A mother who lost her son years ago 🥲🥲🥲💔💔
Saw his look alike in Mecca and she held him so tight and refused to let go 🥲🥲🥲🥹🥹🥹🥹
The pain of a mother losing her child 🥲🥲🥲💔💔💔💔
"I am an elected official, anything else is irrelevant; when it comes to public money, I will dictate how it will be used I ratherbe thrown out of this house than be part of the scam." ~Busia Senator Okiya Omtata to Kingi
Mike sonko shares the receipts and evidence showing how Robert Alai, an MCA elected by mistake, grabbed a property in Runda belonging to an Asian family. He chased the owner like a dog from his own property.
Mike Sonko claims that when the owner sought his help, he connected him with his lawyer, Harrison Kinyanjui. Through the courts, they obtained orders, removed the occupants, and restored the property to its rightful owner.
Sonko says whether he is in office or illegally impeached, he will never allow land grabbing or the oppression of innocent property owners. Every Kenyan deserves the right to enjoy their property in peace.
He also claims to have additional evidence of Alai demanding millions of shillings from the Asian owner. Wacha
A police officer carries enormous power.
The power to stop, search, arrest, detain, investigate and, in some cases, use force.
That power must always come with responsibility.
It is therefore deeply disturbing that many police officers in Kenya continue to hide their names and service numbers while carrying out their duties. This is not only wrong, it is a direct violation of the law.
The National Police Service Act No. 11A of 2011 is clear. Paragraph A10 states:
"A Police officer in uniform shall at all times affix a nametag or identifiable Service number in a clearly visible part of the uniform."
The law does not say "sometimes." It does not say "when convenient." It says at all times.
Why would an officer conceal their identity from the public they are sworn to serve?
An honest officer should have no fear of being identified.
A professional officer should proudly wear their name and service number. It is the rogue officer, the corrupt officer and the abusive officer who benefits from anonymity.
When citizens cannot identify officers, complaints become impossible. Accountability disappears. Justice is obstructed. Public trust is destroyed.
The Inspector General knows this problem exists.
The National Police Service Commission knows it exists.
Human rights organizations have repeatedly raised concerns about it. Yet little meaningful action has been taken.
A police uniform should never become a mask behind which misconduct is hidden.
The question Kenyans must ask is simple:
Are we being policed by accountable public servants, or by individuals who deliberately conceal their identities while exercising state power?
No police officer should be above the law. The first duty of law enforcement is to obey the law.
Every officer must wear a visible name tag and service number.