I have a question.
Why is it that Kenyans are getting murdered by the police in Nanyuki at the expense of American "Ebola" patients?
I don't understand. Today, they have shot another guy.
.@StateDept announced $20 million in funding for Ebola preparedness in Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda, and South Sudan; bringing the total for the Ebola response to more than $220 million. The additional funding will support national emergency operations centers; enhance capacities for surveillance, testing, border screening, and infection prevention and control; enable procurement and distribution of critical commodities; and prepare countries to manage potential patients with Ebola disease.
Office of the Deputy President spent a total of Sh298 million on travel in 9 months of FY2025/26, according to CoB.
This includes Sh76 million on foreign travel and Sh222 million on domestic travel.
Nelson Havi: If you don’t purpose to be honest to the law and you know the Executive have insurance on you, don’t apply to be a judge, that is how we end up with stupid decisions like these.
#JKLive
In your career, you will meet a co-worker who hates you for no reason. It is very important you keep showing up at your best, keep triggering them and their insecurities.
Today’s Kenyan parliament session on BATUK crimes was held behind closed doors. UK representatives were invited, but Esther Njoki, niece of the late Agnes Wanjiru, was denied access for an UNKNOWN reason.
No victims of British soldiers, human rights defenders or lawyers were allowed in. It seems authorities are deliberately hiding interactions with foreign troops.
The question is: why is the parliament, which MUST be open and transparent to Kenyan citizens, engaging in secret deals with those accused of crimes? What are they trying to hide?
Fourteen years we’ve waited for justice for Agnes Wanjiru, who was murdered by British soldiers in Nanyuki in 2012. But no one has been prosecuted. In our own country, our police are powerless because of the Defence Cooperation Agreement with the UK. Why are we being treated as slaves in our own country?
The people of Nanyuki, Laikipia, and all Kenya must decide the terms of any British military presence. Full transparency is non‑negotiable. Our lives depend on it.
Justice for Agnes can still prevail. We can stop future crimes, but not behind closed doors. Open the talks, or send BATUK home.
This is a video message from Esther, which I helped her record today near Parliament, where she was not allowed to enter.
How can an African president visit Norway to seek “an operator of a shipping port” and claim that such primitivity “benefits Kenya?” Does the so-called fishing port even exist? This is embarrassing!