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When two heads of state meet to discuss how to whip and discipline citizens demanding accountability, we’ve crossed from democracy into dictatorship. President Suluhu’s call for President Ruto to join her in suppressing Gen Zs is a conspiracy against constitutional rights.
The audacity to frame calls for good governance as notorious behaviour that must be tamed is an insult to every freedom our constitutions guarantee. Democracy is anchored on the fundamental pillars of the rule of law, human rights and accountable leadership. These aren’t negotiable.
If exercising our constitutional right to protest makes us deserving of canes and whips then our leaders have forgotten who they serve. We will not be silenced. We will not be beaten into submission. The Constitution is our shield and defender and not the whims of those who fear accountability.
A Kenyan by the name Elias Wekesa has taken Safaricom to court, and every Kenyan should pay attention.
He says Safaricom deactivated his line after it stayed inactive for a few months, then reassigned it to another person.
When he tried using it again, he was met with a shock.
The number was gone.
Worse, he says he could no longer receive OTPs from his bank and other platforms tied to that number.
This case matters because it touches every Kenyan.
Because your phone number is no longer just a number.
It is tied to your bank account.
Your email.
Your work accounts.
Your private life.
The moment that number is handed to someone else, the risks begin.
OTPs can go elsewhere.
Recovery codes can land in another person’s hands.
Account alerts can reach a stranger.
That person is not just holding a SIM card.
They may be holding access to parts of your digital life.
And if they have bad intentions, the damage can be immediate.
And for families who have lost loved ones, it cuts even deeper.
A parent’s number.
A sibling’s number.
A loved one’s number.
One day, it holds memories.
The next day, it belongs to a stranger.
This is why Safaricom must be forced to create stronger safeguards before reassigning numbers.
Because in today’s world, a phone number is not disposable.
It is identity.
And identity should never be reassigned without protection.
The President Is Out of Order.
The Office of the Auditor General is a constitutional office, not a department of State House. Dismissing a report that questions the loss of KES 50 billion from SHA undermines the Constitution itself.
KES 50 billion is not a clerical error. It is public money collected from the sweat of Kenyans.
To brush aside such findings insults every Kenyan who struggles to access healthcare while public resources disappear.
You cannot swear to protect the Constitution on Tuesday and tear it up on Wednesday because the truth hurts.
The current culture of institutionalised violence as a form of settling political conflicts will continue to be a defining and destructive feature of Kenyan politics. If NOT promptly addressed, we are risking our country to chaos and violence ahead of the 2027 General Elections.
These are not leaders , they are parasites in suits.
While wananchi skip meals, they gather in Naivasha to eat five courses, burn fuel in convoys, switch on sirens for ego, and congratulate each other for absolutely nothing. This is not retreat. It’s a loot symposium.
They tax bread, milk, fuel then spend the proceeds on buffets and Benzes. That’s not incompetence; that’s contempt. Contempt for suffering, for work, for dignity.
A Parliament that cannot cut its own excess has no moral authority to lecture citizens on sacrifice. None. Zero. You cannot preach austerity with a full mouth and a wine glass in hand.
This is why people say “drain the swamp.” Because swamps are where:
creatures feed without producing
rot is protected by mud
everything survives by sucking life from elsewhere
Kenya’s political class fits that biology perfectly.
History has a pattern: when elites detach completely, they eventually meet the people not at ballot boxes, but in moments they never planned for. Ask Marie Antoinette. Ask Ceaușescu. Ask every ruling class that mistook patience for stupidity.
This video never gets old. The PASSION. A powerful conversation.
"Has Nigeria spilled blood or dropped an atomic bomb in Nagasaki or Hiroshima? You should be quiet when it comes to Moral condemnation. America should be quiet".
He had to apologize at the end for speaking the truth too raw and bluntly.
The silence in this room‼️A powerful moment of truth as Mallence Bart-Williams confronts centuries of exploitation with calm precision‼️ Africa’s history is still being reckoned with, and accountability is uncomfortable when truth is spoken plainly‼️
Africa is waking up‼️