An MP who is always available for pressers, interviews and economic analysis forums but unavailable to vote over crucial matters like the finance bill is a fraud.
@NdindiNyoro I believe there was an option of voting online, it's either a yes or no, writing a big paragraph doesn't justify what you stand.. come clear, watu wakona hasira huku inje namna hatari. Chesaa!!
I honestly don’t think we’re ready for this Eastleigh conversation.
Few Observations,.
You buy something in the majority of those shops and they want cash. If you don’t have cash, they have their own MPesa agents they tell you to withdraw from. They then make a quick call to the agent to confirm the withdrawal before releasing your goods.
That way, they never have to explain their cash flow, but you may one day have to explain yours to the taxman.
We’re talking about a multi billion shilling industry with very little transparency, accountability or visibility into how money moves.
And as long as they remain the middlemen, pay zero tax, sell “counterfeit goods” the government is comfortable
But how dare you use the same business model, open your own wholesale operation and bring your own goods through the port?…..
Then in 2016, Estama company imported 100 containers and called them mobile clinics.
Painted them so well.
The company bought each at KSH 1.2 Million and sold to the Ministry of Health at KSH 10 million each, making a profit of Ksh 9 million per container.
The crooks were paid KSH 1 billion from the government and dumped the containers in Mombasa and Nairobi, and vanished.
Nobody has been convicted.
The heist just died silently.
We have gone through a lot.
Yesterday in Parliament, the Cabinet Secretary for Health, Aden Duale, failed to assure the country that the government’s decision‑making on the Ebola question is within the law and fully under control. The Constitution demands both legality and respect for court orders and public participation.
Listening to him, the message is clear, the court will have its say but the executive will enforce their way.
When a High Court has already issued conservatory orders suspending an Ebola‑related facility, any suggestion that the Executive can press on regardless converts being within the law into a slogan to justify disobedience. Constitutional obedience is not optional and it is not subject to administrative convenience.
Kenyans are entitled to clear, honest answers. Who authorised these arrangements, on what legal basis and with what safeguards for public health and sovereignty? Dismissing concerns as mere alarm while sidestepping these questions undermines public trust in both the Ministry of Health and Parliament’s oversight role.
The right to health under Article 43 must be read together with Articles 10, 94, 95 and 165 on constitutionalism, public participation and the authority of the courts. You cannot promote public health by eroding the very legal framework that protects Kenyans from arbitrary executive action.
Kenya's cabinet secretary for health is asking for USD 20 million (KSh2.6 billion) to prepare for the first 100 Ebola cases.
Which Ebola cases? From where?
Ebola Billionaires.
Imagine waking up to a routine family day, only to walk straight into a calculated trap set by your own flesh and blood. Imagine spending 17 years rotting behind bars, wearing prison stripes, and branded a monster who defiled his own daughters aged 7 and 9. Now, imagine finding out that the entire nightmare was an engineered script.
A script designed to eliminate you permanently so that your family property could be stolen. This is the harrowing, real-life story of Daniel Wanyeki, a case that has entirely shaken Kiambu County and the nation. The nightmare began back in 2007.
Daniel Wanyeki was a hardworking family man who had invested in a prime 1.25-acre piece of land in Ruiru. Following a bitter domestic fallout, his ex-wife became consumed by greed and decided that the easiest way to seize absolute ownership of the property was to completely eliminate him from the picture.
In late 2007, she took their two young daughters, fully coached them, threatened them with severe punishment, and systematically brainwashed them into fabricating a horrific story of abuse against their father.When the case went to trial, the legal system listened to the terrified minors.
There was no medical forensic testing and no DNA evidence, just the weaponized testimonies of two small children under their mother's absolute grip. The court handed Wanyeki a life sentence, and he was escorted straight to Kamiti Maximum Security Prison.
With Daniel safely locked away behind bars, the ex-wife immediately took control of the prime Ruiru land. She subdivided the plot and sold it off to unsuspecting buyers, pocketing millions of shillings from the fraudulent sale.
