Civil Engineer in roads materials and technologies. interested in objective social discussions. Man Utd doesnt know how to react to sport economic disruptions.
@047County@SakajaJohnson Hii pelekeni huuuuuuko! Danganya toto jinga! County Govt of Nbi is corrupt from head to toe. Everyone there is a billionaire with no known business!
Sophie Njehia: Our president is using hundreds of millions to globetrot, lakini watoto hapa hawana chakula kwa shule. If the Ministry of Education is failing, then by extension, so is the government. This country is failing because of our priorities.
#AmkaKenya
@EACCKenya@Andatibless@Brianmbunde 🤣🤣. If a subordinate to the governor has 500000usd under his bed, like our dear SC @ahmednasirlaw wisely said, are we supposed to assume he is the only corrupt fellow hiding money in all county govts?
Mwenye macho haambiwi tazama!
The @GreenBeltMovmnt condemns plans to excise part of Imenti Forest for an airstrip, golf course & State Lodge. Imenti is a critical water tower & biodiversity haven.
Sign the petition and demand its protection: https://t.co/WzxJt6fxuN
#HandsOffImentiForest#SaveOurForests
89% of Kenyans in Mt. Kenya region, 85% in Lower Eastern, 78% in Western, 76% in Nairobi, 73% in Nyanza and 65% at the Coast feel the country is heading in the wrong direction - TIFA survey
Yesterday in Parliament, the Cabinet Secretary for Health, Aden Duale, failed to assure the country that the government’s decision‑making on the Ebola question is within the law and fully under control. The Constitution demands both legality and respect for court orders and public participation.
Listening to him, the message is clear, the court will have its say but the executive will enforce their way.
When a High Court has already issued conservatory orders suspending an Ebola‑related facility, any suggestion that the Executive can press on regardless converts being within the law into a slogan to justify disobedience. Constitutional obedience is not optional and it is not subject to administrative convenience.
Kenyans are entitled to clear, honest answers. Who authorised these arrangements, on what legal basis and with what safeguards for public health and sovereignty? Dismissing concerns as mere alarm while sidestepping these questions undermines public trust in both the Ministry of Health and Parliament’s oversight role.
The right to health under Article 43 must be read together with Articles 10, 94, 95 and 165 on constitutionalism, public participation and the authority of the courts. You cannot promote public health by eroding the very legal framework that protects Kenyans from arbitrary executive action.