Activist. Co-Founder, PAWA254. Throttle Queen. Road Safety Ambassador. Love God. Loving Wife. Mom, yummy mummy and so much more in between!!
#SoftieTheFilm
This is an update to my earlier report on the coordinated mobilization and arming of militia across parts of the Rift Valley and western parts of Kenya. That report (Check my quoted tweet below), detailed the oathing ceremonies, the night gatherings, and the involvement of political figures in organizing young men from specific communities. Since then, trusted sources within government have continued to come forward with new information, and what is emerging paints an even more disturbing picture of how far these alleged preparations have advanced.
Reports I have received point to political militia in their hundreds being assembled across several counties, including Trans Nzoia, reportedly targeting western Kenya and Bungoma, Pokot and Marakwet, Turkana, Uasin Gishu, Nandi, Kericho, Nairobi, Kajiado, Kiambu, Murang’a, Nyeri, Laikipia, Nyandarua and Kirinyaga. Each militia member is allegedly paid a monthly salary of 30,000 kes, with an additional 10,000 kes sitting allowance for each meeting attended. According to my sources, this money is transported and physically delivered to the militia by the same veterinary doctor I named in my earlier report operating from the ugly house on the hill. In Nairobi, Kajiado, and parts of central Kenya, the operation allegedly runs through so-called stage managers aka kamageras, who coordinate activity on the ground and provide political cover.
Now, on the economic sabotage component of this plan. The strategy is not random criminality but a deliberate and calculated effort to disarm, wear down, and render targeted communities helpless and hopeless through sustained thuggery, knife attacks, child disappearances, cattle rustling, and relentless pressure on landowners around Uasin Ngishu to sell their land or, as they are told, remain "at their own risk." The goal is to break the spirit and economic backbone of targeted communities before any wider confrontation if necessary. The coordinators behind this plan are the same individuals I named in my earlier report.
The 41vs1 agenda being pushed is a deliberate replay of 2007: the Kikuyu community against the other 41 tribes, the same dangerous arithmetic that produced over 1,300 deaths and displacement that was never fully reversed. To that end, reports I have received indicate that Kikuyu political leaders allied to the current administration have allegedly been funded to the tune of 2.5 billion shillings, money intended to destabilize the region and neutralize potential resistance from within. Meanwhile, broader alliances are allegedly being sought with elements from the Coast and communities in western Kenya. Notably, according to my sources, the Maasai, Luhya, and Kisii communities have publicly refused to participate. Even in parts of Mount Kenya, the alleged organizers are said to face limited reach and credibility.
History is repeating itself in plain sight. Today, the political temperature is rising again, but this time the alleged plans are being flagged early by elders, citizens, churches, and concerned voices across the country. Framing legitimate national discontent over the economy, governance, and accountability as ethnic persecution or justification for balkanization is a deliberate distraction that benefits only the political class while impoverishing everyone else through fear, thuggery, and lost livelihoods.
We must stop the drums of war now. 2007 caught people off guard; this time the warnings are visible and public. Kenyans of all communities share the same daily struggles: sky-high living costs, insecurity, unemployment, and broken promises. No community wins when children disappear, cows are stolen, or families are forced off land they have farmed for decades. The real divide is between the political elite of all ethnicities and ordinary citizens who are being played in their hunger games.
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We need our own candidate on the ballot in 2027. A president who has never been part of the past regimes, no hidden strings, no old loyalties, no recycled promises. Someone who hasn’t spent years in the corridors of power collecting favours, but in the streets listening to the people.
A person who didn’t climb the ladder of the old system but built credibility in fearless conversations, not in committees and backroom deals. We need a commoner like us who has seen the rot up there. I suggest Boniface Mwangi. @bonifacemwangi
It's not normal for me to seek help online more so when it comes to raising funds but today I am forced to.
There's a petition we finished working on more than two months ago and we've been unable to file it due to financial constraints.
We are challenging the alleged blocking of Kenyans on Social media by state and state actors.
Together with my two co-petitioners, we are arguing that the impugned blocking violates Kenyans constitutional rights specifically the access to information.
A number of Kenyans have been blocked by several state and state affiliated accounts yet these are accounts used for official dissemination of state information.
If there's anyone who is willing to help us in filing this petition or help us in any way, you can kindly send me a DM.
Filing a petition is around Ksh 8,800. If we include printing and binding services and commissioner of Oaths services for our affidavit, we may need close to Ksh 15,000.
The petition has 20 pages, The supporting Affidavit has 188 pages, The certificate of urgency 6 pages and the Notice of Motion has 7 pages.
