BREAKING: We can reveal that Zimbabwean businessman Wicknell Chivayo left Kenya yesterday evening and is currently in South Africa.
We also need to correct an important piece of information we shared earlier today.
This morning, we reported that President Ruto had left the country aboard the Gulfstream V private jet (P4-BFR). Based on information available to us at the time, including reports that a government official was on board and the unusually high security surrounding the flight, we believed that assessment was accurate.
However, after further verification, we established that the passenger on that aircraft was in fact Wicknell Chivayo, who departed Kenya yesterday together with several other individuals. We have since obtained video evidence confirming his departure and will be sharing it shortly. Important that video captures the plane Ruto is using today.
At the same time, we can confirm that President Ruto has now left Kenya today aboard a different private jet and is currently outside Kenyan airspace on his way to South Africa.
The moment we discovered that President Ruto had not travelled on the Gulfstream V, we went back to investigate further. What we found was significant: the aircraft we had tracked was carrying Wicknell Chivayo, not the President.
Below is an image we obtained from the airport showing the same aircraft, Gulfstream V P4-BFR. More evidence, including video footage, will be shared shortly.
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@KenyaPower@KenyaPower_Care I reported power outage since yesterday and now we are headed to 24hrs bila power. Food inaharibika because you can't fix power
Manager: We’re letting you go for poor performance.
Employee: Poor performance?
Manager: Yes. Your output has been below expectations.
Employee: Okay.
Manager: That’s all you have to say?
Employee: Yes. Thank you for the opportunity.
Manager: You’re not going to defend yourself?
Employee: I used to. Then I realized nobody here listens until the damage is done.
Manager: Please hand over your laptop before you leave.
Employee: No problem.
Four hours later…
Manager: Why are these reports not updating?
Team Lead: Because he was the one doing them.
Manager: What about the client tracker?
Team Lead: Also him.
Manager: And the weekly sales dashboard?
Team Lead: Him too.
Manager: So what exactly was everyone else doing?
Team Lead: Waiting for him to finish his part so theirs could look complete.
The next day…
Manager: I reviewed the spreadsheet. I think we made a mistake.
Employee: You fired me yesterday.
Manager: I know. I want to apologize.
Employee: For firing me or for never noticing I was doing three people’s work?
Manager: Both. ↓
Look at Kiharu. Not slogans. Not excuses. Not tribal tears. Receipts.
Fees slashed to KSh 500. Lunch every school day. Uniforms for needy kids. Real money for labs, buses, revision materials. Teachers rewarded. Principals exposed to the world. No hidden levies. No “harambee” extortion. No parents being milked dry. That’s leadership with a ledger, not a loud mouth.
Now pan the camera to North Eastern and Siaya. Same Constitution. Same CDF. Same MPs’ salaries. Same access to Treasury. But what do we get?
Endless blame games. Kikuyus this, Nairobi that, history that. Meanwhile children sit on stones. Desks are missing. Blackboards are a luxury. And every election, MPs return with tears and poetry instead of results.
Here’s the uncomfortable truth: Ndindi Nyoro didn’t inherit magic. He inherited responsibility and did the work.
Development is not a tribe. It’s discipline. It’s priorities. It’s choosing classrooms over convoys, desks over drama, books over billboards.
So to the MPs of North Eastern and Siaya simple question, no insults needed:
Where is your track record?
Show us one constituency plan with measurable outcomes like Kiharu. One audited program that cuts fees, feeds learners, builds labs, and still balances the books. One year of leadership that doesn’t outsource failure to Kikuyus, Raila, Ruto, history, or the weather.
Stop crying tribal persecution while looting silence. Stop weaponizing poverty to excuse incompetence. Children don’t eat excuses.
At this point, if being a Kikuyu from Kiharu means schools work, kids eat, and money shows results…
Sign me up.