The NTSA mandatory annual vehicle inspection is the Motor Vehicle Tax that was impugned in the disgraced 2024 Finance Bill but is now being reintroduced with a different name.
It is a TAX.
Reject it.
So we’ve officially reached the stage where the President’s biggest offense is… showing up to work?
The allegations are serious : punctuality, visibility, and an unhealthy obsession with doing the job. Unbelievable!
Phone snatcher decided to ascend to heaven using KPLC wires, only for people to bring him down and massage him properly.
Risking more than 7 lives, was it worth?
DCI officers raid former president's home on 2nd March 2028 and recover property believed to have been purchased with proceeds from corruption.
Former president Ruto is facing 23,563 cases of corruption, abuse of office and gross misconduct.
The President has said that this is the first step in getting the country in the right direction in its fight against corruption.
“Mtoto amekuja Midterm lakini hutaki kujua anaendelea aje shule. Kama hutaki kulea nitalea mwenyewe. Ata ile siku huendi kazi huwezi kuja kumuona ama ulikuwa unaenda maandamano upigwe fimbo umuache bila baba?”
@WilliamsRuto@Pettikim Uncle, kwani the people who draft your statements have abandoned you? Please don’t lose your mind before 2027. We need you to experience the wrath of the people in your right state of mind!! Vumilia tu kidogo. WANTAM!!!
GMoi,your STANDARD media’s 5 days a week EXTORTIONIST propaganda HEADLINES on me & my administration’s transformative track record will get you NOTHING & NOWHERE.BLACKMAIL to yield to your GREED? NEVER.Kenya belongs to all Kenyans,not you alone.Jaribu 8 days a week. Do your WORST
They were killed by a DCI killer squad.
Then their bodies chopped into pieces then fed to hyenas after the rogues sprinkled salt on them for hyenas to 'enjoy'
When Ruto demanded to know what happened, this was the security brief
Even their families were informed about this
Wadosi Wakenya Wote, I come in Peace and humility.
The vote for the Finance Bill happened yesterday; disappointingly, I was not in Parliament. I travelled out of the Country on Wednesday evening for engagements that could not have been postponed. But no explanation should absolve the blame.
As for the feedback we have received from all Kenyans, we take it with humility. All the feedback will go a long way in making us better as we discharge our duties in Parliament and outside as we serve the great people of Kenya.
We have always been available and forthright in debating both the Appropriations Bill and the Finance Bill on the committee and on the floor of the house as a commitment to giving a different and alternative view. This has also been an important platform of informing Kenyans on the things that affect them, the businesses, investment decisions and the Economy in general.
Whereas this is important, we also must acknowledge the fact that Parliament is in an unprecedented phase where both the Majority and the Minority leadership are on the same side thereby making it difficult to effectively act as an institution of oversight. That’s why we choose to do it both inside and outside.
On the proposals we had on reducing fuel prices, we had the opportunity to appear before the relevant committees. Unfortunately, the Finance Committee did not include the proposals in their final report. The alternative that was left was that of initiating a private member bill. However, this was deemed as a “Money Bill” and could not be carried as an amendment in the Finance Bill on the Floor. It had to take its own course. The guidance from relevant offices in parliament was that we initiate the process after the Finance bill process since most officers of parliament and especially the Parliament Budget Office were engaged in the process of Finance Bill and Appropriations Bill.
The process will now continue on a different path.
I have taken time to read the feedback from Kenyans and it is clear that; we carry an immense responsibility that we should always live up to.
We are glad that together, we have achieved many things through debate, talking about them in forums & media and sharing information. To cite just two;
In December, we were able to speak forthrightly about the plan to hike School Fees for Day Secondary Schools. The plan was shelved, not by the involvement of Parliament; but by the government knowing that Kenyans were aware.
Earlier this year, we took up the issue of the 15% GoK sale of Safaricom shares. While the majority of numbers prevailed in Parliament, the Judiciary sided with our view and money has never changed hands. The sale has never been effected.
We have taken it upon ourselves to tabulate, collate and analyse Economic related information which we always quietly and gladly share with leaders both in Parliament and outside for better oversight and alternative viewpoints.
Personal comfort would call for us to be quiet at critical moments, but it is unpatriotic to seek comfort over what is right.
As human as we are, we are far from being perfect and we will always seek to learn from the feedback we receive.
Asanteni sana.
We are African and Africa is our Business.
ASE and @accpchest recently partnered on a project to develop two educational webinars to improve the understanding of cardiovascular ultrasound's application in pulmonary hypertension (PH). @chest
You can find them on our Right Heart Resources web page! https://t.co/aHA1IniTS3