It looks like General Ogola is not resting easy. It’s like he is haunting the guy that ordered his assassination.
That is the source of all those confusing mentions of Ogola
KISUMU-BUSIA HIGHWAY: HOW MANY MORE LIVES MUST WE LOSE?
For years, Kisumu-Busia road has been a source of pain and frustration for thousands of motorists, passengers, traders, and families who rely on it every day. What should be a critical transport and trade corridor has become one of the most dangerous roads in our region.
The highway passes through Kisumu, Vihiga, Siaya, and Busia counties. It serves millions of people and carries a significant share of trade between Kenya and our East African neighbours. Yet despite its importance, large sections of the road remain riddled with potholes, narrow, poor road markings, inadequate signage, and dangerous bottlenecks that continue to put lives at risk.
Every week, we hear of another tragic accident. Families lose loved ones. Breadwinners never make it home. Children are left without parents. Vehicles are damaged, businesses disrupted, and communities forced to bear the heavy cost of a problem that can and should be fixed.
These are not unavoidable tragedies. Many of these accidents are the direct result of poor road conditions and delayed intervention by @KeNHAKenya the agency responsible for maintaining this highway.
The Constitution guarantees every Kenyan the right to life and security. Government agencies entrusted with public infrastructure have a duty to ensure that our roads are safe for those who use them. That duty cannot be ignored.
I therefore call upon the Ministry of Roads and Transport @TransportKE@Roads_KE and the Kenya National Highways Authority (@KeNHAKenya) to take immediate action and provide clear answers to the people of Western Kenya.
Specifically, I demand:
1) Immediate repair of dangerous potholes and damaged sections along the entire Kisumu-Busia corridor.
2) A clear and publicly available roadmap for the upgrading and expansion of this highway, including the dualing of identified blackspots and high-traffic market centres.
3) Urgent implementation of road safety measures, including proper signage, visible road markings, pedestrian crossings, and traffic calming measures in school and market areas.
The people of Kisumu, Vihiga, Siaya, and Busia deserve safe roads. They deserve leadership that responds to their concerns before lives are lost, not after.
Enough of the promises. Enough of the delays. Enough of the needless deaths. The time for action is now.
Kasongo is on track to become one of Kenya's shortest-serving presidents, as growing public dissatisfaction, economic pressures, and declining political support continue to erode confidence in his administration.
BREAKING: IPOA has shocked the court with admissions that could leave many Kenyans wondering whether Rex Maasai will ever get justice.
In court, investigators admitted they:
- Never collected the bullet removed from Rex Maasai's body.
- Never collected cartridges from the scene.
- Never obtained footage from a crucial CCTV camera on the same street that had a full view.
- Never recovered the alleged murder weapon.
- Never secured key witnesses.
Now the officer charged in the case could be freed because of a lack of evidence.
Let that sink in.
A young Kenyan was killed during protests that the whole country watched.
Yet some of the most important pieces of evidence were never collected.
-The bullet was not collected.
-The cartridges were not collected.
-A critical CCTV camera was not investigated.
-The weapon was never recovered.
-The witnesses were never found.
And Kenyans are now being told by the cop's defense that there may not be enough evidence.
This is the same concern many of us have raised for years.
A case does not always have to be defeated in court.
Sometimes it is weakened long before it gets there by the police.
When evidence is not collected, a case becomes weaker. When witnesses are not secured, a case becomes weaker. When key footage is ignored, a case becomes weaker.
And when enough evidence is missing, justice becomes harder to achieve.
Many people may disagree, but most cases involving police officers can be diluted until accountability becomes almost impossible. Remember, IPOAs are also police, and they can cover for each other.
If these admissions are accurate, then the biggest question is no longer what happened to Rex Maasai.
The biggest question is how so much critical evidence was allowed to slip away in one of the most-watched cases in Kenya.
This is why police officers should wear body cameras.
Evidence should not depend on who remembers, who records, or who investigates.
Justice for Rex Maasai.
BREAKING NEWS: Wanjiku Muhia's security withdrawn.
They continue to do blunders after blunders!
OlKalou sio Mbeere 😀😀😃 msisikie vibaya.
Kasongo is not breathing in one of his one time stronghold.
I have tried reseaching for any Airports built by the firm of Sir Wicknell Chivayo and I couldn't find any. That guy seem to be a dangerous fraud than even Adani
"There is a plan by Nairobi Governor Johnson Sakaja to take a KSh 6.9 billion loan from Sidian Bank." — Embakasi East MP Babu Owino claims that Sakaja and the owner of Sidian Bank have a deal to secure the loan in the name of Nairobi residents.
The Ruto’s government kills its citizens, then it compensates them a sum of Kshs.2 million, and then it protects/immunize the police officers who pulled the trigger from prosecution….Isn’t this what I call political nonsense?
In our law firm, 25th June is a holiday, and we call it Remembrance Day internally, for all the people we lost to senseless police violence in the Finance Bill protests.