GMoi,your STANDARD media’s 5 days a week EXTORTIONIST propaganda HEADLINES on me & my administration’s transformative track record will get you NOTHING & NOWHERE.BLACKMAIL to yield to your GREED? NEVER.Kenya belongs to all Kenyans,not you alone.Jaribu 8 days a week. Do your WORST
County officials made 98 trips to Tanzania and Dubai in nine months, spending Sh380 million.
The Controller of Budget report shows counties spent Sh1.76 billion on foreign trips as key services continue to face challenges.
Good morning National failures @ntsa_kenya and to your hard working, honest colleagues at @047County
I’ve put together sixteen pictures for you to kindly explain a few things to the public.
Have we officially agreed that roundabouts, junctions and pedestrian walkways are now designated matatu, tuk-tuk and boda boda stages? Places like ABC roundabout and the Redhill turn-off seem to have completed the transition. The food carts and stalls are apparently part of the road design too.
I clearly remember CS7 making a pronouncement after the Londiani tragedy that such roadside operations should stop, but perhaps I misunderstood and it was merely small talk and nothing serious, ile mambo ya PR. On the boda bodas dangerously crossing the Redhill Bypass and other major roads, I assume the official procedure remains the same. If a rider is hit while breaking every traffic rule imaginable, the motorist should prepare accordingly. If it’s a lady driver, she should expect harassment and her vehicle torched. If it’s a male driver, he should expect a thorough beating before his vehicle is torched. Road rules are optional, but mob justice remains mandatory.
Oh yes and since zebra crossings are reserved for boda bodas while pedestrian walkways belong to matatus, pedestrians who get knocked down while walking on the road should naturally be blamed. Clearly they are washambas who do not understand how a modern city operates and should be sent back to the village for retraining.
We have not even reached the small matter of the roadworthiness of some of these matatus, but one national crisis at a time.
Just trying to understand the laws here.
#ReclaimNairobi
1/4
Trump: I was in New York, and I met a great police officer in New York. He said, “Sir, I want to thank you.”
I said, “For what?”
He said, “My wife didn’t think very much of me. We were having marital difficulties, actually. She thought I was nothing. I’m a police officer. I’m a tough guy.”
I looked at him—the muscles were all over the place. He didn’t suffer from that, but she thought maybe that muscle wasn’t so good because he was always losing money in the stock market.
And he said, “Sir, in the last year and a half, my 401(k) is up 74%, sir, and she thinks I’m Warren Buffett. She thinks I’m a super genius.”
I said, “How are you getting along with her?”
He said, “Well, I’m not so sure I like her anymore.”
This is quite a fundamental difference between him and Lionel Messi.
Messi didn’t even post about breaking the record yesterday.
And immediately after winning a huge game Ronaldo is shouting about himself.
They say you can choose your friends, but you cannot choose your family. Likewise, I wish to stand with my brother @MuriraKinoti and his able team @KURAroads for trying their very best. He is leading the march to Singapore.
My brother, let nobody call you out for mediocrity or shoddy work. Let nobody say you are incompetent or clueless. I know your heart is in the right place.
These eight or so pictures mean absolutely nothing. Nairobi is almost looking first-world, bro. Take it easy, enjoy the World Cup matches this evening, and don’t let a few potholes, crumbling roads, poor workmanship, and daily inconveniences distract you from the progress.
#ReclaimNairobi
Kidero brought this mess to an end. I remember it so well.
We are back to the shit-on-your-hands/face days.
We are so done.
The police are sleeping.
The county officials are literally absent.
https://t.co/o9RZvMOY7P
We seem to have stopped talking about billboards. Soon all this city will be is an ugly concrete jungle filled with ugly, unplanned buildings, billboards, cabro paving and, sadly, garbage.
Here is a collection of almost 30 photographs from Westlands, Parklands, Spring Valley, Lower Kabete and Redhill that tell the story of the gradual regression of our city.
What makes it even worse is that the billboard disease is now destroying the beautiful green Redhill Bypass. Trees are being cut down in the name of advertising, while one of the few scenic stretches left in Nairobi slowly turns into a cluttered visual mess. At some point we need to start calling out the companies behind this. Every space does not need to be turned into an advert. They haven’t even spared Parklands Police Station where a billboard has been erected within the compound.
What an eyesore. What a sad way to destroy a city.
#ReclaimNairobi
1/7
CS Aden Duale: I would be the last person to disregard or violate a court order. I sincerely regret any action, omission, misunderstanding, or misinterpretation that may have resulted in non-compliance or created the perception thereof
The Pharmacy and Poisons Board (PPB) has intensified its crackdown on illegal pharmaceutical operations, arresting 95 individuals and closing 48 unlicensed medicine outlets during a week-long surveillance exercise in Nairobi and Kajiado counties.
The operation, which concluded on 19 June 2026, involved inspections of 155 pharmaceutical premises in areas including Kibra, Korogocho, Eastleigh, Dandora, Mathare, Embakasi, Nairobi West and Rongai.
According to PPB Head of Good Distribution Practices and Enforcement Julius Kaluai, the inspections revealed widespread non-compliance with pharmaceutical regulations, resulting in arrests and prosecutions.
“Out of the 155 premises inspected, 95 were found to be operating illegally and the individuals responsible were arrested. The suspects have since been presented before courts in Kajiado, Kibra and Makadara, and we are awaiting the outcome of the cases,” said Kaluai.
The Board also ordered the closure of 48 premises found to be operating without valid licences. PPB has engaged county governments, county security teams and the National Police Service to ensure the affected outlets remain closed.
“The premises have been marked and closure notices issued. We have also written to county security commanders, county governments and the National Police Service to ensure the facilities do not resume operations,” he added.
During the exercise, PPB officers confiscated approximately 169 cartons of medicines from the illegal outlets. The seized products are being held pending court directions on their disposal.
Kaluai warned that operating pharmaceutical premises without the required licences not only violates the law but also puts public health at risk. He urged medicine providers to comply with regulatory requirements, noting that offenders risk prosecution and other regulatory action, including loss of licences.
He also called on members of the public to purchase medicines only from registered and licensed pharmacies and chemists.
“Licensed premises are required by law to display their licences prominently where clients can easily see them. Members of the public should always verify these licences before seeking services or purchasing medicines,” he said.
PPB continues to strengthen surveillance, enforcement and public awareness efforts to protect Kenyans from unsafe, unregulated and illegal pharmaceutical practices and to ensure medicines available in the market meet the required standards of safety, quality and efficacy.