24.2k kenyans and counting....
have given a greenlight.
Thank you very much.
Lawyers please get in touch!
We only have one republic of Kenya.
Let's safe guard it!
Kenya needs a renaissance!
Nobody can impeach a guy you elected without your permission.
I just need your node not abuses.
And I am ready .
Lets wake up morning monday on 24k likes.
Kenya needs a renaissance!
A spiritual DISASTER it was and not a national prayer breakfast!
Kenya's most heartless gathering in history!
The best description of a deceptive and evil regime led by hypocrites!
Yes Linus Kaikai nailed it as it is without altering a word!
“If you take those 10 counties of Mt. Kenya, their combined economy is now approaching $30 billion. In comparison, Rwanda is about $14.5 Billion. Botswana is about $22 Billion Dollars. Mauritious is about $16 Billion” - KRA Chairman Ndirirtu Muriithi
Nominated Senator Karen Nyamu's apology for s3xualizing a underage school girl should have come with a resignation letter.
We can't have politicians who build nothing showing their immorality and emptiness on national TV and walk scot-free.
That era is past.
Apology is not enough. If she doesn't resign, removing a senator simple.
UDA party should communicate Nyamu's expulsion to the speaker of the Senate.
There are many other able bodied and brainy Kenyan ladies that can fill this post.
Nimesikiza Caroli Omondi nikakuwa emotional 😭😭 This fearless gentlemen was saying the naked truth💯 Inauma manze 😭😢 Continue resting in peace Baba Raila Odinga ni sawa tu🤕😨
Of Course He Knew.
The moment he told Yvonne Okwara that he doesn't know the type of oil in Turkana and he's the Energy CS, it was evident that this is another thug hiding his skills of thuggery behind polished English, spectacles and suits.
A regime of thugs, for thugs and by thuggery.
#DrainTheSwamp #OccupyStatehouse
With Wandayi Still in Office, Kenyans No Longer Know Where Responsibility Ends
In serious countries, public office is not treated like a hiding place.
In Britain, the doctrine of ministerial responsibility was shaped by cases like Crichel Down in 1954 and the Falklands crisis in 1982, where the basic expectation was that when a department suffers a grave failure, the minister does not behave like a spectator. The office holder carries the political burden because the public must know that responsibility stops somewhere.
In Japan, ministers have stepped down over scandals not because they had already been convicted in court, but because public office is supposed to protect trust, not merely survive legal technicalities. Reuters reported, for example, that Economy Minister Akira Amari resigned in 2016 over a money scandal even as he denied bribery allegations.
In South Korea too, the culture of office can still force action faster than our politics ever does. Reuters reported that Oceans Minister Chun Jae-soo resigned in December 2025 after allegations of improper payments, explicitly saying stepping down was the right thing to do so the ministry and government would not be damaged further, even while calling the claims false.
Now compare that with Kenya.
Here, a fuel scandal erupts in the heart of the petroleum chain. The DCI says the resignation of Petroleum PS Mohamed Liban, KPC MD Joe Sang, and EPRA DG Daniel Kiptoo does not absolve them of criminal liability. The same public record says the officials are being investigated over alleged manipulation of fuel stock data, irregular emergency procurement outside the G-to-G framework, and an allegedly overpriced, substandard shipment.
Yet the Cabinet Secretary, Opiyo Wandayi, still speaks like a moderator on a TV panel. His message to Kenyans has been to be patient and beware of “disinformation,” even as the scandal has already consumed top officials directly under the ministry’s watch.
That is why many people say Kenya is no longer being governed like a serious republic. It is being managed like a failed regime where accountability is carefully rationed downward. Small people fall.
Technocrats are sacrificed. Agencies are told to “investigate.” But the political head sits comfortably in office and starts lecturing the public about tone.
In a functioning state, a scandal of this scale does not leave the minister sounding like the lead investigator, chief commentator and moral referee all at once. In a functioning state, he either takes political responsibility, steps aside, or is removed so that investigations can proceed without the stench of self-protection.
That is the tragedy of Kenya. We have normalized a government where the collapse of oversight is not treated as disqualifying. We are asked to admire statements instead of standards. We are told to wait, to calm down, to avoid politics, while the very people who sat atop the system pretend they were only hearing about the mess on the radio.
A serious nation understands that trust in public office is more important than the comfort of one minister. A failed regime protects the seat first, the truth later, and the public never.
Almost everyone around the petroleum and energy scandal is resigning, yet CS Opiyo Wandayi is still in office. That is what makes this so shocking and unimaginable.
As of April 4, 2026, the resignations publicly reported include Petroleum PS Mohamed Liban, Kenya Pipeline Company MD Joe Sang, EPRA Director-General Daniel Kiptoo Bargoria, Deputy Director of Petroleum Joseph Wafula, and KPC supply and logistics manager Joel Mburu. These resignations came after arrests and a probe into an irregular emergency fuel cargo said to have breached the G-to-G framework and involved substandard fuel.
So the question Kenyans should be asking is very simple....why is Wandayi still in office? If nearly everyone under and around this mess is falling on their sword, how does the Cabinet Secretary remain untouched? How does he expect the public to believe he knew nothing, saw nothing, approved nothing, and bears no political responsibility?
That is where he has a very hard time convincing us.
In any serious government, once a scandal reaches the level where PSs, regulators, and state corporation bosses are resigning, the minister in charge does not sit pretty and speak in press statements. He steps aside, or he is stepped aside. Anything less looks like selective accountability.
Wandayi cannot keep talking as if he is a commentator watching events from outside. He is the Cabinet Secretary for Energy. The buck cannot stop at everyone else and magically skip his desk.
Trust me, now that Dubai is unstable, if we raided the houses of all government officials, we would probably collect enough cash to pay off half the country’s debts. The real national reserve may not even be at Central Bank, it may be sitting in living rooms, ceilings and safes