and national trauma.
The Catholic Church, the Kikuyu Council of Elders and NCCK have already warned against ethnic profiling and political goonism. The CS Interior, NCIC, DCI, NIS and Parliament must stop this before rumours become mobs and mobs become national wounds. The President must answer a simple question: how will he act if those being named are his close allies and public servants? Public office cannot become a theatre where people plan disorder in the morning, deny it in the afternoon and pose as peacemakers by evening.
To all Kenyans: your security begins with you. If you know of goons being recruited, money distributed, transport arranged, statements scripted or violence planned, speak up: to trusted people, credible media, religious leaders, civil society and responsible security officers. Kenya must not be sacrificed at the expense of a few greedy mfs.
My dad died when I was 16. We were really close. He passed suddenly and there were things I never got to say. Years later, I had a daughter. When she was 5, we were driving home at night and passed the road where my dad had his accident. I never told her anything about it.
As we stopped at the light, she got really quiet and looked out the window. Then she said, “You cried harder than Mom.”
I laughed nervously and asked what she meant. She kept looking outside and said, “At the hospital. You were sitting on the floor because you thought if you stood up it would make it real.”
I pulled over. I asked her who told her that.
She looked confused and said, “You were there.”
I asked her what she was talking about.
She looked at me for a second and smiled like I was the one being weird. Then she said:
“When I was your dad.”
I didn’t say anything the rest of the drive.
When we got home, she ran inside like normal. But before she closed the door she turned around and said
“And I’m sorry I left without saying goodbye.”
She never said anything like that again.
This is how you protest. Not with cutest signs, not with cringey chants. Not with stupid hats. You roll up your sleeves and fuck some shit up.
I never thought in 2026, that i’d be rooting for Albania and Iran. But here we are.
There is a video I have seen of her telling the Step father he looks good with the haircut,then something about a family movie being live,nataka mtafute hiyo video you make your own judgement aki.
I cannot unsee it.
Landlord akikataa na rent kama kawaida.
1. Kalia deposit
2. Koroga simiti na mchanga mwaga kwa choo na uhame
3. Unahama na CIU token feeder.
4. Kunia kwa sink
5. Koroga simiti na mchanga Pure mwaga kwa choo na sink
6. Nunua padlock tatu mpia, funga milango zote
7. Enda print poster unauza kuku kienyeji 650 alafu weka number yake enda pale kwa footbridge ya ruiru post hapo Fine ni 50,000 kwa Kenha.sitawafunza kila kitu.
8. Enda polisi
9. Zima stima kwa main switch, connect stima yote from all sockets an switch live to neutral na uwache awashe mwenyewe.
10. Tumia akili wachana na deposit ya elfu kumi enda zako.
All of the above ni tabia mbaya sana, you won't gain anything