Author: Guy Bolding PW

  • Counties Turn Into Cash Cows: Senators Uncover Sh100 Million Loan Scam by Former Governors

    Counties Turn Into Cash Cows: Senators Uncover Sh100 Million Loan Scam by Former Governors

    A shocking Senate investigation has exposed a deep-rooted loan scam involving former governors, deputies, and senior county officials who took hefty car and mortgage loans and disappeared without repaying a cent.

    The Senate County Public Investments and Special Funds Committee, chaired by Vihiga Senator Godfrey Osotsi, revealed that counties across Kenya have been recklessly dishing out multimillion-shilling loans to officials, often without any security, insurance, or repayment guarantees. Once out of office, the borrowers simply walked away, leaving taxpayers to foot the bill.

    “County governments are issuing loans without proper securities or consideration for tenure,” Osotsi said during the explosive hearing.

    “We even have cases where a governor borrowed Sh50 million. How can one possibly repay that in five years?”

    Governors earn about Sh957,000 a month, yet Senate records show that some structured repayment plans spanning up to 20 years, well beyond their five-year terms. Senators said this was a clear abuse of office.

    In Meru County alone, all three former governors, Peter Munya, Kiraitu Murungi, and Kawira Mwangaza, owe a staggering Sh58.04 million to the Executive Staff Housing Fund. Governor Mutuma Mutuma told the committee that Kiraitu borrowed Sh40 million in December 2022 with a 20-year repayment plan. Munya and Mwangaza took Sh25 million and Sh13 million respectively, all under similarly questionable terms.

    “The problem began during Peter Munya’s tenure. Some have defaulted, others are still struggling to pay,” Mutuma admitted, defending the loans as being issued under outdated Salaries and Remuneration Commission guidelines.

    In West Pokot County, the scandal is equally alarming. Former Governor John Lonyangapuo and his deputy Nicholas Atudonyang owe more than Sh45 million, with Atudonyang alone defaulting on Sh23.52 million. Shockingly, he spent most of his term abroad but still enjoyed full access to county loans.

    “This is to notify you that you have defaulted in servicing your car loan and mortgage,” a county notice dated May 15, 2024, warned Atudonyang. “You have 30 days to pay or face legal action.”

    Yet to date, no repayment has been made.

    Current Governor Simon Kachapin confirmed the county’s futile attempts to recover the funds. “We’ve tried everything, even legal threats, but the former governor and his deputy remain untouchable,” he said.

    Senators were furious, describing the revelations as a blatant culture of impunity that has turned counties into personal cash cows. Migori Senator Eddy Oketch demanded that the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission immediately step in.

    “Taking a loan and refusing to repay is outright theft,” said nominated Senator Hamida Kibwana. “This is abuse of office, and these individuals must be held personally accountable.”

    The committee resolved to summon all implicated officials under Article 125 of the Constitution, warning that unsecured loans will make recovery nearly impossible.

    The Auditor-General’s 2024 report paints an even grimmer picture. Kirinyaga County still has Sh2.69 million in unpaid loans dating back to 2017, while Kericho County struggles to recover Sh61.95 million owed by 12 executive staff, including one deceased officer.

    The Senate committee vowed to recommend sweeping reforms, tighter financial oversight, and legal action to ensure no county boss ever turns public funds into a personal payday again.

    “Counties are not banks,” Osotsi declared. “We must stop this madness before it bankrupts devolution.”

  • Oburu Calms Babu Owino’s Growing Panic Over ODM Nairobi Ticket

    Oburu Calms Babu Owino’s Growing Panic Over ODM Nairobi Ticket

    A political storm is quietly brewing inside the Orange Democratic Movement, but ODM acting leader Oburu Odinga has stepped in to pour cold water on fears that the party could deny Embakasi East MP Babu Owino the coveted Nairobi gubernatorial ticket in 2027.

    Speaking during an explosive interview on Ramogi TV, Oburu openly assured the youthful MP that the party will honour the will of its members and hand him the ticket if he wins fairly in the nominations.

    His remarks appeared aimed at cooling Babu’s visible anxiety and defiance that have been fueling whispers of a looming fallout between him and the party’s old guard.

    “I do not see anything wrong with Babu Owino, although I hear there are some issues troubling him,” Oburu said with a calm smile.

    “I do not think there can be any reason to deny him the ticket if he wins the nominations. If he wins, he will get it, so let him not run away from the party.”

    Oburu threw the ball back to all ODM aspirants eyeing City Hall, daring them to face off in a clean and open contest instead of spreading fear or running to other parties.

    “Anyone who wants the party ticket in the Nairobi governor race should just declare and square it out openly among each other. Let nobody run away because they think they will be denied a chance. Nobody can take the ticket away from you if you win it and you’re a member of the party,” he declared.

