Power fades. Titles pause. But a mother’s love remains.
Today!, Alex Kosgei - son of former Minister Henry Kosgei - stood in a rare, pensive silence as his mother’s body was airlifted home to Nandi.
In that moment, the politician stepped aside and the son took over. The weight in his eyes, the quiet stance, said what words could not: _This loss is huge._
May the Kosgei family find strength in the legacy she leaves behind.
A mother’s love shapes nations through her children. Rest in peace, Mama.
Pole sana to the entire Kosgei family.
WELCOME TO ELDORET, THE CITY OF OPPORTUNITIES!
Landspot Properties celebrates the incredible growth of Eldoret’s retail scene.
Congratulations to:
✅ *Serani Mall, Elgon View* - Now open & hosting Kipchimatt Supermarket
✅ *Simba Mall* - Final stages + new Carrefour coming soon
✅ *Rupa’s Mall* - New major China Square now open
To these retail chains and many more choosing Eldoret: Karibuni sana!
Your investment is transforming our city, creating jobs, and making Eldoret the ultimate business + lifestyle hub in the North Rift.
As Eldoret grows, so do land & investment opportunities.
*Landspot Properties is here to help you own a piece of this booming city.* Prime plots, commercial land, flexible payments.
Eldoret, we’re proud to call you home. Thank you for the growth!
#LandspotProperties
📞0720831876
📧[email protected]
#EldoretRising #InvestInEldoret #SeraniMall #SimbaMall #RupasMall #EldoretBusiness
*LANDSPOT PROPERTIES × BTEXPO 🔥*
Catch us at Bizlink Trade Expo
📅 June 25-27 | Eldoret Sports Club
Among 100+ businesses incl real estate, wellness & innovators
Your land experts. Booth ready!
Free entry for buyers
#BTEXPO #LandspotAtExpo #EldoretLand.
In[email protected]
Why I Moved All My Land Updates to Landspotproperties FB Page.
For the last few years, many of you have followed me here for property insights, land deals, and real estate tips. I’m grateful for the trust you’ve placed in me.
Today I want to invite you to something bigger: Landspotproperties!
Landspotproperties is more than just a page. It’s a space I’ve created for anyone serious about land and investment in Kenya. Whether you’re buying your first 50x100 in Eldoret, or western Kenya, looking for acreage for farming, or simply trying to understand how to avoid fake titles and land scams, Landspot will be your home for verified, practical, and honest information.
Here’s what you’ll get when you follow Landspot:
1. *Verified Listings*:
Only real plots with clean titles. No “air plots” or stories.
2. *Land Buying Education*:
I’ll break down complicated processes like transfers, leases for foreigners, title searches, and Land Control Board consents into simple steps.
3. *Off-Market Deals*:
Some of the best land never reaches public ads. My followers on Landspot will see them first.
4. *Market Updates*:
Land prices in Eldoret, Uasin Gishu, and beyond change fast. I’ll keep you informed so you don’t overpay.
My goal is simple: to help you make land decisions with confidence. Land is still one of the safest investments we have, but only when done right. The wrong plot can cost you years. The right one can secure your family’s future.
So I’m asking for 3 seconds of your time today. Tap the link below and follow Landspot. Bring a friend, a sibling, or anyone planning to buy land in the next 12 months.
👉 Follow Landspotproperties Page
On President Ruto’s Foreign Trips:
The presidency is not a 9-to-5 office job. When the President travels, he represents 55M Kenyans on the global stage.
Trade deals, investment, security partnerships, and Kenya’s voice at UN/AU don’t come to State House. The President has to go where decisions are made.
That’s why chartered jets and state visits happen - because the office demands it. It’s constitutional duty, not leisure.
Claims of “rebellion anywhere" don’t reflect the full picture. Dissent exists in every democracy, and right now it’s concentrated in a few political pockets, mainly parts of Mt Kenya. But across most counties, Kenyans are still engaging government through dialogue, not rebellion.
Presidency means representing the country day and night, office or traveling. That’s the job description for the holder of the highest office.
#Kenya #WilliamRuto #Leadership
SC Havi, seats matter but delays kill justice more.
Ask CJ Koome, why are civil cases dying at “summons for confirmation” for years with endless adjournments?
Ask Kenyans to share stuck case numbers. The truth will shock you.
Kenyans need determinations, not just seats.
#CourtDelaysKE
With respect CNSL Havi,
The discussion Kenyans need is bigger than seats in courtrooms.
Ask CJ Martha Koome and the Judiciary this: Why are thousands of civil cases stuck at “summons for confirmation of documents” stage for 3, 4, even 10 years? With 20+ adjournments for the same mention?