We will individually defend it at the high Court in line with article 258 of the CoK 2010.
We will also share the petition here for everyone once it has been filed.
Thank you and have a blessed Sunday.
I think it is high time for @EUparliament to go full throttle and impose comprehensive sanctions against @SuluhuSamia’s increasingly repressive regime. Tanzanians cannot continue paying the price for her incompetence, recklessness, entrenched corruption, nepotism, political violence, and the growing culture of killings, enforced disappearances, and impunity.
The continued assault on democracy, human rights, and the rule of law in Tanzania demands urgent and decisive international action. @davidmcallister@EUtoAU@EU_Commission@UKinTanzania@SweAmbTZ@usembassytz@CanadaTanzania@DanishMFA
Two days after a body of a young Tanzanian that was abducted was discovered floating headless in a river, about a week after her own commission mentioned contradicting figures about people her government killed during the October 2025 elections, Samia Saluhu openly and publicly called upon another head of state to join her in her violence against young people that are demanding for better leadership. How can one woman be this blood thirsty and sadistic? The murders and torture she has sanctioned are not enough yet? The endless tears of mothers are not enough! She has to be stopped.
There is nothing democratic, just, or legitimate about a government that abducts peaceful protesters and political opponents, subjects them to torture, rape and sodomy, and then murders them or - if they are lucky - throws them in prison, as has happened to Tundu Lissu, Kizza Besigye and hundreds of other opposition supporters in East Africa.
I survived Tanzania. The horrors I endured there are something I have spoken about only three or four times, because the memories of our torture breaks me. My friend Agather Atuhaire, who was abducted alongside me, can no longer wear high heels or dance as she once did; the soles of her feet were beaten so severely that they swell whenever she stands for too long. We are the lucky ones. Hundreds of others who were abducted have never been seen again.
Here in Kenya, we are currently sheltering hundreds of Tanzanian survivors who escaped the 2025 killings. In just one week in October 2025, Samia Suluhu Hassan’s government murdered over 2,000 unarmed civilians. Hundreds more were injured, with some still recovering in Kenya. Many were shot dead simply for protesting the sham elections, with reports indicating that most of those killed had not even participated in the protests. A sham cover-up investigation by the Tanzanian government put the number of dead at just 518, significantly less than the thousands that independent observers have claimed. A government accused of murdering its own citizens cannot be expected to investigate itself truthfully.
Two days ago, President Ruto addressed an illegal Tanzanian parliament that installed itself after barring the main opposition from the elections, with leading opposition leader, Tundu Lissu, imprisoned on trumped-up charges.
During the visit, his host, Samia Suluhu — who has developed a reputation for violence — told him: “When evils occur in Kenya, they are our evils; let us cooperate to remove them. When evils occur in Tanzania, it is the same.” The two leaders then discussed how to deal with “these ill-mannered children of ours who call themselves Gen Z… going everywhere claiming to fight for democracy.”
In effect, they were exploring ways for Kenya — long a safe haven for political refugees from the region — to expel Tanzanian dissidents. They were also legitimizing the use of extra-judicial means to "deal" with individuals they deem problematic to their corrupt, autocratic regimes.
We know that Maria Tsarugi and Mshabaha Hamza narrowly escaped abduction in Nairobi by Tanzanian intelligence agents operating with Kenyan government approval. This mirrors the abduction of Kizza Besigye in Nairobi by Ugandan intelligence and his subsequent transfer to a military court in Kampala, as well as the recent murder in Nairobi of Ethiopian human rights advocate and journalist, Yaekob Yatane, by Ethiopian agents.
In Kenya, our government routinely brands human rights defenders as “commercial activists” or agents of “evil society.” It abducts and kills its own citizens, then attacks those who dare to expose the corruption and injustice it is commiting. Despite this, we continue to fight because we stand for the truth and retain some faith in our institutions.
Yet, the situation in Tanzania is far worse: citizens are abducted, raped, sodomised, and killed with impunity.
If President Ruto chooses to cooperate with Suluhu in the manner she demands, Tanzanian political refugees in Kenya will face deportation and almost certain execution upon their return.
As Kenyans, we support genuine regional cooperation, but what Samia is seeking is the entrenchment of regional impunity. That path will only lead to the loss of more innocent lives, those of brave Tanzanians fighting for a better future.
In Samia Suluhu’s authoritarian dictionary
👉🏽Criticism of her = wananitukana
👉🏽Protests/ Maandamano = kufanya fujo
👉🏽To kill, abduct and torture = kuchapa mikwaju
👉🏽 Freedom of expression = nywinywinywi
👉🏽 Demokrasia = utovu wa nidhamu
👉🏽Authoritarianism = mila na desturi zetu
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.