    The remarks come amid a surge in Babu Owino’s political activities as he positions himself to succeed Governor Johnson Sakaja in 2027.

    Babu Owino admitted to the bar as advocate of the High Court.
    Babu Owino admitted to the bar as advocate of the High Court.

    Babu has been everywhere lately, storming rallies, charity events and national forums with an unmistakable tone of defiance and youthful energy that has left ODM elders restless. His growing national popularity and strong online following have made him one of the most visible faces of ODM’s next generation, a status that some insiders believe has unsettled the party’s conservative wing.

    Oburu, however, brushed aside claims of factional fights, warning against turning Raila Odinga’s succession into an ethnic or generational battlefield. He said leadership in Luo Nyanza, and within ODM, would emerge naturally from the people’s will and not from political boardrooms. “There’s no forum where a Luo kingpin is elected. A kingpin will sprout out of nowhere like a mushroom; someone will just emerge and take Raila’s space, but not from his agemates like myself,” he said firmly.

    He added that the next wave of leadership in ODM will be determined by public acceptance, not handpicking. “There are young leaders cropping up, and one of them will step up and take that place. But if we handpick somebody and the people do not accept him, then they will still not be kingpin,” Oburu added.

    Sources close to the ODM interim boss revealed that he has already sent emissaries to reach out to Babu Owino in a bid to ease tensions and reaffirm his place in the party. Oburu admitted that he had not met Babu personally but insisted that nothing sinister was happening behind the scenes. “Let him relax, there is no problem in ODM,” he said.

    Meanwhile, the battle for City Hall is heating up. Governor Johnson Sakaja, who only survived impeachment in September after a delicate balancing act involving both President Ruto and the late Raila Odinga, now faces renewed pressure as ODM reorganizes itself.

    With Raila gone, the political tide in Nairobi appears to be shifting fast, and Babu Owino is moving aggressively to occupy the vacuum.

    So far, the Nairobi race has drawn in several heavyweights, including Sakaja, former PS Irungu Nyakera, former CS and presidential advisor Moses Kuria, and Embakasi North MP James Gakuya.

    But none have generated as much noise or captured the youth vote like Babu, who has vowed to “take over the city and clean it up.”

    As 2027 draws closer, all eyes will be on whether Babu Owino’s trust in Oburu’s promise will hold or if he will bolt from ODM to chart his own path. What is clear is that the battle for Nairobi has already begun, and ODM’s unity will be tested in the fiercest political showdown the capital has seen in years.

    Babu Owino pays respect to the late Raila Odinga.
    Babu Owino pays respect to the late Raila Odinga.
  • Russia Using Vocational Training Programme To Recruit Young Africans Into The Ukraine War

    Russia Using Vocational Training Programme To Recruit Young Africans Into The Ukraine War

    A diplomatic storm is brewing over Russia’s Alabuga Start Programme, with international intelligence agencies investigating claims that the vocational training initiative is being used as a front to recruit young Africans into the Ukraine war.

    The probe, which involves multilateral diplomatic and intelligence coordination, has cast a spotlight on recruitment intermediaries and agencies linked to Russian institutions operating across the continent.

    At the heart of the investigation are allegations that Kenyan and other African youths are being lured with promises of lucrative employment and educational opportunities, only to find themselves funneled into military training camps.

    “The Alabuga Start initiative is being closely scrutinised. There is concern that it is being manipulated for covert recruitment into Russia’s war effort,” a senior diplomatic source familiar with the matter revealed, speaking on condition of anonymity.

    The controversy deepened in September when Russian national Mikhail Lyapin was arrested, interrogated and subsequently deported over suspected links to a recruitment ring. While the Directorate of Criminal Investigations initially stated that Lyapin was working for the Russian embassy, the mission denied he held diplomatic status.

    The Alabuga Start Programme was originally launched to promote technical training and industrial innovation at the Alabuga Special Economic Zone in Tatarstan.

    However, in recent months, the programme’s foreign student component has come under intense international scrutiny amid allegations that it has been repurposed to attract young people from developing countries under false pretenses.

    Investigative reports, including those by African Uncensored, have documented troubling patterns. A comprehensive study by the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organised Crime revealed that 14 Kenyan women were among 200 young Africans employed under the programme in Tatarstan. The facility’s proximity to conflict became starkly evident in April last year when Ukrainian drones struck the special economic zone, hitting one of the dormitories housing Alabuga Start participants and injuring several people. In response, the programme released a video featuring a Kenyan participant who claimed that she and her colleagues remained undeterred by Ukrainian threats.

