There is a group that wants to wipe out the majority of the people in East Africa so that they can have the rare minerals without any issue. Ebola is a bio weapon that targets a specific DNA genome.
Sounds like conspiracy BUT I would not be surprised if this was it.
Paul Njuguna, a retired technical manager at the Agricultural Development Corporation, invested Ksh 16 million in 2019 to set up Elgon Pine, a refined oil and animal feed plant in Eldoret. At its peak, the plant processed 90 tonnes of canola, sunflower, and soya annually, with capacity for 300 tonnes. Njuguna contracted about 100 farmers who supplied raw materials, while he also farmed 10 acres himself.
The business also produced poultry feeds and soap from crop by-products.
The venture collapsed after Kenya Power slapped him with a Ksh 400,000 bill in August 2021, compared to his usual monthly bill of about Ksh 30,000. Njuguna disputed it as an error and filed a complaint, but Kenya Power claimed underbilling and refused to adjust. When he failed to pay, Kenya Power disconnected electricity to both his plant and home. Though EPRA ruled in his favour and ordered reconnection, the power was never restored, forcing him to shut down operations.
The shutdown affected the entire value chain - contracted farmers, suppliers, and employees - all of whom lost income. Njuguna now questions whether the disconnection was deliberate sabotage and why Kenya does little to protect small industrial ventures. His case has raised concerns about how utility billing errors and slow dispute resolution can destroy promising local businesses and the livelihoods tied to them.
Hii serikali imekua ni kama kibanda, CS wa treasury and finance ako anapost barabara, CS wa transport ako anaongelelea mambo ya ICT, CS wa interior ako anaongelelea mambo ya SHA, CS wa health ako anaongelelea mambo ya indiscipline, PS wa interior analaunch stadiums badala ya kuangalia security.
Unashindwa hii serikali nani ndio nani.
BATUK: BRITAIN'S COLONIAL GRIP IN KENYA
BATUK: The White Man’s Burden in Kenya is not just a documentary about a British military base where soldiers roll around in the dirt for six months before returning home to the UK. It is a documentary about abuse of power, occupation of indigenous land and the unfinished business of colonialism.
For decades, ordinary Kenyans living around BATUK have raised allegations of abuse, sexual violence, ecological destruction and impunity, while one of the world’s most powerful former colonial powers continues to operate freely on Kenyan soil, handing out small amounts of compensation whenever evidence of alleged crimes reaches the media.
At the centre of the documentary is the story of Agnes Wanjiru, a 21-year-old Kenyan woman who was tortured, killed and dumped in a septic tank, while British soldiers mocked and ridiculed her death on social media. One soldier posed in front of the septic tank and posted, “If you know, you know.” Others joked about the five-month-old daughter she left behind, posting imagery of a baby beside a gravesite.
But the story goes beyond Agnes and her tragic killing and the shocking behaviour of British troops thereafter. The documentary asks deeper questions:
How did Britain maintain a military presence in Kenya, the very same year the country supposedly gained independence?
Why are foreign troops still training on stolen land while local communities continue to suffer?
And above all, why does the Kenyan government allow all of this?
Laikipia County, currently in the spotlight because of plans for an Ebola quarantine facility for US citizens, is the very same county where the BATUK military base is headquartered. This documentary helps connect the dots about why Kenya’s political elite remain so willing to cede sovereignty to foreign powers like Britain, and why they may be willing to do the same again with the United States.
This is Sovereign Media’s first-ever documentary. We are a small, independent team with a brand-new YouTube channel and no corporate backing. We need your support now more than ever.
Watch. Share. Comment. Spread it everywhere.
@AhmedKaballo@NaamMedia@VoxUmmah@venanalysis@qiaocollective@ProgIntl@KawsachunNews@OrinocoTribune@blkagendareport@SoberaniaPod
This is exactly what many of us feared.
The reported deaths during protests over the proposed U.S.-backed #Ebola facility in Kenya should be a wake-up call. Public health responses depend on trust, transparency, and community engagement—not decisions perceived as shifting risk from wealthy countries to others.
The U.S. has the expertise and biocontainment capacity to safely care for Americans exposed to or infected with Ebola. This tragedy further underscores why we should not be pursuing this approach.
My thoughts are with the families of those who lost their lives.
DRC has been battling repeated ebola outbreaks since 1976. Sometimes it spreads to Uganda which has experience of dealing with it. Suddenly, Kenya that has never had an Ebola case, says it has set up 23 centres, a country whose public healthcare has crumpled?
Kenyan police, after "successful" dispersing crowds, why the need to hunt them down like criminals? Surely picketing doesn't warrant the force being used. We have to get rid of this police bad culture completely!
The Trump admin has already slashed health funding for Kenya, but now expects Kenya to host American Ebola patients—rather than bring them home to care for them here.
Both governments should heed the concerns of Kenyan civil society.
Our government has a responsibility to help Americans abroad.
The US already has domestic facilities specifically designed to safely care for Ebola patients.
The Trump admin should bring Americans home and help them, not outsource that responsibility to a foreign government.
You are elected representatives of the People. If the People demand that the President of the Republic of Kenya be impeached then the Representatives shouldn't be doing mathematics problems on Twitter. You should be drafting the Motion.
Njeri Kenyans know all of this. What we need is concrete proof that the speaker refused to table it. Mkisema ⅓ need to sign on it try & tell only these 20 out of 117 signed on it tukae tukijua all the rest are traitors. Otherwise your layman terms will keep looking like excuses
Am hearing more Ebola news related to Kenya than Congo in international media yet the outbreak is in Congo. Yep, just because of that ebola facility in Laikipia, Kenya. Anyone might be forgiven for thinking the outbreak is actually in Kenya. Choices, consequences. Travel. ⚖️
Last October, my niece was raped on her way home at around 9;00pm. After those two beasts were done violating her, they forced her to send money to an M-Pesa till.
