Orders granted!
The Court certified the application as urgent and granted interim conservatory orders restraining the Respondents from establishing, operationalising, approving, or facilitating any Ebola exposure, quarantine, isolation, or treatment facility in Kenya under any arrangement with the United States or any other foreign government or agency, pending the hearing of the application.
The Court further barred the Respondents from admitting into, transferring to, receiving within, or facilitating the entry into Kenya of any persons exposed to or infected with Ebola pursuant to the impugned arrangement.
The matter is scheduled for mention on 2nd June 2026 for further directions.
Never decouple William Ruto and Uhuru Kenyatta.
They are Siamese twins of political treachery and economic devastation.
Anything else is narratives.
End.
People MUST resist Freehold Land being turned into Leasehold and oppressive TAXES imposed with the Land being auctioned upon failure to pay the those taxes.Objective is to disposess people of their Lands and turn them into labourers for the new owners.We have a CRIMINAL regime
STATEMENT: If these demands are not met, it will demonstrate a lack of commitment and accountability on the part of duty bearers. If there is no action within the next 40 days, we will organise peaceful protests across the country and file a Strategic Interest Litigation (SIL)
Is this the plan?
1. Kill agriculture
2. Kill the informal economy
3. Kill SMEs
4. Defund education and health
5. Kill the people
6. Share land and loot with foreign corporates.
BREAKING: Today, I can reveal that President William Ruto has reportedly left Azerbaijan and is currently headed to Kazakhstan.
For the last few hours, we have been actively tracking the President’s private chartered jet. Flight data shows it departed Azerbaijan at exactly 11:39 AM (07:39 UTC), and Astana airport systems have already updated its expected arrival later this afternoon.
What makes this even more controversial is the timing. Kenyans are currently protesting painful fuel prices across the country, yet the President has remained completely silent. In fact, he left the country just a day before the protests intensified, in what I would call fleeing.
I can also reveal that this private chartered jet reportedly costs up to $30,000 PER HOUR to operate. Multiply that by roughly 5 hours, and taxpayers could be looking at nearly KSh 18 million spent on this trip alone.
While ordinary Kenyans are struggling with rising costs and fuel prices, the President appears to be moving from country to country as the crisis at home escalates.
In my opinion, this is becoming the definition of a “tourist presidency.”
And trust me, there is still much more we have uncovered that I will reveal later.
Follow me - Sholla Ard - so you don’t miss what many would prefer stays hidden. We do this for our country, Kenya.
The most dangerous oppression on this continent is not the one with soldiers at intersections. It is the one with election posters and international observers and a population that has been successfully convinced it is free.
I have watched people living in conditions identical to those produced by the most violent dictatorships, no water, no electricity, no functional healthcare, no justice, and yet waiting patiently for the next election as though the previous four had not produced the same result. The plutocrat understands something the dictator never fully grasped: that the most durable form of control is not the one that breaks the will of the governed but the one that makes the governed believe they are not being governed at all.
Full piece : https://t.co/JJjCK6sMWw
When you hear politicians suddenly uniting to tell you who the “enemy” is, pause and ask yourself one question:
Who benefits when citizens are divided and distracted?
Too often, the political class closes ranks not to defend the people, but to defend the system that feeds them. They want Kenyans fighting each other while corruption, impunity, unemployment, and economic injustice continue unchecked.
The moment someone begins questioning the structure of exploitation, the wardens of the prison quickly unite and point at a new “enemy” to keep the prisoners distracted.
Kenyans must stop worshipping political camps and start defending principles. Accountability is not tribal. Justice is not regional. Truth is not partisan.
The real struggle is not between ordinary citizens. The real struggle is between a corrupt system and the people paying the price for it every day.
82 years ago, on December 1st 1944, African soldiers who fought and bled to help defeat the Nazis were massacred by the French army at Thiaroye massacre after demanding the salary they were promised. They survived Hitler, only to be murdered by the empire they defended.
Nearly half of Kenya’s projected FY 2026/2027 budget will go to debt servicing instead of development.
Out of the Ksh 4.82 trillion budget, taxpayers will pay approximately Ksh 2.3 trillion toward debt obligations, including Ksh 1.3 trillion consumed purely by loan interest payments before meaningful development spending even begins.
Under Kenyan law, debt repayment is a “first charge” on national revenue. Creditors are paid first, before hospitals, schools, counties, agriculture, or public services.
At the same time, Kenya continues borrowing heavily to repay maturing loans and cover budget deficits. The public debt has now risen to approximately Ksh 12.4 trillion, while ordinary citizens continue facing unemployment, high taxation, failing services, and rising economic hardship.
Kenyans must ask:
Who borrowed this money?
Were all these loans borrowed procedurally as per the constitution?
Who benefited?
Why should citizens repay debts arising from corruption, secrecy, inflated contracts, and mismanagement?
An odious debt is not a people’s debt. It is a regime debt.
