Here's your reminder: It's not just about today but the journey you're on. Every little step counts towards the bigger achievement.
What's that one step you take today? Share in the comments.
#positivemonday#Mindsetmonday#Strongermonday
Earlier in the day, H.E. Lt. Gen. (Rtd.) Albert Kendagor, Ambassador of Kenya to the State of Israel met with the Kenya Diaspora Football team at the Chancery. He congratulated them for their exemplary performance in past tournaments and wished them well in future competitions.
@Maryian96 This is inhumane, barbaric and unacceptable. Forced disappearances, unlawful arrests, extrajudicial killings, and actual deaths from police brutality under the government's command!!!
Real danger!!!
#RutoMustGo
If you ever feel like you are having a soft spot for this regime go back in time,tell me how you feel when you look at these images! He is not worth the top seat, unless you are unwell upstairs.
#RutoMustGo
Kenyans,your ancestral land is at risk!
Ruto’s government is enacting laws to let counties auction your land if you miss tax payments.This is about legalized land grabbing!
Fvckers & Svckers supporting Ruto will be the first victims to lose parcels of land.
#RejectFinanceBill
Politicians R scrambling on social media to dodge the people's rage. Where were they when we were killed, tortured, and arrested for peaceful protests?Mnaenda nyumbani wote kudadake.!
#OccupyStatehouse#RejectFinanceBill
For my generation and younger- who stood in the rain during the #RejectFinanceBill protests - Raila became both a legend and a lesson.
A legend of courage.
A lesson in what happens when movements outgrow their heroes.
The truth is, he walked so that we could run - and then, we ran in a direction he could no longer follow.
Kenya : When the government uses the Internet to silence the Gen Z
In Kenya, the protests led by Generation Z between 2024 and 2025 were not only suppressed in the streets. They were also crushed online. Beyond police violence, the government used digital tools to surveil, harass, and intimidate young protesters, a quieter but far more dangerous form of repression.
This is what a report by Amnesty International reveals. It all began with the rejection of the 2024 Finance Bill, a piece of legislation proposing new taxes and higher levies on goods and services at a time when the cost of living was already soaring.
Hashtags such as #RejectFinanceBill and #SisiNiNumbers mobilized thousands of young people. But the state’s response was brutal. According to several NGOs, more than 100 people were killed, hundreds were arrested, and many others forcibly disappeared, as shown in footage broadcast by local media.
The repression soon extended beyond the streets and into the digital space.
Amnesty reports that the government paid bloggers to threaten and intimidate young protesters online. Serah, a highly active activist, received anonymous calls and violent messages on Facebook and WhatsApp. Traumatized, she deleted her accounts and now lives in fear.
Loba, a 24-year-old student, received messages warning him that he would lose his university scholarship if he continued protesting. He still went out to demonstrate, but admits he no longer feels safe doing so.
The strategy was deliberate: flood the internet with propaganda and silence dissenting voices. Whenever young people used the hashtag #RutoMustGo, armies of pro-government accounts instantly responded with #RutoMustGoOn.
Some bloggers later confirmed they were paid daily to defend the government and attack activists. The goal was clear: intimidate, divide, and discourage. The harassment went even further. Hanifa Adan, a journalist of Somali origin, was targeted with racist abuse and online harassment. She says the campaign severely affected her mental health.
Meanwhile, a new law — the Computer Misuse and Cybercrimes (Amendment) Act of 2024 — has expanded the government’s power to monitor and repress online speech. While authorities claim it is meant to combat disinformation, Amnesty, human rights defenders, and opposition figures argue that it is a tool of repression.
What is happening in Kenya reveals a disturbing reality: modern authoritarianism no longer relies solely on batons and bullets. It also controls the internet. And its primary targets are young people — those who dare to question power.
@LEADPartyZim@Paedeezy@lilomatic@BoubacarNaba01@citizentvkenya
#AfricanVoices #Kenya #GenZ #Internet