Once she had successfully liquidated the asset and gotten her money, she completely abandoned the very children she claimed to protect. With the father in prison & the mother gone to enjoy the proceeds of the land, the two young girls were cast out of their own home and spent the remainder of their childhood and teenage years growing up in a children's home.
For 17 long years, spanning from 2007 all the way to late 2024, the sisters carried a suffocating weight of guilt, knowing that their innocent father was rotting in a maximum-security cell because of a lie they were forced to tell.
As grown adults, they could no longer live with the crushing burden and finally decided to break the silence. They stepped forward, approached the Kiambu High Court under Judge Dorah Chepkwony, and exposed the dark truth, revealing that their father never touched them and that their mother had forced them to lie solely to facilitate the land theft.
After reviewing the historic, emotional confessions of the daughters, the High Court quashed the original life sentence. Following final legal assessments by the office of the DPP, Daniel Wanyeki finally walked out of the prison gates a completely free man.
He went into prison in 2007 when his daughters were tiny children and walked out to find them as fully grown women. Seventeen years of prime youth were completely gone, yet in an unbelievable show of grace, Daniel embraced his daughters and publicly forgave them, recognizing that they were just innocent pawns in a wicked game played by an adult. WOMEN ARE VERY DANGEROUS CREATURES!!
We will not allow these Ebola merchants to sell us fear and terror.
Never, again.
COVID19 taught us a lot.
Just use other means to loot our resources. But, using Ebola? No way.
Court Update:
The High Court has granted conservatory orders restraining the Government from establishing, operationalising, facilitating, approving, or permitting any Ebola quarantine, isolation, exposure, or treatment facility in Kenya pursuant to the challenged arrangement with the United States or any other foreign government pending the hearing and determination of the petition.
The Court has further prohibited the admission into, transfer to, receipt within, or facilitation of entry into Kenya of persons exposed to or infected with Ebola under the challenged arrangement.
The Court has also compelled the Respondents to disclose all agreements, negotiations, approvals, risk assessments, and operational protocols relating to the proposed facility and arrangement within 7 days.
These orders maintain the current state of affairs, prevent irreversible actions from being taken before constitutional scrutiny, and ensure transparency and public accountability in a matter raising significant concerns about public health, sovereignty, and constitutional governance.
.@joshuamalidzo .@NoraMbagathi
Coca-Cola warns that the proposed Finance Bill 2025 plan to impose Sh20 per litre excise duty on fruit juice could raise prices by about Sh6 per litre, a 42% increase.
It says this could increase production costs, cut profits, and reduce tax revenue as demand for juice drops.
The High Court has ordered Kenya's government to disclose details of its deal with the US to set up an Ebola quarantine facility in Laikipia.
The court also wants health and safety reports made public.
In Kiambu County, people are reportedly building houses only on weekends and public holidays due to alleged harassment by county askaris who, in collusion with local chiefs, solicit money from property owners. The are chiefs moves around to see houses that are under construction then they notify the kanjo. Kiambu County is rotten to the core. Even in some of the larger estates, it is alleged that investors are required to surrender a few housing units to H.E. in order to operate smoothly.
About 90% of KPC’s top 20 shareholders are unknown since their shares are held through nominee accounts.
Only Uganda National Oil Company and Kenya’s Unclaimed Financial Assets Authority are known.
[The top 20 shareholders control 94.3% of KPC].
USA House Foreign Affairs Committee has opposed the Trump administration’s move to outsource the care of American Ebola patients to Kenya, saying the US already has domestic facilities designed to safely handle Ebola cases.
The committee says Americans abroad should be brought home and treated by their own government, not dumped on a foreign country.
Now that we are finally talking about school safety, the Ministry of Education must also address the madness of 3-year-old children being paraded on roads at 4:30am and 5am waiting for school buses.
This is also harming children. Maybe not death in the physical sense, but what kind of childhood is that?
A toddler should not be standing by the roadside in darkness like a factory worker reporting for duty.
Some of these school routines are quietly destroying children while adults pretend it is normal.