It is scary to imagine what these despots have in mind and are laying it bare for the world to know. They have done it before and are here promising to do it again. The world is watching!#JumuiyaNiYetu#FreeAllPoliticalPrisoners
As Chief Justice, I cherished the brotherly bonds within our East African Jumuiya and worked closely with my colleagues in the Tanzanian judiciary in the shared pursuit of justice and the rule of law.
I am therefore deeply disturbed by the remarks attributed to Her Excellency President Samia Suluhu during President Ruto's address to Tanzania's National Assembly.
It is regrettable that the two presidents are reported to have discussed coordinating efforts to "chapa mikwajo" the Gen Z across Kenya and Tanzania.
These remarks are abhorrent.
They come barely a week after President Suluhu received the report of the Commission of Inquiry into killings during and after Tanzania's 29 October 2025 general elections, in which more than 518 people lost their lives, primarily from gunshot wounds.
To date, not a single person has been held accountable.
We must also not forget that our compatriot Boniface Mwangi, and Agather Atuhaire of Uganda, were tortured on Tanzanian soil. The perpetrators remain free.
Citizens of East Africa must speak up. The axis of tyranny that Presidents Suluhu and Ruto are constructing threatens to return our region to autocracy.
As I demonstrated through my solidarity appearance in Dar-es-Salaam on 19 May 2025, standing with opposition leader Tundu Lissu, our East African Jumuiya cannot advance while leaders suppress dissent and trample on the basic rights of our people.
#UkatibaMovement #UkatibaNdioTiba
Are government projects in YOUR area working as promised?
Debt-financed projects are being marked "complete" , but are they actually serving the public? Help us verify.
Report if you've seen a project that is:
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#BBCAfricaEye investigates a wave of enforced disappearances spreading fear across Tanzania – told through powerful testimonies from survivors of abduction and torture.
🎥 Watch the documentary 'State of Fear' here: https://t.co/rABmOSM74W
🚨TWITTER SPACE🚨
#Uganda is facing an assault on democracy— arbitrary arrests, repression, and silenced voices. Join our Space, #UgandaNotAlone, to help keep global attention on this fight for freedom. Your voice and your energy matters.
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At some point, motorists and road users need to effect a class-action suit against the orangutans running @KeNHAKenya at Barabara Plaza. The contractors should be equally sued as accessories to murder and all instances of attempted murders. This is a premeditated death trap.
Over the weekend, The Matatu Musical took center stage a bold and unflinching political satire tracing Kenya’s history with striking honesty. Written by George “Ndetch” Ndiritu, the play centres the defiant spirit of Kenyans a people who have consistently resisted oppression in all its forms. It deliberately elevates women, reclaiming voices and roles too often erased from our historical narratives.
This was more than a performance; it was an intergenerational conversation. The story journeyed from the pre-colonial era through the struggle for independence, into the Kenyatta and Moi years, confronting the horrors of the Nyayo House Torture Chambers.
At its core, the production highlighted women as the fuel of the struggle from Mekatilili wa Menza and Muthoni Nyanjiru, to Wangari Maathai and the Release Political Prisoners (RPP) women at Freedom Corner, and all the way to our Gen Z girlies in crop tops and hijabs, standing side by side in the anti–Finance Bill protests.
The narrative carried us into the hope of the 2002 elections before culminating in the painful reckoning of the 2007/2008 post-election violence. In doing so, it delivered a sobering message to young people: the fight for justice, good governance, and a corruption-free state did not begin yesterday. It is a long, costly struggle borne on the backs of many who came before us.
Gratitude to @nisisikenya and @Pawa254 for sponsoring the event and creating space for this necessary dialogue. This is a conversation that must be taken to every county across the country.
#MatatuMusical
.@HEBobiwine and Barbra, sorry for all you’ve been through. Your determination to free Uganda of tyranny and the murderous regime of Museveni is not in vain. He will not live forever, he is on his way out. Freedom is in the air. Stay strong. Stay safe! Ugandans, do not relent!
Following the events that happened at NUP’s party president @HEBobiwine’s home last night , his wife Barbra Kyagulanyi who is currently admitted at Nsambya hospital narrates what happened @observerug
Members of the Keekonyokie community invited me into their homes to narrate how hired goons, escorted by police, have been terrorizing them in an attempt to evict them from their land. Here are highlights from some of the people I spoke to. I will be sharing their full stories over the coming week. #BongaNaBonnie