BREAKING: A man interviewed by Citizen TV during yesterday's 7 pm and 9 pm news broadcasts made allegations that should concern every Kenyan.
He claimed that some police officers operate alongside goons while dressed in plain clothes.
He alleged that they participate in robberies, attacks on civilians, and other criminal activities.
He further claimed that plain-clothes police officers were among those involved in the attack on All Saints Cathedral last weekend.
And according to him, if some of them are arrested, they are later identified and released from police custody.
These are serious allegations.
But what makes them even more disturbing is that they appear to answer questions Kenyans have been asking for years.
During the 2024 and 2025 protests, many Kenyans watched goons move freely in the presence of uniformed police officers.
We saw videos of businesses being looted.
We saw shops being burned.
We saw civilians being attacked.
Yet in many cases, arrests never seemed to follow.
At the time, many people could not understand what they were seeing.
How could criminals operate so openly without consequences?
How could goons appear so confident around officers who were supposed to stop them?
Now, a man has come forward with allegations that seem to offer an explanation.
Whether his claims are true or false, they demand urgent investigation.
Because if those allegations are true, then Kenya is facing something more dangerous than goons.
A goon can only terrorize a few people.
But if criminals are receiving protection from within institutions that are supposed to stop them, then every Kenyan is at risk.
The most chilling part is that this would mean the line between those protecting citizens and those preying on them has started to disappear.
The police officer you are meeting at the station might be a friend of the one who robbed you.
For me, this is exactly why I say Ruto must go.
A country cannot function when the people meant to protect citizens are themselves facing allegations of participating in the very lawlessness they are supposed to prevent.
BREAKING: The risk that Kenyans might never know who received the over Sh6.3 billion from eCitizen that was diverted to a private Pesaflow account at Equity Bank has now risen.
The parliamentary committee investigating the matter appears to have stalled.
When the probe began, witnesses were being summoned, and hearings were taking place. Then the postponements started. Even meetings scheduled for May failed to proceed, reportedly surprising some committee members.
The committee is chaired by Tindi Mwale.
Now ask yourself: if over Sh6.3 billion belonging to the public cannot be traced to its final beneficiaries, what message does that send to ordinary Kenyans struggling to pay taxes, licenses, and government fees?
We have seen this movie before.
In Kenya, whenever the feathers of a stolen chicken lead to the chief's compound, investigations somehow lose momentum before the final answers emerge.
Who is being protected? You and I can only guess.
Parliament is failing Kenyans.
The EACC is failing Kenyans.
And every day this investigation remains stalled, public trust dies a little more.
Disclaimer: This post raises questions about a matter of public interest and should not be construed as an allegation against any person.
MAJAMAA, we are getting closer to getting #JusticeForBrianOdhiambo
You see the six KWS officers who put on their defence ? They have started pointing fingers.
Yesterday Alex Lorogoi told the court that it's sergeant Francis Wachira who should explain the whereabouts of Brian Odhiambo, saying that as junior officers, they were acting on behalf of Wachira.
Lorogoi says that they were following orders and also narrating how they chased after Brian.
In football we say, " ukiona wameanza kugombana, jua wamepoteza game."
This is going to be an interesting case on June 22nd 2026.
Breaking: The Sh1,000 note is becoming Kenya's new "small money."
Latest CBK data shows the value of Sh1,000 notes in circulation has surged from Sh278.6 billion to Sh388.4 billion under the Ruto administration.
Think about that.
A few years ago, you could walk into a supermarket with Sh500 and leave with a basket of essentials.
Today, many Kenyans can't even complete a basic shopping trip without pulling out a Sh1,000 note.
That's why more Sh1,000 notes are circulating than ever before.
Not because Kenyans are richer.
Because everyday life is becoming more expensive, especially under the William Ruto Government.
The question isn't why there are more Sh1,000 notes.
The question is: what happened to the purchasing power of the Sh500 note?
Because many Kenyans remember a time when Sh500 felt like what Sh1,000 feels like today.
@sholard_mancity@punda_amechoka https://t.co/5A5k4a5Sos
We need to move radically. Maandamano kwa mtandao and at 1M signatures, the people shall lay the table of demands...