Courtrooms can have wooden benches. But when a widow waits 8 years just to have her land case mentioned, that’s justice denied.
CNSL Havi, use your huge platform. Ask Kenyans to comment with their case numbers stuck at summons/confirmation stage. You will be shocked by the numbers and stories.
Who need fancy seats. We need cases heard and determined. Access to justice = timely justice.
#JusticeDelayedIsJusticeDenied #CourtDelaysKE
On President Ruto’s Foreign Trips:
The presidency is not a 9-to-5 office job. When the President travels, he represents 55M Kenyans on the global stage.
Trade deals, investment, security partnerships, and Kenya’s voice at UN/AU don’t come to State House. The President has to go where decisions are made.
That’s why chartered jets and state visits happen - because the office demands it. It’s constitutional duty, not leisure.
Claims of “rebellion anywhere" don’t reflect the full picture. Dissent exists in every democracy, and right now it’s concentrated in a few political pockets, mainly parts of Mt Kenya. But across most counties, Kenyans are still engaging government through dialogue, not rebellion.
Presidency means representing the country day and night, office or traveling. That’s the job description for the holder of the highest office.
#Kenya #WilliamRuto #Leadership
On President Ruto’s Foreign Trips:
The presidency is not a 9-to-5 office job. When the President travels, he represents 55M Kenyans on the global stage.
Trade deals, investment, security partnerships, and Kenya’s voice at UN/AU don’t come to State House. The President has to go where decisions are made.
That’s why chartered jets and state visits happen - because the office demands it. It’s constitutional duty, not leisure.
Claims of “rebellion anywhere" don’t reflect the full picture. Dissent exists in every democracy, and right now it’s concentrated in a few political pockets, mainly parts of Mt Kenya. But across most counties, Kenyans are still engaging government through dialogue, not rebellion.
Presidency means representing the country day and night, office or traveling. That’s the job description for the holder of the highest office.
#Kenya #WilliamRuto #Leadership
On President Ruto’s Foreign Trips:
The presidency is not a 9-to-5 office job. When the President travels, he represents 55M Kenyans on the global stage.
Trade deals, investment, security partnerships, and Kenya’s voice at UN/AU don’t come to State House. The President has to go where decisions are made.
That’s why chartered jets and state visits happen - because the office demands it. It’s constitutional duty, not leisure.
Claims of “rebellion anywhere" don’t reflect the full picture. Dissent exists in every democracy, and right now it’s concentrated in a few political pockets, mainly parts of Mt Kenya. But across most counties, Kenyans are still engaging government through dialogue, not rebellion.
Presidency means representing the country day and night, office or traveling. That’s the job description for the holder of the highest office.
#Kenya #WilliamRuto #Leadership
On President Ruto’s Foreign Trips:
The presidency is not a 9-to-5 office job. When the President travels, he represents 55M Kenyans on the global stage.
Trade deals, investment, security partnerships, and Kenya’s voice at UN/AU don’t come to State House. The President has to go where decisions are made.
That’s why chartered jets and state visits happen - because the office demands it. It’s constitutional duty, not leisure.
Claims of “rebellion anywhere" don’t reflect the full picture. Dissent exists in every democracy, and right now it’s concentrated in a few political pockets, mainly parts of Mt Kenya. But across most counties, Kenyans are still engaging government through dialogue, not rebellion.
Presidency means representing the country day and night, office or traveling. That’s the job description for the holder of the highest office.
#Kenya #WilliamRuto #Leadership
LAND WANTED TO LEASE | UASIN GISHU*
*Client Requirement from LandSpot Properties*
Our client is urgently seeking to *LEASE 5 ACRES* of farmland in *Uasin Gishu County* for *5 YEARS*.
*Requirements:*
1. *Size*: 5 acres, flat or gently sloping
2. *Location*: Uasin Gishu County - _Medium to warm areas only. Low/cold temperature zones will not be considered_
3. *Use*: Commercial farming
4. *Lease term*: 5 years, renewable
5. *Access*: Good road access + water available is an advantage
6. *Documents*: Must have clear title/lease agreement
*Note*: LandSpot Properties will facilitate all due diligence, lease agreements + NDA for owner protection.
If you have land that matches OR you know someone with land to lease, please contact us immediately.
