BREAKING: As I promised, here is evidence showing how the Finance Bill 2026 could increase M-Pesa and digital transaction costs. Reject the Finance Bill 2026
UDA propagandists asked for evidence. Here it is.
Go to pages 16 and 17 of the Finance Bill under Clause 31(b).
TWEET 2
The bill says:
“Section A of the First Schedule to the Value Added Tax Act is amended,”
Then specifically:
“in Part II.... by deleting subparagraph (b) and substituting therefor the following new paragraph...”
This is important.
Let's move to 2/5
I have noticed some UDA bloggers are now hiding behind the “read the clause properly” argument. Fine. Let’s read it properly then.
First: Reject the Finance Bill 2026.
The bill is moving electric bikes and bicycle manufacturing inputs from ZERO-RATED to VAT EXEMPT.
And that change matters a lot.
Under zero-rating, manufacturers could claim back VAT paid on spare parts and raw materials used to manufacture the bikes. That helped keep production costs and retail prices lower.
Now under VAT-exempt status, they won’t be able to recover that VAT.
Meaning?
Higher production costs.
Higher prices for electric bikes and bicycles.
Consumers will pay more in the end.
I have attached:
• The clauses in the Finance Bill
• Snippets showing the CURRENT zero-rated status
• Evidence showing the parts are being moved to
Paragraph 157 of the VAT Act
And Paragraph 157 falls under VAT EXEMPT supplies.
So please, let’s stop pretending this change has no effect.
Al Jazeera has released a disturbing documentary exposing how Kenyans are allegedly being surveilled through their phones, and how Safaricom may have been enabling it.
According to the documentary, citizens’ phone data has reportedly been shared with security agencies, while spyware has allegedly been used to infiltrate devices and monitor people.
Think about that for a moment.
The same phone you use for M-Pesa, calls, WhatsApp and private family conversations could allegedly be turned into a surveillance tool against you.
This should terrify every Kenyan.
Because this is no longer about politicians.
It’s about ordinary people.
A boda rider criticizing taxes.
A journalist exposing corruption.
A university student tweeting against the government.
A parent complaining about the economy in a WhatsApp group.
If unchecked, Kenya could slowly return to the fear that existed during the Moi era, where people whispered inside homes because they feared the state was listening.
Only this time, the informer is in your pocket.
Your phone. That is why this story matters.
A government that watches its own citizens is not protecting democracy or them.
It is protecting leaders like Ruto.
And once people become afraid to speak freely, freedom dies quietly.
Kenyans, we are being conned. Today, I exposed the shocking cost of Talanta Stadium.
Now here’s the most unbelievable part:
A 60,000-seat stadium in Kenya is set to cost MORE than Arsenal’s Emirates Stadium. ie 97.5 billion ksh
Read that again slowly.
To put that into perspective:
🇬🇧 Emirates Stadium (England)
60,704 seats — Ksh 68B
🇨🇮 Stade Alassane Ouattara (Ivory Coast)
60,000 seats — Ksh 33.1B
🇪🇸 Estadio La Cartuja (Spain)
70,000 seats — Ksh 23.5B
🇲🇦 Hassan II Stadium (Morocco)
115,000 seats — Ksh 64.5B
🇲🇦 Ibn Battouta Stadium (Morocco)
60,000 seats — Ksh 13.9B
🇨🇩 Stade des Martyrs (DRC)
80,000 seats — Ksh 5.9B
So why is Kenya paying almost 100 BILLION for a stadium smaller than some of these?
For the price of ONE Talanta Stadium, other countries are building 2 or even 3 world-class stadiums.
And we are expected to clap instead of asking questions.
This country is being looted in broad daylight. It might look good, beautiful, but we also need to point out the robbery and stop the robbers.
BREAKING: As I promised you yesterday, today we reveal how Kenyans may have been misled on the REAL cost of Talanta Stadium.
You were told:
“KSh44.5 billion.”
But the latest Auditor-General report now suggests the long-term liability could exceed KSh97.5 BILLION once interest and the 15-year financing structure are included.
That is more than DOUBLE.
And it gets worse.
The Auditor-General says key guarantee documents linked to the deal were NOT provided for audit verification.
Meaning:
Kenyans could be carrying massive hidden costs without full transparency.
Now ask yourself:
How does a 60,000-seat stadium end up costing Kenya more than some of the biggest stadiums in Africa?
📍 Morocco:
Hassan II Stadium - 115,000 seats — approx KSh24.5B
📍 Morocco:
Ibn Battouta Stadium - 60,000 seats — approx KSh13.9B
📍 DRC:
Stade des Martyrs - 80,000 seats — approx KSh5.9B
Meanwhile, Kenyan taxpayers may end up paying over KSh97 BILLION for ONE stadium.
This matters because:
It is YOUR taxes,
YOUR fuel levies,
YOUR future debt burden.
At that cost exposure, Kenya could theoretically build multiple world-class stadiums.
Instead, ordinary Kenyans may be left paying for decades.
Source: Auditor-General report on the Sports Fund.
I have attached a snippet of the report in the image above
And there is more coming, an even bigger exposee, so follow me - Sholla Ard . Adiós! 👋
I have witnessed this club go from doubters to believers, and from believers to champions. It took hard work and I always did everything I could to help the club get there. Nothing makes me prouder than that.
Us crumbling to yet another defeat this season was very painful and not what our fans deserve. I want to see Liverpool go back to being the heavy metal attacking team that opponents fear and back to being a team that wins trophies. That is the football I know how to play and that is the identity that needs to be recovered and kept for good. It cannot be negotiable and everyone that joins this club should adapt to it.
Winning some games here and there is not what Liverpool should be about. All teams win games.
Liverpool will always be a club that means a great deal to me and to my family. I want to see it succeed for long after I have moved on.
As I’ve always said, qualifying to next season’s Champions League is the bare minimum and I will do everything I can to make that happen.