When most Africans and Kenyans in particular travel to European or Asian countries they feel so lonely and end up on social media as their communities. They are live 24/7 trying to connect with people back at home. If you can make it here just stay at home.
Sheila Chebii came to Australia a month ago, full of dreams and hope for a better future through quality education. Just exactly a month later,she died under unexplained circumstances while working at Meriton Suites Pitt Street Sydney. Her family deserves answers, transparency, and justice.
Chebii was a Very young woman, a sister, and a hardworking member of the community. Tragically, her life ended under unexplained circumstances while working at Meriton Suites. There was No media coverage on this. It's 8days after the incident without public acknowledgement of her death.
According to reports, Sheila fell from the 19th floor to the 4th floor at her workplace. However, those who were able to view her body, after difficulties around this, say they observed inconsistencies with the information shared so far, raising serious unanswered questions for both the family and the wider community.
This is not about making unproven accusations.
This is about demanding transparency, accountability, and ensuring that:
- a Kenyan worker matters,
- an Immigrant matters,
- and a Woman’s life matters.
The family deserves answrs and closure.
We are also calling upon the Kenyan Mission Office in Canbera, whose role includes protecting and supporting Kenyan citizens abroad, to support a diplomatic government-to-government inquiry so that this burden is not left for the community alone to bear.
The community will peacefully gather in Canberra to call for:
- Transparency in investigations
- Accountability where necessary
- Respect and dignity for Sheila
- Support for the grieving family
- Proper review of all available evidence
We are asking for truth.
#JusticeForSheilaChebii
#TransparencyForSheila
#Justiceforwomen
#KenyansInAustralia
#JusticeForWorkers
🚨🚨🎙️ Wayne Rooney on Arsenal winning the Premier League after 22 years: an emotional speech 🎤
“This team… this team… honestly, I’m actually feeling emotional for them right now. For years people called them soft, fragile, bottlers… every season it was ‘stay humble’, ‘show some mentality’, ‘build some muscle’, ‘they’re not built for the big moments’. 😭
Well… where’s Mr. Mentality now? Where’s the man telling everyone to stay humble now? Where’s the man mocking them with a bottle. I can’t see them 👀
Because Arsenal have gone and done it. After 22 years. And they didn’t do it in an easy season either, they did it in one of the toughest Premier League campaigns I can remember. The pressure, the intensity, the competition… and they still came out on top.
If right now, you are still doubting this team then you’ve been left behind, and it’s only a matter of time you will stop doubting them.
You have to give credit where it’s due. Mikel Arteta deserves enormous praise because he rebuilt this club step by step and got people believing again.
I can already see Arsenal fans becoming the loudest people on earth for the next 20 years… and honestly? Fair enough. They’ve suffered enough. Congratulations to Arsenal Football Club.” 🏆❤️
If Arsenal win the quadruple, Tottenham get relegated, and England win the World Cup, all in the same summer, then I think I’m giving up my season ticket, retiring from football, and taking up knitting or something.
Nothing would ever top it, it would only be downhill from there
Why Manchester City Fans Are Quietly Nervous
For years, Manchester City have been the Premier League’s symbol of inevitability. Under Pep Guardiola, they mastered the art of late-season domination, crushing the hopes of rivals like Arsenal and Liverpool with ruthless consistency.
That history still shapes how this season is discussed. Many assume that once again, City will surge, others will stumble, and the title will return to Manchester.
But this assumption ignores a critical reality: this is not the same City. Much of Guardiola’s current squad has never fought through a full-blown title race. Only a handful remain from the Treble-winning side, and even fewer are regular starters. This is a rebuilt team , talented, exciting, but largely untested under sustained pressure.
The old City’s greatest weapon was not just quality. It was emotional control. They knew how to suffer in April, grind in May, and stay calm when rivals panicked. They had lived those moments before.
This team has not.
The club may carry institutional memory, but trophies are not won by history. They are won by players. And “Jenny in marketing” does not take corners.
So when people casually predict that Mikel Arteta’s Arsenal will inevitably collapse, they are leaning on the past rather than analysing the present.
Today’s City are still brilliant. They may yet dominate again. But they no longer have automatic authority. They are in transition, learning , again , how to carry expectation.
That is why many City fans are uneasy.
Not because they doubt their team’s talent.
But because, for the first time in years, dominance is no longer guaranteed.
This season is not about inevitability.
It is about whether Manchester City can relearn how to be invincible.
@EmekaOkoye@jamesagada@israel_ajoje@MuftauAdewale3
"Kama mama yangu anaeza nifanyia hivi, heri nikae bila mama! I wish Mungu angenipea mama mwingine!" Drama as a daughter bursts out with anger as she confronts her mother.😥
Kenya is hurting. Not loudly, not on headlines but quietly, inside homes where parents wake up every morning forced to choose between health, rent, food, and education, knowing none of them will be fully met. This is not survival. This is slow suffocation.
Benjamin is a Form Two student at St. Domnic Kasarani moving to Form Three. Last term, he never sat his end-term exams. Not because he failed, not because he refused to learn but because poverty shut the school gate in his face. While his classmates returned to school this term, Benjamin stayed home.
Every morning he prepares a jiko and charcoal, waiting for his mother to return from marikiti where she roasts maize for strangers. He waits with hope hope that she will come back with food, hope that something small will remain for rent. This is the routine of a child who should be in class, not counting coins.
What he told me today is what truly broke me. He said he is ready to operate a boda boda to help his mother put food on the table, but he is only 17 and has no ID. A child willing to trade his education and safety for survival. That is not courage that is desperation created by neglect.
This is how children drop out of school in Kenya. Not because they are lazy, but because the system looks away. Not because parents don’t care, but because they have been pushed beyond their limits.
I appeal to Kasarani MP Hon. @KarauriR you have helped many, and this is one more child whose future can still be saved. This is not about politics. It is about responsibility.
And to Kenyans: if we ignore stories like Benjamin’s, we become part of the problem. This is not a plea for sympathy. It is a call for action. School fees, basic support, attention small interventions that change a life forever.
Benjamin does not need pity.
He needs a classroom.
He needs a chance.
He needs us now.
@CollinRugg Here is a documentary on how isolated tribe resists contact with outsiders in the Peruvian Amazon..
These tribes have been interacting for sometime now.
https://t.co/9rPweqwiWB
🚨WATCH: iShowSpeed explains after the stream ended that security had told him to notice a kid in Rwanda who’d been riding behind them for three and a half hours on a bike that kept breaking down, just to meet him.
Realising how far the 16-year-old went leaves Speed genuinely shocked, and he gives him a special, heartfelt greeting in return
I’m yet to understand why such a talented singer hasn’t hit the mass market yet. She is big, but mostly in urban spaces. Bridget Blue is the future of Kenyan music!