INJUSTICE ANYWHERE IS A THREAT TO JUSTICE EVERYWHERE.
Civic Education Lobbyists| Digital Literacy Activists| Environmentalists| Youth and Women Powerhouse|
Last week, we joined World Health🏥 Summit Regional Meeting 2026, organised by Ministry of Health, Kenya ,@AfricaCDC@JoepLangeInst@AKUGlobal@WHO to discuss on practical ways to fund stronger, sustainable health systems in the context of Global Health Architecture reforms.
Governments fear what they cannot control. #RightsCon2026 was cancelled because open dialogue on human rights is threatening those who suppress it. We will not be silenced. 🇰🇪✊ #KeepItOn
When spaces for dialogue are disrupted, trust is shaken.
We must protect platforms where rights are discussed openly. This moment we should push to ask
Who controls civic spaces and who gets excluded?
#RightsCon#Accountability#RightsCon2026
Kenyans, wake up! Wake up Kenyans! Arise!
Billions have been lost in the fuel scandal and we are not angry or furious?
A cabinet secretary confesses to not knowing what is happening in his Ministry that led to the loss of billions and he remains in office?
Why? How? @OpiyoWandayi must go. Enough is enough already.
In Captain America: Civil War, there’s a moment that feels small in action but huge in meaning.
Iron Man, frustrated and exhausted, says he has
“lost patience.” It’s not just anger it’s a turning point.
Dialogue ends there.
Listening ends there.
And in its place comes action.
He turns to Spider-Man young, powerful, but still learning and gives a simple command: take Captain America’s shield.
That moment captures something deeper than a superhero fight.
Spider-Man doesn’t fully understand the history, the politics, or the weight of what’s happening.
He trusts the system he’s been brought into. He follows instructions. And just like that, he becomes an extension of someone else’s power.
Captain America’s shield, meanwhile, is more than vibranium it represents identity, protection, and the right to stand for something.
Taking it isn’t just strategy.
It’s the removal of agency.
This is where the scene stops being fiction and starts reflecting our present reality.
Today, artificial intelligence is playing a role very similar to Spider-Man in that moment fast, efficient, and incredibly capable, but often operating without full context or moral grounding. Those who build and control these systems, like Iron Man, are under pressure to act quickly, to solve problems, to optimize outcomes.
But when patience runs out, systems are deployed without fully considering who might be affected or excluded.
In many parts of Africa, this dynamic is already unfolding. Digital identity systems, biometric registration, and automated decision-making tools are being introduced to improve governance and service delivery.
But for communities that are already marginalized especially those facing statelessness the risks are profound. If you are not captured in the data, you don’t exist in the system. And if the system is making decisions about access to services, movement, or rights, then invisibility becomes a form of exclusion.
Worse still, these systems can misidentify people. A wrong match, a missing record, or biased data can lead to denial of services or wrongful targeting. It is, in many ways, like having your shield taken away in a system you never fully understood or consented to. The power imbalance is stark: those who design and deploy the technology hold control, while those subjected to it often have little say.
The real lesson from that scene is not about heroes and villains. It is about what happens when power stops listening and starts acting unilaterally. Technology, like Spider-Man, is not inherently good or bad—it depends on how it is used and who it serves. But without accountability, inclusion, and a deep understanding of context, it can easily become a tool that reinforces inequality rather than addressing it.
As AI continues to shape governance, identity, and participation, the question is no longer whether it will be used. But how will it protect people’s “shields” their rights, identities, and dignity or will it be used to take them away in the name of efficiency?
For those working on digital rights, civic space, and ending statelessness, the answer lies in ensuring that No one is invisible in the systems being built, and that no system is allowed to act without being held accountable to the people it affects.
Hello guys. In case you don’t know what’s going on in Watamu, the Watamu park was taken up by the affordable housing project and the locals rejected it, went to court . On 24th Dec The court issued an injunction to stop any further work on the said plot, however over the weekend locals complained that the falling of trees and clearing is still on going as seen in this video despite the court order. We went to serve the court order today and successfully managed to eject the workers from the park. This is utterly shameful and should not be allowed!
On this Human Rights Day, we reaffirm our commitment to a society where dignity, safety, and justice are non-negotiable. At K-Haki, we stand with communities in the fight against GBV, demand accountable leadership, and champion citizens who uphold their duties. Together, we protect our everyday essentials and build a fair, inclusive, and human-centered future for all.
#HumanRightsDay #ForumCiv #VocalAfrica #HakiAfrica #K-Haki
Our discussions focused on strengthening civic participation, amplifying community voices, and building youth-led initiatives that address local governance challenges and climate risks.
Together with TARDA, K-Haki is co-developing tools and programs to educate, equip, and empower young people to claim their rights, participate in decision-making, and protect their communities. #HumanRights #Governance
This partnership strengthens youth innovation, accountability, and resilience in Kibra and beyond. K-Haki continues to champion informed, active, and climate-conscious communities. #YouthLeadership #CommunityPower #YouthAgency #ClimateAction
justice hub from Kibra, engaged with @TardaKE to explore ways young people can lead change in governance, human rights, and climate resilience. #YouthLeadership#YouthPower
ADVANCING YOUTH AGENCY: TARDA MEETS K-HAKI ON RIGHTS, GOVERNANCE & CLIMATE RESILIENCE
1: @TardaKE held a strategic engagement with Kituo cha HAKI (K-HAKI) — a youth-led human rights and social justice hub redefining citizen agency from the heart of Kibra. #YouthLeadership
Beneath the surface of stability, freedoms are eroding.
Reports from 2024-2025 detail widespread impunity in Tanzania, from election violence and political silencing to the forced displacement of Indigenous Maasai.
We cannot stay silent when basic dignity is denied. Where do you stand?
Gunmen stormed a girls' boarding school in Kebbi State, abducting 25 schoolgirls and killing one dedicated staff member in a pre-dawn raid.
This is the latest in a wave of mass kidnappings by armed bandits who exploit remote schools, turning the right to education into a life-or-death gamble for children in Northern Nigeria.
We started the journey in Uasin Gishu, Eldoret City.
We are seeking your assistance in reposting the petition to have the constitution of Kenya studied in school from primary to tertiary level.
https://t.co/juUHSml0wR
If this is true that foreign forces were used to suppress Kenyan protesters, this is not just a human rights violation it’s a betrayal of sovereignty. No government should ever turn its guns, or borrow another’s, against its own people. #JusticeForGenZ#KenyaDeservesBetter