My sister called me crying in the middle of the night and I called Usikimye Founder, Njeri Wa Migwi, because I didn't know what to do. My niece received the medical help she needed, and the matter was reported to the Theta Police Station in Juja Constituency. She was given an OB, number 07/09/10/2025.
My niece went to follow up with the police but they didn’t even bother to write a statement. They didn’t even visit the scene. I paid a visit to the station with a lawyer @fatumabdulkadir, my wife @njerikan, and a friend, @JulianiKenya and spoke to the OCS. Our presence forced the Officer Commanding the Police Station to assign an officer to her case.
My niece wrote her statement and we drove the police to the site. The lady assigned to the case was Inspector MWW. I kept in touch with her every other day for months while following up on the case. The wheels of justice in Kenya grind slowly or sometimes never even start. As a good police officer, she filed a miscellaneous application in court to find out who owned the M-Pesa number to which my niece sent the money.
The application went through, but before the inspector could identify the perpetrators in January, she was arrested by the Directorate of Criminal Investigations, Serious Crime Unit. The same DCI unit that has been harassing me and arresting me on trumped-up charges. I have been under state surveillance for a long time, ironically for being a good citizen advocating for a better Kenya.
My repeated calls to a police inspector were flagged by the National Intelligence Service, which handed over the call logs to the DCI to obtain a search warrant against her. She was arrested, her phone and laptop confiscated and taken to DCI. She gave my phone number to her family, and they called me. They told me she was questioned and accused of helping me plan protests. Inspector MWW was accused by the DCI of planning to mobilize members of the public to demonstrate and cause mayhem in the Ruiru area. Specifically, she was suspected of offences including preparation to commit a felony, malicious damage to property and assault causing actual bodily harm. The case also involved unauthorised interference with computer systems, with allegations that she used WhatsApp chats, text messages, and other digital communications to orchestrate or coordinate actions that posed a risk to public peace, stability, and safety. Her HP Compaq laptop and dual-SIM smartphone were seized for forensic analysis to gather evidence related to these alleged activities.
I called Advocate Ian Mutiso, who went to see her at DCI and was ready to help. She declined legal assistance connected to me, fearing that accepting it could be interpreted as evidence of an association. She cut off all communications with me to protect her job and decidednot to follow up on my niece’s rape case. The last time I checked on her through her family, her gadgets were yet to be returned to her. After her arrest, even the officers at the police station refused to investigate the case.
Then another assault and attempted rape happened. Same place. Same people, according to the description given by the second victim. This time, the rapist sent the money to himself, not another number, and took the victim’s phone. The victim could see her phone’s location somewhere in Juja. The victim’s OB number is 02/03/03/2026.
If the police had arrested the perpetrators instead of the investigator, the second rape wouldn’t have happened, and many other crimes. Every year since this government came to power, the National Intelligence Service (NIS) has continued to grow. Their budget is Ksh 51.4 billion, while the Judiciary’s is about half that, at Ksh 27.8 billion. The judiciary has over 250 court stations and tribunals across the country. They have more employees, a pending caseload of approximately 600,000 cases, and justice to deliver to millions of Kenyans, but it’s the spying agency that has a bigger budget.
The NIS does important work to protect Kenyans, but it also has units that are assigned to abduct active citizens. They have killer squads who will show up in protests masked, and shoot unarmed citizens. The same budget for NIS is where the president can call and send Noordin or his minions to deliver a briefcase containing millions of shillings to a politician or someone the president wants to bribe, so they can be silenced or persuaded to support him. They collect dirt, blackmail, and bribe people to support an unpopular president whose only legacy is abducting and killing young people. increased debt, and defunding education.
Let this regime be a lesson to all of us. Never vote for people who are accused of beating women, raping women, murdering and committing crimes against humanity. When you vote for such people, they will not care about the safety of women and children, they will prioritise house repairs over health, handouts instead of funding education, and if you dare protest, they will send police to shoot you. The pain and depression in the lives of Kenyans are a result of voting for someone who showed us his true colours, and we still elected him.
Tomorrow, my family and I will join the women’s march in Nairobi to protest against femicide, gender-based violence and the children who have been kidnapped or killed. I will be in the streets for my niece, and every woman and child whose life has been violated and ruined by this regime.
Ps: I have attached the search warrant and photos of the OB numbers in the thread.
I have just watched how Ebola started in Liberia and how it spread to Guinea.
A quarantine facility was set up manned by military but Ebola wipped out patients together with medical team.
This is what Kenyan government is tolerating.
@clairecesc@thegiftedpen Of particular concern are the Americans violating Court Orders they acknowledge they are aware of.
WsR:it is yet another solid ground of impeachment
@USForeignAssist@lindahoguttu@StateDept@IMC_Worldwide Leave Kenya out of this nonsense 🚶🏿♀️
Pay Kasongo what you’re paying him and fly your minerals from DRC to US through Laikipia Air Base in peace…hizi story mingi pelekeni kwenyu
So you’re telling me that out of all the MPs in Parliament, not a single one has the courage to table an impeachment motion against Ruto?
Not one? 🚶🏿♀️
Watu wako mafutani.
This dalliance with the US government to establish a Ebola centre in Laikipia is going to bite Ruto more than Gachagua ever did.
Ruto is a series of epic blunders. Looks like he can't help himself; greed blinds him entirely.