I saw this young boy and it really broke my heart 😢💔
During the launch of the Mercy Cheptoo Bimbin Tournament at Kimulot, a large crowd gathered under the tent enjoying the event.
Everyone was eating well..Everyone laughed and enjoyed the lunch. No one cared about the innocent boy sitting over there.
Yet this young boy sat alone in the grass, watching everything from a distance. He made no complaints and no noise at all💔
He was just a child silently observing the world around him. Sometimes the deepest pain stays unspoken. Poverty teaches children to sit quietly and accept what they lack in life ju hakuna otherwise.
The rich always sit together and abandon the poor. Some even watch them willingly but ignore to serve even a single food.
It steals opportunities, confidence, and the simple joy of feeling included among others. Let us be the reason someone smiles and feels part of the moment.
Learn to share with the poor.
Thank You.
🔴🚨BREAKING: CoA says Paying for Land Is Not Enough - Occupation May Matter More Than the Title Deed
Many Kenyans assume that once a land sale agreement collapses, the buyer loses everything and the registered owner automatically keeps the property. The Court of Appeal has now shaken that assumption in Okul v Ondieki [2026]. The dispute revolved around a Nakuru property allegedly sold in 1985. The purchaser paid the agreed consideration, took possession, developed the land, erected rental structures, and remained in occupation for over three decades. Yet the transfer was never completed. Years later, after both the buyer and seller had died, the seller’s family claimed the property as part of the deceased’s estate and argued that no valid transfer had ever occurred.
The Court of Appeal was confronted with a question that keeps many investors, families, and estate administrators awake at night: can a person who never received a title deed still end up owning the land? The answer was a resounding yes. The Court held that where a purchaser enters land pursuant to a sale agreement, openly occupies it, develops it, collects rent, and remains there uninterrupted for the statutory period, that occupation can mature into adverse possession even if the sale transaction itself was never completed. In one of the most consequential statements in the judgment, the Court affirmed that entry into land under an incomplete sale agreement, particularly where the purchaser is not to blame for the failure to complete, can ultimately extinguish the registered owner's rights altogether.
The implication for landowners, investors, succession practitioners, and property developers is profound. A title deed is not always the end of the conversation. If another person occupies your property openly, treats it as their own, develops it, earns income from it, and you fail to assert your rights for years, the law may eventually recognize them rather than you. The decision reinforces a powerful principle in Kenyan property law: ownership is not protected by registration alone; it must also be defended through action. For those dealing with old land transactions, stalled transfers, family estates, or forgotten sale agreements, this judgment is a reminder that time can quietly transfer property just as effectively as a signed transfer form.
Kindly retweet. 🙏
Parenting has no manual. Drunkards have raised priests, holy families have raised drunkards, chiefs have raised thieves, peasant farmers have raised doctors, and rich men have raised beggars. Success is relative, so don't judge other people's children.
@gladyswanga You sent your bloggers to attack ad insult Millie Odhiambo and Nereah Oketch, where you not a woman then?? Using the woman card when it benefits you. Kwanza Orengo should say that again in the machakos rally....
Kenyan researcher Professor George Njoroge wins Sh446 million award alongside UK scientist Professor Robert Bristow, for advancing early detection of oesophageal cancer.
What is life?
• Dostoevsky: It’s hell.
• Socrates: It’s a test.
• Aristotle: It’s the mind.
• Nietzsche: It’s power.
• Freud: It’s death.
• Marx: It’s the idea.
• Picasso: It’s art.
• Gandhi: It’s love.
• Schopenhauer: It’s suffering.
• Bertrand Russell: It’s competition.
• Steve Jobs: It’s faith.
• Einstein: It’s knowledge.
• Stephen Hawking: It’s hope.
• Kafka: It’s just the beginning.
Each one must therefore give life a meaning according to how you one perceive.
We have come too far to sell out this struggle for a token concession. Our demands were collective, and the solution must be collective. #RejectFuelPrices
The continued increase in fuel prices is pushing the cost of living beyond the reach of ordinary Kenyans. Transport, food, and basic commodities are becoming more expensive every day. Leaders must put wananchi first and stop burdening citizens with policies that deepen economic hardship.