BREAKING: MP Ngogoyo has launched a fierce attack on the Kenya Kwanza government, calling its priorities completely misplaced.
While millions of Kenyans are struggling with high taxes, unemployment, and the rising cost of living, he questioned how Executive spending rose by KSh 6.3 billion in just two weeks through Supplementary Budget II.
I've said it before, and I'll say it again: this government has inverted priorities. The things that should come first are treated as an afterthought, while spending at the top keeps growing.
Credit to MP Ngogoyo for saying what many Kenyans have been thinking.
Why is so hard for our Government to build a new international airport as Ethiopia & Rwanda have done in an above-board deal? Why do we like to use people with criminal pasts? Is it so hard to undertake a multi-billion project with open transparency? How can we use a Contractor from Zimbabwe of all places? JKIA deserves our respect & patriotism.
The Bible says the Truth loves Light! Evil loves Darkness!
BREAKING: A man interviewed by Citizen TV during yesterday's 7 pm and 9 pm news broadcasts made allegations that should concern every Kenyan.
He claimed that some police officers operate alongside goons while dressed in plain clothes.
He alleged that they participate in robberies, attacks on civilians, and other criminal activities.
He further claimed that plain-clothes police officers were among those involved in the attack on All Saints Cathedral last weekend.
And according to him, if some of them are arrested, they are later identified and released from police custody.
These are serious allegations.
But what makes them even more disturbing is that they appear to answer questions Kenyans have been asking for years.
During the 2024 and 2025 protests, many Kenyans watched goons move freely in the presence of uniformed police officers.
We saw videos of businesses being looted.
We saw shops being burned.
We saw civilians being attacked.
Yet in many cases, arrests never seemed to follow.
At the time, many people could not understand what they were seeing.
How could criminals operate so openly without consequences?
How could goons appear so confident around officers who were supposed to stop them?
Now, a man has come forward with allegations that seem to offer an explanation.
Whether his claims are true or false, they demand urgent investigation.
Because if those allegations are true, then Kenya is facing something more dangerous than goons.
A goon can only terrorize a few people.
But if criminals are receiving protection from within institutions that are supposed to stop them, then every Kenyan is at risk.
The most chilling part is that this would mean the line between those protecting citizens and those preying on them has started to disappear.
The police officer you are meeting at the station might be a friend of the one who robbed you.
For me, this is exactly why I say Ruto must go.
A country cannot function when the people meant to protect citizens are themselves facing allegations of participating in the very lawlessness they are supposed to prevent.
Kenya could be staring at one of the most serious national security threats in recent history as foreigners obtain Kenyan identity cards and passports through rogue networks operating both in and out of the government.
For weeks, The Standard infiltrated the dangerous networks and uncovered how rogue officials within the Immigration Department and the National Registration Bureau facilitate this dubious syndicate, allowing nationals from countries such as Somalia, Ethiopia, Burundi and Uganda to acquire Kenyan identity documents without proper vetting, scrutiny or verification, driven by bribery and corruption.
https://t.co/pPOhGNncNt
“If Somalis decided to pull their resources out of Kenya, it will collapse in a day”..This is part of a statement by @AlinurMohamed_
By all means, pull your resources out of Kenya, let it collapse!! We will rebuild from scratch.
Every time a conversation on how Eastleigh business are taxed arises, you see such statements. We won’t cave. Watu walipe tax!!
I honestly don’t think we’re ready for this Eastleigh conversation.
Few Observations,.
You buy something in the majority of those shops and they want cash. If you don’t have cash, they have their own MPesa agents they tell you to withdraw from. They then make a quick call to the agent to confirm the withdrawal before releasing your goods.
That way, they never have to explain their cash flow, but you may one day have to explain yours to the taxman.
We’re talking about a multi billion shilling industry with very little transparency, accountability or visibility into how money moves.
And as long as they remain the middlemen, pay zero tax, sell “counterfeit goods” the government is comfortable
But how dare you use the same business model, open your own wholesale operation and bring your own goods through the port?…..
Three protesters shot dead in Nanyuki. Students shot inside their own hostel at Multimedia University.
Hooded, unidentifiable officers firing live rounds on unarmed Kenyans.
This is not law enforcement. This is the constitution being violated in broad daylight.
As we approach the 2nd anniversary of June 25, we must refuse to normalise what we are witnessing.
Accountability is not optional. It is what justice looks like in practice.
Here is my statement on the current pattern of violence by the Police:
State House spent Sh4.5 billion outside its approved budget in the first nine months of FY2025/26, according to the Controller of Budget.
This is one of the highest cases of unplanned government spending in the period.
Yote tisa, ya kumi ni hii,
Doh za bibi yako ni kama pesa ya Zimbabwe,
We unajua iko, but haujawahi ona, hautawahi guza, unaskia iko, haujui ina nunua nini, na ni nani anapewa.
Kitu unaeza ona tu, ni WhatsApp status.
But, doh zako ni kama dola, kila mtu anataka.
Jipange.
The World Cup shouldn’t be taking place in the racist USA.
African players, referees and fans are being subjected to trauma by Pedophile @realDonaldTrump and his fellow white supremacists.
Countries with retrogressive visa policies should not be allowed to host global tournaments.
The Somali referee Omar Abdulkadir Artan was reportedly denied entry into the US despite having a valid visa, meaning he will miss his World Cup debut as the first Somali official at the tournament. That alone tells you how broken this hosting model is.
You cannot invite the world to your country, collect tournament glory, collect tourism money, collect broadcast attention, then humiliate qualified officials and participants at the border.
Even the extortionist visa system at the US Embassy in Nairobi should be condemned. Kenyans pay money, fill forms, queue, wait for months, then someone rejects them in two minutes and keeps the money.
If your visa policy treats Africans like suspects and ATMs, you have no business hosting the world.
Five mattress companies in Kenya are suspected of working together to fix prices.
These companies include Bobmil, Superform, Foam Mattress, Jumbo and Vitafoam.
[They are now under investigation by the competition watchdog].
Breaking : The William Ruto Govt is now planning to sell Kenyan data on eCitizen to anyone who can afford it.
Through the Ministry of Information, Communications and the Digital Economy (MICTDE), the government is proposing a National Data Governance Policy that would create a state-run data marketplace.
The justification?
Generate extra government revenue.
Treat data as a "strategic national asset."
This may go down as one of the worst policy proposals ever put forward by a Kenyan government.
First they borrowed.
Then they raised taxes.
Then they sold state assets.
Then they securitized future revenues.
Now they want to monetize the data of ordinary Kenyans.
How much is enough?
When you give your information to the government, you do so because it is required to access public services, not because you expect the government to package that information and sell access to it.
No wonder every institution is being pushed onto eCitizen. Schools. Hospitals. Government services. More and more information is being centralized under one platform.
And before the defenders rush in, this is not just about whether names are removed or not.
The bigger question is this:
At what point does a citizen stop being a citizen and become a product?
Today they call your data a "strategic national asset."
Tomorrow what else will they decide is for sale?
A government that sees citizens primarily as a source of revenue will never stop looking for new things to monetize.
NB- Edited image used