This constitutional and economic battle continues in court.
The matter comes up on 25th June 2026 at the Milimani Law Courts.
Kenyans must remain vigilant. This fight is about economic justice, accountability, and the future of our Republic. #DeniBandia #OdiousDebt #ReKe
There are days I envy those who carry no political consciousness whatsoever. Those who move through the world unburdened by the knowledge of the systems producing their suffering, indifferent to the past, unconcerned with the future, existing in the simple present of their own lives. There must be a peace in that innocence that I recognise from a distance and will never again be able to reach.
And there are days, more than I care to admit, when I wish I could unlearn everything I have learned, unsee what I have seen and return to the person I was before the knowledge settled into my bones and made indifference permanently impossible.
Because what nobody tells you about political consciousness is that it is not a gift but a weight. It does not liberate you from suffering. Rather, it adds to your suffering the particular anguish of understanding exactly why you are suffering and watching the vast majority of those around you remain unreachable, not out of malice but out of an exposure they never had, an experience they never lived, a set of doors that were never opened for them. You cannot share what you carry with people who do not have the vocabulary to receive it.
And so you carry it largely alone, in public spaces that mistake your urgency for performance and in private moments that offer no relief. There are days I genuinely want to go back to not knowing. I understand why that is impossible but I want it anyway.
This may be the first time non-French-speaking Africans are witnessing the full depth of French presidential condescension, but for us it has always been this way. Nicolas Sarkozy walked into a room full of university students in Dakar in 2007 and declared that “ the African man had not yet entered history”.
Emmanuel Macron asked Roch Marc Christian Kaboré, the then president of Burkina Faso, to go fix the air conditioning for him during a 2017 press conference, then proceeded to publicly humiliate Tshisekedi in the DRC in 2020.
These are not isolated moments of poor judgment. They are a pattern. The infantilisation of Africans is not a failure of one French presidential character. It is a feature of French presidential culture, so deeply embedded in the relationship between France and its former colonies that these men cannot suppress it even when the cameras are running and the entire world is watching.
They were never trained to see us as equals. And it shows, every single time, without exception, regardless of which French president occupies the room.
It is quite satisfying to watch the antelope loudly proclaim its friendship with the leopard. But the entire savanna knows, that this friendship has never existed anywhere but in the mind of the predator searching for a more comfortable way to feed, and that of a prey so foolish it has mistaken the beauty of those spots for something other than the last thing it will ever see..
Harry Truman once said: “The only thing new in the world is the history you do not know.”
Fellow Kenyans, our crisis did not begin yesterday.
The looting. The illegal debt. The betrayal of the Constitution. The collapse of public services. The silence of career politicians. These are old scripts repeated by leaders who believe Kenyans forget quickly.
They believe another scandal will trend. Another distraction will come. Another funeral, another handshake, another coalition, another slogan.
Meanwhile, you pay more taxes for debts you never approved and never benefited from.
Between 2014 and 2024, Kenya borrowed Sh9.11 trillion. Only Sh2.57 trillion received proper parliamentary approval. The remaining Sh6.54 trillion is odious debt, unconstitutional borrowing forced onto the backs of struggling citizens.
This is why food prices rise while wages stagnate. This is why hospitals lack medicine while billions disappear. This is why schools decline while politicians grow richer. This is why young people graduate into hopelessness.
And while Kenya bleeds, legacy politicians remain silent. Many are not fighting to fix the system. They are fighting to inherit it.
They criminalize protesters. They weaponize police. They reward political loyalists with advisory jobs funded by taxpayers. They protect corruption networks while ordinary Kenyans suffer.
We go to court because the Constitution is the last line of defense between the people and organized state plunder.
From the struggle for independence in 1963, to Saba Saba, to the 2010 Constitution, every generation of Kenyans has been called to defend freedom against greed and impunity. History is watching us now.
If we remain silent while our country is looted, future generations will remember us as the people who watched Kenya collapse and did nothing.
Read history. Defend the Constitution. Reject fear. Reject silence. Reject thieves disguised as leaders.
We must be a nation that reads, remembers, and refuses to be misled by the same old tricks. Know your history, defend your rights, and let us not be "newly" surprised by what we should have already learned.
Kenya istahili heshima
#OdiousDebt
#ReKe
#Constitutionalism
They've engineered the silence because they fear you more than they fear any judge. An informed public is their worst nightmare. So read the filings. Track the hearings. Ask the hard questions. The @IMFAfrica@KeTreasury, @NAssemblyKE, and every pen that signed these loans must answer.
Some politicians waiting in the wings will not speak because they hope to inherit the same broken system. To those seeking office: this is a test of principle. You cannot inherit a system you refuse to question.
We don't need their headlines to know our rights. The Constitution didn't give us a voice to whisper. The front page isn't theirs to give. It's ours to demand. Stay loud. Stay informed. The law is on our side
#OdiousDebtKenya #PeoplePower #DeniBandia