Dr Fred Matiang'i 8 years ago. Jamaa could even go to dormitories to check the conditions of the places.
Wengi mlikua mnasema ni PR but this is how such negligence is corrected.
This man can save our country. Ebola Utumishi Girls Academy.
DCI boss Amin is personally using the money meant to gather crime information from the public. The biggest enemy of police officers are the IG and DCI boss Amin.
Two useless individuals.
What is life Anyway? Elizabeth Njoki is 21 years old. She was born and raised in Nakuru by a banker father and a businesswoman mother. Her father built a 12-bedroom mansion and owned two cars while her mother ran a boutique. Life was comfortable until she was 12, when her father was diagnosed with cancer and diabetes. He died a month later.
Two weeks after the burial, her father's two brothers showed up and kicked the family out of their own home. They took the cars and the boutique, claiming everything belonged to their late brother. The family had nowhere to go.
They were taken in by a friend of her mother for two weeks. They then moved to Naivasha where another friend helped her mother find a job to provide for the children. The children went back to school and tried to accept their new reality.
After some time, the mother fell into depression and nearly lost her mind. Together with a friend, Njoki helped take her to Mathare Hospital where she was admitted. With her mother gone, Njoki dropped out of school and started doing casual jobs to buy food for her three siblings.
Her mother eventually got better and was discharged from hospital with help from the area MCA. Despite everything, Njoki managed to score 378 marks in her KCSE and a Good Samaritan paid for her entire secondary education.
But in Form Three, her mother's condition worsened again. She started disappearing for days at a time before returning home. Without her knowledge, some men took advantage of her situation and she came back pregnant. Njoki once again had to leave school and look for casual jobs to keep the family fed. Her mother later gave birth to their fifth child.
When they could not pay rent, the landlord locked them out with all their belongings still inside. A family friend then relocated them to their rural home in Kinangop to live with their grandmother. Things stabilised for a while. The children went back to school and Njoki adapted to a life of casual work because her mother's mental health kept deteriorating.
Their grandmother died in 2024 and they were kicked out of that home too. Njoki used her savings to rent a single room and life went on.
In June last year, Njoki collapsed and was rushed to hospital by a neighbour after she was found bleeding. Doctors discovered she had fibroids in her uterus requiring urgent surgery, or the uterus would have to be removed entirely to stop the bleeding. She could not raise the 80,000 shillings needed for the operation and continued living with the daily bleeding.
She was trying to manage her own condition, care for her mentally unstable mother, provide for the younger children and pay rent all at once. It became too much. The landlord kicked them out again and a neighbour took them in.
Then in August last year, their second born son was involved in an accident and died on the spot. Njoki went to the area chief who helped organise a simple burial within two days at a public cemetery in Longonot. Only a handful of people attended. Their mother was absent.
Njoki scored a B plus in KCSE. She had the grades to build a future for herself. Instead she chose to stay behind and hold her family together. Today she lives on hope alone, trusting that God will find a way through.
Final Update:
After my grievances with @ICEALION i can with full confidence say they have paid the full claim of Ksh 7,800,000 which has reflected in the account provided.
Thank you very much to the X family for the support you gave me as I pursed the claim compensation.
Good afternoon @ICEALION kindly process my claim (KDV 187J) of Ksh 7,800,000. I’m tired of the everyday lies from Magdalene Nekesa of the claims department.
Mr. President, @WilliamsRuto it is alarming that EPRA @EPRA_KE appears to be playing games in cohort with a cabal inside the OMC, even as we have more than enough fuel coming into the country.
As a member of the Energy Committee, I can authoritatively state that Kenya’s monthly requirement for PMS is only about 180,000 metric tonnes. Yet the Government‑to‑Government (G2G) arrangement is today offloading 36 MT, with an additional 180 MT expected within the next two weeks via the vessels Valory Roma, MT Banias, and MT Sinthia. These cargoes were loaded in Europe and the United States at approximately USD 84 per metric tonne, which should translate into cheaper, not more expensive, fuel for Kenyan consumers.
Given this level of supply far above demand, the continued upward revision of pump prices suggests systemic manipulation rather than genuine cost‑pass‑through. The public deserves a clear explanation of why prices are rising when stocks are more than adequate and the landed cost of fuel remains relatively low.
Mr President, @WilliamsRuto how can the Ministry of Energy buy fuel outside the G2G framework at ~USD 253–255/MT while G2G fuel is fixed at USD 84/MT and still expect prices to stay affordable? This is a cabal enterprise. A few greedy faces are making everything in Kenya very expensive. Kenyans need to see real charges filed in court against all those energy officials and others involved. Not fake resignations while in police custody. No theatrics just dockets, trials, and convictions.
I sat in the committee room yesterday reading emails between ORYX ENERGY LTD and the Ministry of Energy officials, including the Cabinet Secretary, and I was shocked to discover that they were all in agreement to import fuel at USD 253.94 per MT—while the same government they serve imports fuel at USD 84.00 per MT. If OMCs are not taking advantage in cohorts with ministry officials, who is fooling whom? This is an artificial get‑rich‑quick scam orchestrated by a fuel cabal! We are not stupid—only for the deal to be cancelled at the last minute when a shipment of substandard fuel imported by ONE PETROLEUM LIMITED arrived and was offloaded, costing Kenyans the equivalent of USD 198,855 per MT—still USD 114 more per MT than the government’s own G‑to‑G rate.
I knew Havi was a nutjob when he tried to convince me that he has a kid with Saddam Hussein's sister when he was courting me. He has a kid with an arab woman from mombasa yes... lakini hapo kwa Saddam sijui ilifikiria it'd impress me... ama?