*LandSpot Properties – Eldoret*
Call/WhatsApp: 📞 ±254720831876
Email: [email protected]
“Connecting land owners with serious investors”
#LandWanted #UasinGishu #FarmLease #LandSpotProperties #Eldoret
Condolence Message from LandSpot Properties – Eldoret Office
To: Mzee George Kili and Family
Eldoret, Kenya
On behalf of LandSpot Properties and the entire LandSpot Team Eldoret Office, we extend our deepest condolences to you and your family following the untimely passing of your daughter, the late June Chebet.
We share in your grief during this painful time. Mzee Kili, your contribution to farming and community in Eldoret is well known, and it is our prayer that God grants you divine strength, comfort, and peace as you mourn.
May the Lord, who is near to the brokenhearted, uphold you, your family, and all who loved June. May her soul rest in eternal peace, and may her memory be a blessing to all who knew her.
Please accept our heartfelt sympathy. We stand with you in prayer and solidarity.
Sincerely,
Management & Staff
LandSpot Properties – Eldoret Office
5th May 2026
This week LandSpot Properties closed a KES 100M+ land transaction in Pioneer, Eldoret.
Not because we couldn’t agree on price.
But because the buyer refused to sign a Non-Disclosure Agreement before accessing sensitive owner documents.
At LandSpot, that’s non-negotiable.
Why?
1. Title deeds + owner IDs are prime targets for fraud in Kenya today
2. Our mandate is to protect the owner’s privacy and asset first
3. Professional buyers understand: NDA + Proof-of-Funds = standard due diligence
We held the property for 3 days. No signature, no docs, no deal.
We’d rather lose a sale than compromise a client’s security.
Because at LandSpot, our clients come first. That’s the policy. That’s the standard.
To investors: This is how your agent should protect you too.
#RealEstateKenya #EldoretCBD #LandDueDiligence #LandSpotProperties
*Justice for Sheila Jepkorir Chebii – Kenyans Demand Answers*
The death of Sheila Jepkorir Chebii, a 25-year-old Kenyan from Eldoret, has left a family, a community, and a nation in grief and unanswered questions.
Sheila traveled to Australia just one month ago to pursue her studies — full of hope, ambition, and the dreams that so many Kenyan youth carry when they go abroad. According to a police report shared with her family, she fell while on shift working at a hotel in Sydney. She died far from home, under circumstances her loved ones still do not fully understand.
Her story is not just Sheila’s story. It is the story of every Kenyan student, worker, and dreamer who leaves home seeking a better future. When one of us dies abroad in unclear circumstances, we all feel the pain and the responsibility to ask: what really happened?
*A Call to Peaceful Action*
Friends of Sheila and her family are asking all Kenyans — friends, students, professionals, and concerned citizens — to stand with them today in Nairobi.
*Venue*: The Bomb Blast Memorial Site, formerly the American Embassy, Nairobi
*Date*: 5th,June 2026.
*Time*: 11:00 AM
*Purpose*: A peaceful demonstration to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs office
We are marching peacefully to seek the support of the Kenya High Commission in Australia and the State Department for Diaspora Affairs. We ask them to urgently liaise with Australian authorities for:
1. *Full disclosure* of the circumstances surrounding Sheila’s death
2. *Transparent investigation* and regular updates to the family
3. *Justice and accountability* if any negligence or foul play is found
This is not a protest of anger. It is a demonstration of unity, dignity, and the value we place on every Kenyan life — at home or abroad.
*Why Your Presence Matters*
Sheila was a daughter, a friend, a student. Today it is Sheila. Tomorrow it could be any Kenyan child chasing dreams overseas. By showing up, we tell the government that diaspora Kenyans matter. We tell families that they will not grieve alone. We tell the world that Kenya demands answers when one of its own dies in mystery.
Friends of Sheila and the family are requesting your support. Come in peace. Come with dignity. Come for Sheila Jepkorir Chebii.
_“A nation that protects its people, even in death, is a nation that honors its future.”_
#JusticeForSheilaChebii 🇰🇪
This kind of thinking from the impeached Deputy President is childish and beneath the office he once held.
Ebola is a global health threat, not a political weapon. Quarantine centers exist to protect all Kenyans — including Mt Kenya — from outbreaks. Turning public health into tribal conspiracy talk only spreads fear, not solutions.
Leaders should inform and unite people, especially on health matters. Kenyans deserve facts, not cheap, divisive theatrics.
President William Samoei Ruto: The True Leader Kenya Waited 60 Years For.
Today, as Kenya marks 63 years of Madaraka, one name stands out in the story of our nation’s progress: President William Samoei Ruto. If there is one leader who embodies the spirit of self-governance and nation-building that Madaraka represents, it is him.
