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“The government that has killed Kenyan youth cannot simply claim it wants to compensate them without justice,” said former Chief Justice David Maraga.
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Condolences are pouring in for the family of 35-year-old labour lawyer Chinette Gallichan, who was gunned down by unknown assailants in Joburg's CBD yesterday. https://t.co/x5w4lzwqaN
Sitting Presidents must be prevented from signing contracts that stretch beyond their time in office and should be answerable for messes they create during their tenure even when they leave office.
BREAKING: WILLIAM RUTO ABDUCTS AND MURDERS AUTHOR MOSES ATSULU LINKED TO SLAIN BLOGGER ALBERT OJWANG
In the shadow of Kenya’s escalating war on dissent, a young author, Moses Atsulu, has vanished without a trace, his disappearance cloaked in a chilling veil of mystery and menace.
His crime? Daring to publish a novel - a work of fiction that cuts too close to the bone, vividly recounting the murder of blogger Albert Ojwang, with the Deputy Inspector General’s fatal directive at its heart.
The book has become a lightning rod, drawing ominous threats demanding its immediate removal. Atsulu’s fate, like that of so many others, hangs in a sinister limbo.
This is no isolated tragedy. Kenya’s bloggers and dissenters are being hunted, silenced and erased in a relentless campaign of state-sponsored terror.
Since June 2024, the Kenya National Commission on Human Rights has documented 82 abductions, with 29 souls still unaccounted for, their families left to wander morgues and plead with authorities who offer nothing but hollow assurances of “ongoing investigations.”
Albert Ojwang’s brutal death in police custody in June 2025, his body bearing the unmistakable marks of assault - blunt force trauma, neck compression, and soft tissue injuries - ignited nationwide protests, yet the perpetrators walk free, shielded by a system that devours its critics.
Atsulu’s family, given a mere 24 hours before reporting his disappearance, turned to the very police implicated in these atrocities. But in a land where the hyena sits as judge, the goat can expect no justice.
The same security forces accused of abducting, torturing, and killing protesters and activists - over 200 deaths between 2024-2025 during anti-Ruto protests - are now tasked with “investigating” Atsulu’s case.
The pattern is unmistakable: critics like Gideon Kibet, a cartoonist snatched for mocking the president, and the Longton brothers, held for 32 days and beaten for their activism, reveal a regime that thrives on fear, wielding abductions and extrajudicial killings as tools to crush dissent.
This is a nation suffocating under the weight of its own betrayal, where the promise of democracy is drowned in the blood of its youth.
The disappearance of Moses Atsulu is not just a missing person case - it is a clarion call to the world. A young author’s voice, bold enough to expose the rot within, has been silenced, and with it, the hope of a generation.
Will we stand idly by as Kenya’s writers, bloggers, and dreamers are dragged into the abyss?
Let this outrage ignite a fire that demands accountability, justice, and an end to this reign of terror. The hyenas must not be allowed to feast unchallenged.