Let's try something
Comment or quote this tweet with a car that you own and how has been the ownership.
Ie.
Bmw e36.preety decent car.reliable.easy to work on n parts aren't as cheap but they are available
Vehicle theft involving fresh imports has become increasingly gone high.
You import a car, and within days or weeks, it gets stolen.
In some cases (not all), buyers are handed only one key while another key remains in the wrong hands.
That spare key is later be used to steal the vehicle.
( these thieves are installing trackers. Be vigilant)
To help protect our clients, we will now be verifying the number of keys programmed to each vehicle during inspections.
This helps establish whether there are additional keys assigned to the car that you may not be aware of.
For clients whose vehicles we have inspected within the last three months, we are planning a day next week when you can bring your car in for key-count verification.
This service will be FREE.
Our role goes beyond inspections. We are committed to walking with you throughout your car ownership journey.
For pre-purchase inspections, contact us on 0729 686 646.
Remember to follow our WhatsApp channel for practical car care tips.
Here's the link . https://t.co/vBzkjISSlJ
I will keep saying and will never tire. We need to find a way to get rid of matatus and bodabodas. They are the biggest contributor to the disorder and fatalities we see on our roads. Sensitizations, trainings and enforcement will not work for them! We are too corrupt for that!
Mumeskia huyo student ali rushwa from a Nico bus because hakuwa na 50 bob? I'm more mad at a society that watches people getting killed! Kwa basi Iko na watu more than 50 nobody found it right kulipia mtoto wa shule fare? Whatever happened to empathy mahn! We can be better humans
The court stopping NTSA’s smart driving licence and automated fines system should make us ask a bigger question…
Is Kenya really chasing road safety, or are we rushing to automate punishment?
You cannot copy Germany’s cameras and forget Germany’s engineering.
You cannot copy developed countries’ fines and ignore the decades they spent building safer roads, pedestrian systems, markings, intelligent highways and driver culture.
Even today, pedestrians on Thika Road and our bypasses still gamble with death crossing highways because basic footbridges and safe crossing points are missing.
But somehow, the fastest infrastructure we can complete is the one that sends a fine to your phone.
A camera does not save the pedestrian who has nowhere safe to cross.
A smart licence does not fix a poorly designed road.
A digital fine does not replace investment in safety.
Kenyans are not against technology. Kenyans are not against discipline.
But technology without fairness feels like taxation with a different name.
Countries we admire built the foundation first — then automated enforcement.
We seem to be automating enforcement while still struggling with the foundation.
Road safety should start by protecting lives…
Not perfecting how to collect money from them.
Cannabis, Heroin, and Cocaine are the top three most used illicit drugs in Kenya.
But the story does not end there.
NACADA's latest wastewater analysis has revealed something even more concerning. Our sewage is now showing evidence of synthetic drugs, emerging psychoactive substances, prescription drug abuse, dangerous drug mixtures, and even signs of small-scale clandestine drug laboratories operating within the country.
For years, many believed Kenya was mainly a transit route for narcotics. The data now suggests we may be evolving into a consumption and, potentially, a production hub for more sophisticated synthetic drugs.
What makes this study unique is that it removes the guesswork. People may hide their habits, deny surveys, or avoid interviews, but sewage tells the whole truth.
The findings should push us to ask harder questions:
Why are more young people turning to drugs?
What role do unemployment, hopelessness, mental health struggles, social pressure, and governance failures play?
Why are prevention and rehabilitation still receiving less attention than they deserve?
This analysis raises questions and reveals secrets that can't be ignored.
If Dedan Kimathi had survived, y'all would have got the Land Redistribution Commission.
Unlock the potential of land.
Teach people to value land again.
Optimise production.
Land is more than just wealth.
Land is sacred.
Land gives us dignity.
No sovereign citizen should be landless.
All land belongs to the community.
Anyone who preaches getting people off land is a NEW WORLD ORDER stooge.
A police officer is reported to have died following a tragic road accident in Nairobi's Westlands area on Friday, June 5.
According to reports circulating online, the officer was riding a police motorcycle and was allegedly pursuing a boda boda rider when the fatal crash occurred. The officer is said to have sustained severe injuries and died at the scene.
Details surrounding the incident remain unclear, and authorities had not released an official statement on the circumstances of the crash by the time of publication. The identity of the officer has also not been made public.