*A Unifier in a Divided Nation*
Kenya’s history has been tested by ethnic and political divisions. President Ruto came in with a clear mission: to unite Kenyans beyond tribe, region, and political camp. His message of “bottom-up economics” and “hustler nation” spoke directly to every Kenyan, from the boda boda rider in Kapseret to the farmer in Rift Valley and the trader in Gikomba. Under his leadership, the idea that every Kenyan matters regardless of background has moved from slogan to policy.
*Economic Prosperity and Farsighted Leadership*
The hard times of debt, global inflation, and post-pandemic recovery would break many leaders. President Ruto managed these challenges with steady hands and long-term vision. He set the bar high by prioritizing agriculture, affordable housing, digital jobs, and manufacturing. These are not quick political wins. They are foundations for the next 50 years. His farsighted leadership is visible in projects aimed at lowering food costs, creating jobs for youth, and making Kenya an investment hub. He thinks in decades, not election cycles.
*Development Everywhere*
From roads, markets, and hospitals to classrooms and housing, development under President Ruto is not confined to one region. “Development everywhere” is the reality Kenyans see daily. The focus on universal health coverage, last-mile electricity, and water projects shows a president who measures success by how the ordinary mwananchi lives, not by headlines.
*Setting the Bar for Future Leaders*
Madaraka is about Kenyans taking charge of their destiny. President Ruto has managed the hardest season of Kenya’s economy and still delivered on hope. In doing so, he has set the bar too high for coming leaders. The standard is now clear: a president must unite, deliver development, and think beyond himself. For 60 years Kenya waited for a leader with this combination of grit, vision, and connection to the people. In President William Samoei Ruto, that wait is over.
As we celebrate 63 years of freedom today, we celebrate a leader who is turning that freedom into prosperity, dignity, and opportunity for all Kenyans.
*Happy Madaraka Day. Kenya is in safe hands.*
*Many Kenyans Have No Problem With a Protected, Isolated Ebola Facility*
Kenya’s history is full of crises that tested our unity, from disease outbreaks to natural disasters. When the discussion turns to building a protected, isolated Ebola treatment facility, the reaction from many Kenyans is clear: we have no problem with it. In fact, most see it as a necessary, responsible step for national security and public health.
First, Kenyans understand the meaning of isolation in disease control. We lived through COVID-19. We learned that keeping infectious patients in designated, secure centers protects families, hospitals, and entire communities. An Ebola facility that is properly isolated, with strict biosafety protocols, is not a threat to its neighbors. It is a shield for them. Many Kenyans reason that a facility built away from dense residential areas, with its own waste management, power, and security, reduces risk to zero. The problem is not the facility. The problem is Ebola itself, and we want it contained far from our homes.
Second, this is about preparedness, not panic. Many Kenyans work in transport, trade, and aviation. Jomo Kenyatta International Airport and Moi International Airport connect us to West Africa and the world. If an Ebola case arrives in Kenya, we cannot rely on makeshift wards in general hospitals. That risks doctors, nurses, and other patients. A dedicated, protected facility means our health workers have the right equipment, training, and isolation rooms from day one. Kenyans respect that kind of planning. We would rather the government builds it now and never uses it, than need it tomorrow and have nowhere to take patients.
Third, there is trust in security and science when things are done transparently. When Kenyans are told “this facility will be fenced, guarded, with no-go zones, incinerators for waste, and international WHO standards,” the fear disappears. What remains is pride that Kenya can handle regional health threats. Many see it as Kenya taking its place as a hub for East Africa. Uganda, Rwanda, and South Sudan also benefit when Kenya has capacity to isolate and treat high-risk pathogens. That is leadership, and Kenyans support leadership that protects all of us.
Critics often speak loudest, but they do not represent the majority view on the ground. In estates, in matatus, in marketplaces, the conversation is practical: “As long as it is far, fenced, and follows the rules, let them build it.” Kenyans are not anti-science. We are pro-safety. A protected, isolated Ebola facility fits that value.
Madaraka means self-governance. Part of governing ourselves is making hard decisions to protect the next generation. Building a secure Ebola facility is one of those decisions. Many Kenyans are ready for it, because we know that true freedom includes freedom from fear of preventable disease outbreaks.
The message to government and health planners is simple: Engage the community, show the plans, meet the safety standards, and build. Many Kenyans will stand with you.
*Many Kenyans Have No Problem With a Protected, Isolated Ebola Facility*
Kenya’s history is full of crises that tested our unity, from disease outbreaks to natural disasters. When the discussion turns to building a protected, isolated Ebola treatment facility, the reaction from many Kenyans is clear: we have no problem with it. In fact, most see it as a necessary, responsible step for national security and public health.
