In accordance with Section 101(y) of the Petroleum Act 2019 and Legal Notice No.192 of 2022, has calculated the maximum retail prices of petroleum products which will be in force from 15th June 2026 to 14th July 2026.
In the period under review, the maximum allowed petroleum pump prices for Super Petrol and Diesel decreases by KShs.0.22/litre and KShs.10.00/litre respectively while the price of Kerosene remains unchanged.
In Nairobi, Super Petrol, Diesel and Kerosene now retail at Kshs.214.03, Kshs.222.86 and Kshs.191.38 effective midnight for the next 30 days.
The greatest pitfall that unsuspecting purchasers fall victim to is a 'ready title deed.' Purchasers need to always remember that a title deed is not an absolute proof of ownership. It is always safe to conduct your due diligence (background checks) before purchasing any property. We need to talk about this more often.
The greatest pitfall that unsuspecting purchasers fall victim to is a 'ready title deed.' Purchasers need to always remember that a Title Deed is not an absolute proof of ownership. It is always safe to conduct your due diligence (background checks) before purchasing any property. We need to talk about this more often.
Daughters of Mumbi who are Currently buying those 100k Plots in Malindi, Make sure the papers are there and do Background Check Otherwise wembe ni Ule Ule Haha.
This brazen act of anarchy is deeply troubling. No society governed by the rule of law should tolerate violence or organized lawlessness.
The public deserves answers. The DCI should carry out swift investigations and bring to account those responsible.
Power to Goons…
CCTV footage shows how goons stormed All Saints Cathedral
Goons on motorcycles disrupted a post-budget review meeting
Gang attacked and robbed pedestrians along Kenyatta Avenue
Police yet to issue update on status of investigation, arrests
#CitizenWeekend
This is a good step by NTSA.
Moving forward, we should not wait for tragedy before taking action. We need to consistently audit operators in the transport industry to guarantee the safety of the public.
A welcome reminder that land disputes are rarely won by possession of a Title Deed alone. While registration remains key to prove ownership, equitable interests, possession, as well as long periods of inaction can fundamentally alter proprietary rights.
This decision reiterates the need to exercise heightened diligence in land transactions and estate administration. It is a clarion call to landowners, purchasers, and estate administrators alike: protect your interests, complete your transactions, and do not leave land disputes to be settled by the passage of time.
The sentiments of Abdikadir Mohammed SC that I picked from this timely conversation were: Come 2027, everyone should vote for the fittest candidate to hold a particular office.
This was a clarion call for Advocates even as the elections for Judiciary Service Commission representatives draw closer: let's elect candidates who are bold and courageous enough to advance the welfare of lawyers and the public at large.
Abdikadir Mohamed: I think the weakest link is Parliament. Parliament has abdicated its role and handed over its powers to the President. If the President can call and say kick out so and so tomorrow and they do so, that is a tragedy. The JSC has been a complete disaster #JKLive
A welcome reminder that land disputes are rarely won by possession of a Title Deed alone. While registration remains key to prove ownership, equitable interests, possession, as well as long periods of inaction can fundamentally alter proprietary rights.
This decision reiterates the need to exercise heightened diligence in land transactions and estate administration. It is a clarion call to landowners, purchasers, and estate administrators alike: protect your interests, complete your transactions, and do not leave land disputes to be settled by the passage of time.
🔴🚨BREAKING: CoA says Paying for Land Is Not Enough - Occupation May Matter More Than the Title Deed
Many Kenyans assume that once a land sale agreement collapses, the buyer loses everything and the registered owner automatically keeps the property. The Court of Appeal has now shaken that assumption in Okul v Ondieki [2026]. The dispute revolved around a Nakuru property allegedly sold in 1985. The purchaser paid the agreed consideration, took possession, developed the land, erected rental structures, and remained in occupation for over three decades. Yet the transfer was never completed. Years later, after both the buyer and seller had died, the seller’s family claimed the property as part of the deceased’s estate and argued that no valid transfer had ever occurred.
The Court of Appeal was confronted with a question that keeps many investors, families, and estate administrators awake at night: can a person who never received a title deed still end up owning the land? The answer was a resounding yes. The Court held that where a purchaser enters land pursuant to a sale agreement, openly occupies it, develops it, collects rent, and remains there uninterrupted for the statutory period, that occupation can mature into adverse possession even if the sale transaction itself was never completed. In one of the most consequential statements in the judgment, the Court affirmed that entry into land under an incomplete sale agreement, particularly where the purchaser is not to blame for the failure to complete, can ultimately extinguish the registered owner's rights altogether.
The implication for landowners, investors, succession practitioners, and property developers is profound. A title deed is not always the end of the conversation. If another person occupies your property openly, treats it as their own, develops it, earns income from it, and you fail to assert your rights for years, the law may eventually recognize them rather than you. The decision reinforces a powerful principle in Kenyan property law: ownership is not protected by registration alone; it must also be defended through action. For those dealing with old land transactions, stalled transfers, family estates, or forgotten sale agreements, this judgment is a reminder that time can quietly transfer property just as effectively as a signed transfer form.
Kindly retweet. 🙏
We need to find the courage to have serious and uncomfortable conversations needed to fix it. It should not be about advocates alone, but every citizen should rally for a transparent Judiciary
The availability of multiple complaint channels is a welcome step towards making the Judiciary more accessible, responsive and accountable to the public it serves.
#Accesstojusticeforall
HOW TO LODGE A COMPLAINT
* Walk in
• phone calls
* via WhatsApp
* Email
* Write a letter
* E-filling
CONTACT US
📞Phone:
+254 748 676 862
+254 748 645 711
Email:
📧[email protected][email protected]
📍VISIT US
Reinsurance Plaza,
Taifa Road,
2nd Floor, Podium Wing
@BrianOkoth_@Pareno_Solonka Well said. As we embrace technology, we should not lose the unique benefits that physical hearings bring to the profession.
The Court in the Gachagua matter should be commended for the detailed analysis of complex questions raised in the Petition within such a short time-frame.
However, the finding that the former Deputy President's right to a fair hearing was violated while simultaneously sustaining the impeachment process raises important jurisprudential questions. If the right to be heard is a foundational constitutional guarantee, particularly in these proceedings which may result in removal from a constitutional office, it is legitimate to ask whether a violation of that right should warrant more convincing orders, apart from the award of damages.
The decision also invites reflection on the extent to which Parliament should rely on allegations relating to integrity, abuse of office, and social cohesion without the benefit of findings/a report from the National Cohesion and Integration Commission.
As the matter inevitably continues through the appellate process, an opportunity is presented to further clarify the relationship between political accountability and the constitutional guarantees of fair administrative action, access to justice, and fair hearing. We can only be said to have paid due deference to our Constitution when we manage to accord equal fidelity to both accountability and due process.
Under Article 25(c) of the constitution, the right to fair trial is a non-derogable right. So how can the court make quasi constitutional excuses on amorphous grounds in its refusal to set aside the impeachment of Hon Rigathi Gachagua? The Gachagua judgment in my humble opinion is on a shaky, shallow, soggy and sandy soil.