What were these students thinking?
I genuinely don't understand it.
From what I've seen, this doesn't look like a split-second mistake. It raises serious questions about planning, intent, and what they expected would happen after the fires were started.
I've never watched footage of an arson incident before, and it's difficult to comprehend how someone could knowingly start a fire in a dormitory full of students and not anticipate the potential consequences.
Perhaps there are facts investigators still need to uncover, but as things stand, I am struggling to make sense of it.
What do you think was going through their minds?
Media platforms were warned not to take photos or videos during the fuel talk meeting with matatu associates.
They were warned, but someone just pretended he was holding her phone, took a snap when they were issuing cheques.
The photo is from a state official. It was taken secretly during the envelope distribution. Each envelope had a KSh 2 million cheque.
The matatu associates froze and declared that the protest had been suspended countrywide. They turned the protest into millions...into wealth.
Going home smiling with KSh 2 million plus job promises.
Just same like Mprara Kebaso who became millionaire in just months.
In Murangβa, there is a program called the Murangβa Youth Service. Yesterday there was a recruitment exercise across the whole of Murangβa. This program takes 30 youths per ward, and so far they have taken more than 8,000 youths. The youths are selected through balloting, if you pick βyes,β you get a chance. No educational qualifications are required.
If you are selected, you work in cleaning the towns in Murangβa for two months and you are paid Ksh 400 per day. You receive Ksh 300, while Ksh 100 is sent to your parent.
After finishing the cleaning work, you are taken to a polytechnic to study a course of your choice such as plumbing, hair and beauty, etc., for three months, and the program pays for your NITA exam.
After completing the exams, there is a graduation, and you are given Ksh 15,000 to start a business. If you start your business in Murangβa, you do not pay a business license fee for one year.
Murang'a is making other Kenyans feel like they were born in Mogadishu. Now that is empowerment, silent, focused and impacful, not what we are currently seeing in other areas. Other leaders are milking the country dry while telling their mumu voters that all development is taken to Murima bcoz of entitlement.π€‘
Safaricom has rolled out a new feature called Shiriki Pay that lets you give someone direct access to spend from your M-PESA wallet.
Here are more details about the new feature
Thread below;
The price of diapers, sanitary towels & detergents is set to go up by more than 20% from February 3 under NEMAβs new waste rules.
For example, a jumbo pack of 60 diapers will rise from Sh2,000 β Sh2,550, while 14-pack sanitary pads go from Sh218 β Sh262.