Team A
1. Kipchumba Murkomen
2. Oscar Sudi
3. Reuben Kiborek
4. Kiprono Chemitei
5. Stephen Sang
6. Hillary Sigei
Team B
1. Aaron Cheruiyot
2. Jackson Mandago
3. Makilap
4. CPA Ruto
5. DK
Game on!.
I'm so happy iyo tabia ya 'kuomba keja' iliisha na millenials juu there's no way naweza achia mtu kwangu adinyane alafu nikuje nilalie the same bed lmfao 😂😂.
I want to thank the Kenyan media that has continued to cover Sheila’s case.
In Australia, however, there has been what appears to be a near-total media blackout.
And I keep asking myself: why would the death of a 25-year-old Kenyan student, Straitht A student, one of my mentees - who left Kenya with so much promise. Raised $ for masters classes , who died on Sunday while at work in one of Australia’s leading apartment chains, Meriton Suites, not attract meaningful media attention in Sydney?
Is it possible that no human-interest journalist has come across the story? Is it a question of courage? Or has the PR machinery done its job so effectively that stories like these simply never make it into the public conversation?
What is the role of the media in the pursuit of justice and the larger common good?
What is life really like for Kenyans and Africans in the diaspora? Who speaks for minorities when tragedy strikes in a country that is not their own? Who asks the difficult questions when families thousands of kilometres away are searching for answers?
I have always held the belief that our Kenyan diaspora are among the modern-day heroes of our country.
I have consistently spoken up for this community because I understand the risks many take in pursuit of the same things we all seek here at home — careers, enterprise, opportunity, and a better future for their families. They pursue these dreams far from home, often in unfamiliar places, with limited support, carrying not only their own ambitions but also the hopes of entire families and communities.
Today, those sacrifices are reflected in the numbers.
In 2025, Kenyans abroad sent home more than KSh 1 trillion in remittances, making the diaspora Kenya’s single largest source of foreign exchange.
To put that in perspective, tea — our largest traditional export — earned approximately KSh 187 billion.
The Kenyan diaspora now brings in more foreign exchange than tea, coffee, and many of our traditional export sectors combined. They are paying school fees, building homes, financing businesses, supporting healthcare, and sustaining livelihoods in every corner of our country.
When we speak of Kenya’s economic heroes, we rightly celebrate our farmers, entrepreneurs, workers, and professionals at home. But we must also celebrate the Kenyan working double shifts in Dallas, driving trucks in Perth, caring for the elderly in London, building software in Toronto, running businesses in Dubai, studying in Sydney, and striving in countless cities across the world.
Their remittances are not just money transfers.
They are acts of faith in Kenya.
They are acts of courage.
And because of that, I promise to be a strong friend of the Kenyan diaspora when I get an opportunity to serve in Parliament in 2027.
I will treat the Diaspora and Young People as my third county.
Hold me to it.
Justice for Sheila.
https://t.co/UW7LxkVeve
#JusticeForSheila #Diaspora #KOT #Immigration #Sydney #KenyansAbroad
I want to thank the Kenyan media that has continued to cover Sheila’s case.
In Australia, however, there has been what appears to be a near-total media blackout.
And I keep asking myself: why would the death of a 25-year-old Kenyan student, Straitht A student, one of my mentees - who left Kenya with so much promise. Raised $ for masters classes , who died on Sunday while at work in one of Australia’s leading apartment chains, Meriton Suites, not attract meaningful media attention in Sydney?
Is it possible that no human-interest journalist has come across the story? Is it a question of courage? Or has the PR machinery done its job so effectively that stories like these simply never make it into the public conversation?
What is the role of the media in the pursuit of justice and the larger common good?
What is life really like for Kenyans and Africans in the diaspora? Who speaks for minorities when tragedy strikes in a country that is not their own? Who asks the difficult questions when families thousands of kilometres away are searching for answers?
I have always held the belief that our Kenyan diaspora are among the modern-day heroes of our country.
I have consistently spoken up for this community because I understand the risks many take in pursuit of the same things we all seek here at home — careers, enterprise, opportunity, and a better future for their families. They pursue these dreams far from home, often in unfamiliar places, with limited support, carrying not only their own ambitions but also the hopes of entire families and communities.
Today, those sacrifices are reflected in the numbers.
In 2025, Kenyans abroad sent home more than KSh 1 trillion in remittances, making the diaspora Kenya’s single largest source of foreign exchange.
To put that in perspective, tea — our largest traditional export — earned approximately KSh 187 billion.
The Kenyan diaspora now brings in more foreign exchange than tea, coffee, and many of our traditional export sectors combined. They are paying school fees, building homes, financing businesses, supporting healthcare, and sustaining livelihoods in every corner of our country.
When we speak of Kenya’s economic heroes, we rightly celebrate our farmers, entrepreneurs, workers, and professionals at home. But we must also celebrate the Kenyan working double shifts in Dallas, driving trucks in Perth, caring for the elderly in London, building software in Toronto, running businesses in Dubai, studying in Sydney, and striving in countless cities across the world.
Their remittances are not just money transfers.
They are acts of faith in Kenya.
They are acts of courage.
And because of that, I promise to be a strong friend of the Kenyan diaspora when I get an opportunity to serve in Parliament in 2027.
I will treat the Diaspora and Young People as my third county.
Hold me to it.
Justice for Sheila.
https://t.co/UW7LxkVeve
#JusticeForSheila #Diaspora #KOT #Immigration #Sydney #KenyansAbroad
Aden Duale has said in JKL that maternal and neonatal mortalities should be treated as National tragedies.
How will this be eradicated when the Government is not employing Medics? To be precise, adequate Nurses?
Mchezo mingi sana.
@citizentvkenya@KoinangeJeff@AyubAbdikadir WAZIRI, You stated categorically today in the floor of the House that the setting up of the quarantine centre will go on.
Why are you, together with all other relevant stakeholders, disregarding the Court Order which has stopped the aforementioned from going on?
#JKL