What I love most about Arsenal fans is that our fans never go around flaunting Kai’s Champions League trophy, Kepa’s Champions League winner’s medal, or Madueke’s Club World Cup success.
It makes me glad to stand with the Arsenal faithful.
Real criminals are roaming with guns robbing pedestrians and revellers while @DCI_Kenya are busy surveiling on and intimidating innocent Kenyans advocating for a better country. Hii madharau itaisha siku Moja ✊
🚨🇮🇹 BREAKING: Italian authorities just
seized 216 kilograms of drugs from an
Israeli arriving from Tel Aviv in Rome.
He is demanding to be deported to israel.
What exactly is the Government so afraid of?
If the Sh6.95 trillion public debt was incurred lawfully, transparently, and for the benefit of Kenyans, then let the case proceed. Only those with something to hide fear scrutiny.
For years, ordinary Kenyans have been crushed by taxes, soaring living costs, and relentless debt repayments. Yet when the opportunity arises to subject that debt to constitutional scrutiny, the Government rushes to block the process instead of welcoming it.
Transparency should never terrify an honest government. If every shilling is accounted for, prove it in court. If the borrowing complied with the Constitution, demonstrate it before an independent judge. Running from scrutiny only deepens public suspicion.
Kenyans are not debt slaves. They deserve the truth before they are forced to repay another shilling.
Who the fuck do you think you are to tell us who to stan and not? “RETARDED” but you chose to pick the side of a serial loser. 32 years old with no league title, no European trophy, and the only international trophy he won was because of Ronaldo. GTFOH 😹😹😹🤡
Leandro Trossard leaves #Arsenal as a Premier League champion, with his stock amongst the fan base at its highest ever point. He scored one of the biggest goals in our history, and will be remembered as cult hero. Besiktas are getting a phenomenal player; he’s got more in him.
We are seeing too many school riots, and the fire at Jomo Kenyatta Boys High School in Bahati, Nakuru is the latest, terrifying warning that we are failing to listen to what is happening in our learning spaces.
This is not just about one school, it is part of a disturbing pattern of unrest, arson and violent protests in institutions that should be nurturing our children, not endangering them. When police and firefighters are overwhelmed by a blaze inside a school compound, it means we have allowed tensions, breakdowns in discipline and unresolved grievances to reach a dangerous boiling point.
As a country, we must stop treating these incidents as isolated drama and start confronting them as a systemic crisis. We need honest conversations about student welfare, mental health, school governance and the pressures our young people are facing, alongside firm but fair discipline and clear consequences for violence and destruction.
I call on the @EduMinKenya, school boards, parents and student leaders to treat the wave of school riots as an urgent national concern. Secure every learner, investigate each incident thoroughly and implement concrete safeguards and dialogue mechanisms so that schools remain places of safety, learning and hope, not recurring scenes of fire, fear and chaos.
What are they afraid of? If the borrowing was lawful, transparent, and every shilling can be accounted for, then a public hearing should not be feared.
Kenyans should not be compelled to shoulder debts that are found to have been incurred unlawfully or misappropriated. Those who authorized illegal borrowing or stole public funds should be held personally accountable. The burden of corruption must not be transferred to ordinary citizens who never benefited from it.
Accountability is not a threat to government, it is the foundation of constitutional governance.