3 judges with the International Criminal Court filed a lawsuit in a US federal court against Trump and his administration, challenging the sanctions against them and calling it a "financial death penalty."
The judges bringing the lawsuit are:
- Kimberly Prost (Canada)
- Solomy Balungi Bossa (Uganda)
- Reine Adelaide Sophie Alapini-Gansou (Benin)
Trump placed sanctions on the judges over their judicial decisions regarding investigations into war crimes by Israel and the US.
The judges argue that the sanctions are extrajudicial measures meant to punish and coerce them. They say the restrictions cut them off from banking, online platforms, travel booking, and sometimes health insurance.
This should be much bigger news.
Say Her Name: Joy Kanini
She was only 25 years old, her body was dismembered and dumped in a sack in Ngangarithi Nyeri.
Her head is still missing.
The suspect John Muriithi is on the run. We need him arrested. Help us find him
#JusticeforJoyKanini#usikimye
🙌🏿🙌🏿🙌🏿Join later this evening for a Vernissage of the exhibition "Forging Urban Citizenship" at Munyu Space, Westlands. I'll opening for my elder sister @MCShazDecibelle !!
Doors open at 4:30, kosa uhurumiwe!! #ShereheTunayo
God. These guys are truly evil. We were saying on #MaishaKazini that the government is so parasitic, it profits from the death and unemployment it causes. It killed people precisely because it refused to recognize their constitutional right to demonstrate, now it uses the blood of those same people to "remember the lives WE lost." Who's "we" here? YOU, the ministry caused those lives to be lost. And are you so intellectually bankrupt that you must steal even the words, and the grief, on behalf of those you killed? This is why I despise public relations. It teaches people to manipulate words with no reverence for the truth.
#GoKmimicry
Tomorrow, 25th June 2026, we join all Kenyans in demanding justice, dignity and accountability from the State for all the victims of state brutality and repression.
#RutoMustGo#HakiSasa#JusticeNow
BREAKING: 187 MPs skipped the Finance Bill 2026 vote.
122 voted YES.
40 voted NO.
187 were absent.
Let that sink in.
More than half of Parliament failed to show up for a vote that will affect taxes, prices, businesses, and millions of Kenyan households.
Yet every month, taxpayers still pay their salaries, allowances, mileage claims, and perks.
Kenyans need the names of all 187 MPs who were absent.
If you can't show up for the Finance Bill, what exactly are taxpayers paying you for?
NB-N Edited image used.
Finance Bill 2026.
Out of 347 MPs, only 162 showed up to vote on one of the most consequential pieces of legislation affecting millions of Kenyans.
122 voted YES
40 voted NO
185 MPs were absent
If only 162 MPs can determine the future of the country's finances, then Kenyans have every right to ask:
Why are taxpayers funding 347 MPs when nearly half the House is missing during critical national decisions? 🇰🇪
BREAKING: Parliament may have just made sugar more expensive for millions of Kenyans.
Parliament has approved an amendment in the Finance Bill 2026, increasing the tax on imported sugar from KSh 7.50 per kg to KSh 40 per kg.
The explanation?
"Protect local farmers."
Sounds patriotic.
Sounds reasonable.
Sounds like something everyone should support.
But here is what they are not telling you:
Kenya consumes about 1.2 million tonnes of sugar every year.
In 2025, we produced only about 613,000 tonnes.
That means nearly half of the sugar we need has to come from somewhere else.
Imports.
So if we still depend on imported sugar, who exactly will pay this extra tax?
The importer?
The wholesaler?
Or the ordinary Kenyan buying sugar for tea?
I have seen this script before.
A tax is introduced in the name of helping Kenyans.
Months later, prices quietly go up.
Then we are told the increase was caused by "market forces."
Maybe I am wrong.
But if sugar prices start rising in the coming months, remember this post.
The elite tackle the problems of the broken-down system by finding private solutions that insulate them from the rest of the community; they do not try to engage with or seek a response from the state or institutions mandated to provide these services. The elite push the “politics is a dirty game” narrative and sponsor those they consider rough around the edges to get involved in politics. The elite spend a lot of time complaining and engaging on social media, while some self-styled political analysts hop from one radio or TV station to another offering “analyses”.