First, Kenyans understand the meaning of isolation in disease control. We lived through COVID-19. We learned that keeping infectious patients in designated, secure centers protects families, hospitals, and entire communities. An Ebola facility that is properly isolated, with strict biosafety protocols, is not a threat to its neighbors. It is a shield for them. Many Kenyans reason that a facility built away from dense residential areas, with its own waste management, power, and security, reduces risk to zero. The problem is not the facility. The problem is Ebola itself, and we want it contained far from our homes.
Second, this is about preparedness, not panic. Many Kenyans work in transport, trade, and aviation. Jomo Kenyatta International Airport and Moi International Airport connect us to West Africa and the world. If an Ebola case arrives in Kenya, we cannot rely on makeshift wards in general hospitals. That risks doctors, nurses, and other patients. A dedicated, protected facility means our health workers have the right equipment, training, and isolation rooms from day one. Kenyans respect that kind of planning. We would rather the government builds it now and never uses it, than need it tomorrow and have nowhere to take patients.
Third, there is trust in security and science when things are done transparently. When Kenyans are told “this facility will be fenced, guarded, with no-go zones, incinerators for waste, and international WHO standards,” the fear disappears. What remains is pride that Kenya can handle regional health threats. Many see it as Kenya taking its place as a hub for East Africa. Uganda, Rwanda, and South Sudan also benefit when Kenya has capacity to isolate and treat high-risk pathogens. That is leadership, and Kenyans support leadership that protects all of us.
Critics often speak loudest, but they do not represent the majority view on the ground. In estates, in matatus, in marketplaces, the conversation is practical: “As long as it is far, fenced, and follows the rules, let them build it.” Kenyans are not anti-science. We are pro-safety. A protected, isolated Ebola facility fits that value.
Madaraka means self-governance. Part of governing ourselves is making hard decisions to protect the next generation. Building a secure Ebola facility is one of those decisions. Many Kenyans are ready for it, because we know that true freedom includes freedom from fear of preventable disease outbreaks.
The message to government and health planners is simple: Engage the community, show the plans, meet the safety standards, and build. Many Kenyans will stand with you.
*Many Kenyans Have No Problem With a Protected, Isolated Ebola Facility*
Kenya’s history is full of crises that tested our unity, from disease outbreaks to natural disasters. When the discussion turns to building a protected, isolated Ebola treatment facility, the reaction from many Kenyans is clear: we have no problem with it. In fact, most see it as a necessary, responsible step for national security and public health.
First, Kenyans understand the meaning of isolation in disease control. We lived through COVID-19. We learned that keeping infectious patients in designated, secure centers protects families, hospitals, and entire communities. An Ebola facility that is properly isolated, with strict biosafety protocols, is not a threat to its neighbors. It is a shield for them. Many Kenyans reason that a facility built away from dense residential areas, with its own waste management, power, and security, reduces risk to zero. The problem is not the facility. The problem is Ebola itself, and we want it contained far from our homes.
Second, this is about preparedness, not panic. Many Kenyans work in transport, trade, and aviation. Jomo Kenyatta International Airport and Moi International Airport connect us to West Africa and the world. If an Ebola case arrives in Kenya, we cannot rely on makeshift wards in general hospitals. That risks doctors, nurses, and other patients. A dedicated, protected facility means our health workers have the right equipment, training, and isolation rooms from day one. Kenyans respect that kind of planning. We would rather the government builds it now and never uses it, than need it tomorrow and have nowhere to take patients.
Third, there is trust in security and science when things are done transparently. When Kenyans are told “this facility will be fenced, guarded, with no-go zones, incinerators for waste, and international WHO standards,” the fear disappears. What remains is pride that Kenya can handle regional health threats. Many see it as Kenya taking its place as a hub for East Africa. Uganda, Rwanda, and South Sudan also benefit when Kenya has capacity to isolate and treat high-risk pathogens. That is leadership, and Kenyans support leadership that protects all of us.
Critics often speak loudest, but they do not represent the majority view on the ground. In estates, in matatus, in marketplaces, the conversation is practical: “As long as it is far, fenced, and follows the rules, let them build it.” Kenyans are not anti-science. We are pro-safety. A protected, isolated Ebola facility fits that value.
Madaraka means self-governance. Part of governing ourselves is making hard decisions to protect the next generation. Building a secure Ebola facility is one of those decisions. Many Kenyans are ready for it, because we know that true freedom includes freedom from fear of preventable disease outbreaks.
The message to government and health planners is simple: Engage the community, show the plans, meet the safety standards, and build. Many Kenyans will stand with you.