Analysis: https://t.co/EjE4zgAG95
@ObyObyerodhyamb@m_ogada@wmnjoya@jnyairo@ArkAnudDinYaSin@YusufSerunkuma@tony_mochama@ReginaldOduor@WMutunga@NativeLandgrab@DavidNdii@KiamaKaara@jkobuthi@realoyungapala@johngithongo #IWentToAlliance #TheElephant #EliteMediocrity #Governance
Kenya functions in word and deed as an imperial outpost, but the real source of concern is that even those of us who can perceive it treat it as dysfunction – it isn’t. The truth about Kenya is that our schools, systems, and government were designed that way, and are fully functioning as empire intended 63 years after “independence”. The old “schoolboys” are holding on to the offices they first occupied two generations ago and blithely selling the youth drivel like “You should create employment, not look for employment” or “You are the leaders of tomorrow” or “You should invest”…accompanied by the princely sum of 500 Kenya shillings (4 US dollars) in state funding to start their entrepreneurial journey.
Analysis: https://t.co/OEihJ9CCiB
@m_ogada@wmnjoya@jnyairo@ArkAnudDinYaSin@ObyObyerodhyamb@YusufSerunkuma@tony_mochama@ReginaldOduor@WMutunga@NativeLandgrab@DavidNdii@KiamaKaara@jkobuthi@realoyungapala@johngithongo #IWentToAlliance #TheElephant #EliteMediocrity #Governance
The same government called 8.4.4s so useless that employers were demanding CBC.
Kenyans must expand their minds and see that the government markets our survival strategies to foreigners. When educated people seek jobs abroad to escape the local economy, the government shows off to foreigners about our skills. But at home, the same government calls our skills useless and schemes hard to block children from advancing in school. Same with protests. Kenyans protest to challenge misrule and corruption. The government markets Kenya as a vibrant democracy with Kenyans very active in constitutionalism. But at home, the government insults and kills the same protestors it shows off about abroad.
This is deep, deep cruelty and hypocrisy that we have to understand.
You can talk with such bravado about caning children but you had nothing to say when the government decided to starve the kids in school with capitation of 90 bob.
Don't blame children for not accepting what you have accepted as the adults.
Picture this: Three boys are standing at the Macha Town roundabout. A well-known man in Macha, who was coming from drinking at Club Legends, hits one of them with his car.
The boys ask him what’s going on. The man reacts by getting out of the car with a machete. Then, without hesitation, he claims that the boys were trying to steal his car.
Within moments, boda boda riders have gathered around, and before long, they decide to burn the boys. That’s how dangerous mob justice can be.
Justice for our boys. My homies and former Mumbuni Boys School mates ; we will miss you.
Justice will be served. Rest in peace, Charlie, Stan, and Katuu. Stan & Katuu were brothers 💔 Tomorrow is Katuu’s birthday
Kindly retweet widely!!!
This kid went missing yesterday around TASSIA next to Summit Hospital.
If you have any info about her or a lost 4-year-old girl in a grey sweat pant kindly call 0722137283 or 0728975614.
BATUK: BRITAIN'S COLONIAL GRIP IN KENYA
BATUK: The White Man’s Burden in Kenya is not just a documentary about a British military base where soldiers roll around in the dirt for six months before returning home to the UK. It is a documentary about abuse of power, occupation of indigenous land and the unfinished business of colonialism.
For decades, ordinary Kenyans living around BATUK have raised allegations of abuse, sexual violence, ecological destruction and impunity, while one of the world’s most powerful former colonial powers continues to operate freely on Kenyan soil, handing out small amounts of compensation whenever evidence of alleged crimes reaches the media.
At the centre of the documentary is the story of Agnes Wanjiru, a 21-year-old Kenyan woman who was tortured, killed and dumped in a septic tank, while British soldiers mocked and ridiculed her death on social media. One soldier posed in front of the septic tank and posted, “If you know, you know.” Others joked about the five-month-old daughter she left behind, posting imagery of a baby beside a gravesite.
But the story goes beyond Agnes and her tragic killing and the shocking behaviour of British troops thereafter. The documentary asks deeper questions:
How did Britain maintain a military presence in Kenya, the very same year the country supposedly gained independence?
Why are foreign troops still training on stolen land while local communities continue to suffer?
And above all, why does the Kenyan government allow all of this?
Laikipia County, currently in the spotlight because of plans for an Ebola quarantine facility for US citizens, is the very same county where the BATUK military base is headquartered. This documentary helps connect the dots about why Kenya’s political elite remain so willing to cede sovereignty to foreign powers like Britain, and why they may be willing to do the same again with the United States.
This is Sovereign Media’s first-ever documentary. We are a small, independent team with a brand-new YouTube channel and no corporate backing. We need your support now more than ever.
Watch. Share. Comment. Spread it everywhere.
@AhmedKaballo@NaamMedia@VoxUmmah@venanalysis@qiaocollective@ProgIntl@KawsachunNews@OrinocoTribune@blkagendareport@SoberaniaPod