    The research found that reports of labour exploitation at Alabuga had triggered official responses in both Kenya and Tanzania. In Kenya, agents from the Directorate of Criminal Investigations questioned immigration department officials about how Alabuga recruits had obtained passports to leave the country.

    Beyond those deceived into recruitment, intelligence sources indicate that some Africans, particularly former soldiers, have voluntarily signed up for frontline duty, attracted by significantly higher payment packages than those available in their home countries.

    The Russian Embassy in Nairobi has strongly rejected the allegations, characterizing them as part of an anti-Russian propaganda campaign spreading across Africa. In a statement, the embassy defended the Alabuga programme, describing it as a legitimate employment initiative for young specialists.

    “The Alabuga Special Economic Zone, established in 2006 in the Republic of Tatarstan, Russia, hosts the Alabuga Start international programme for the employment of young specialists in Russia. Young people from all over the world are recruited for programmes, where they undergo a full cycle of training, including a practical part, receive real skills and employment opportunities,” the embassy stated.

    The mission further accused Western countries of orchestrating a smear campaign to undermine Russia’s growing influence in Africa. “Western countries, which realise their position in the world is becoming increasingly precarious, are resorting to various, sometimes the most despicable, tools,” the statement read.

    Adding another layer of complexity to the controversy, Alabuga publicly highlighted a visit by Kenya’s Ambassador to Russia, Peter Mathuki, to the facility in May. According to a statement released by Alabuga, the centre exceeded the ambassador’s expectations.

    “I had heard about Alabuga before, but it helped a lot to see this technological industrial park with my own eyes. I am impressed,” the statement quoted Ambassador Mathuki as saying. During his visit, the ambassador toured the industrial site, the Alabuga Polytech educational centre and residential complexes housing company employees, including Alabuga Start participants.

    The ongoing investigation reflects growing concerns among African governments and international bodies about the vulnerability of young Africans seeking opportunities abroad. As the probe continues, diplomatic sources indicate that more evidence is being gathered on the operations of recruitment networks and their connections to Russian military objectives in Ukraine.

    The allegations have placed African governments in a delicate position, balancing their sovereign relationships with Russia against mounting evidence of potential exploitation of their citizens. For the young Africans caught in the middle, the promise of a better future through vocational training may have led them into a conflict thousands of miles from home.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

  • Baba Was Consolidating a Stronger ODM to Endorse Ruto in 2027, Raila’s Close Confidant Salah Oketch Reveals

    Baba Was Consolidating a Stronger ODM to Endorse Ruto in 2027, Raila’s Close Confidant Salah Oketch Reveals

    A close friend of the late former Prime Minister Raila Odinga, Oketch Salah, has disclosed new details about the veteran politician’s final political vision, saying that he had confided in him during their stay in India that he intended to strengthen the Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) as part of a broader plan to endorse President William Ruto for re-election in 2027.

    Speaking during an ODM consultative meeting at Siaya Senator Oburu Odinga’s home on Friday, October 24, Salah urged supporters in the Nyanza region and across the ODM network to remain part of President Ruto’s broad-based government, arguing that doing so would honour Raila’s wishes and secure the political relevance of his legacy. Salah said Raila envisioned a future where ODM would not merely serve as the opposition but as an active participant in national governance.

    “Baba alikuwa anataka kumsport Ruto; alitaka ODM iwe na nguvu ndio aendorse Ruto 2027,” Salah told the gathering, insisting that the late ODM leader’s remarks cautioning members against premature 2027 campaigns were part of a larger strategic plan.

    Oketch Salah while accompanying late former prime minister Raila Odinga in India.
    Oketch Salah while accompanying late former prime minister Raila Odinga in India.

    According to him, those statements, which some interpreted as Raila’s last instruction to focus on unity and development, were in fact meant to prepare the ground for a structured endorsement of Ruto’s re-election bid.

    Salah recounted his final days with Raila in India, where the former Prime Minister was undergoing treatment. He said Raila repeatedly spoke about his desire to consolidate ODM’s internal unity, broaden its national reach and position the party as a key pillar of Kenya’s political stability. “He was clear that ODM needed to evolve with the times. He told me, ‘Salah, we must make ODM strong and national, not just for elections but for the country’s future,’” he said.

    He further described Raila’s political spirit as one deeply inclined toward unity and stability, noting that even in his final months, the former Prime Minister was determined to build bridges across political divides. Salah said Raila believed that aligning with President Ruto’s administration would ensure the country remained cohesive and that ODM would maintain a decisive voice in national affairs.

    “Raila understood that Kenya’s politics was shifting,” Salah added. “He wanted ODM to be at the centre of that change, to work with the government of the day rather than fight it. That was his last great political vision.”

    Salah warned that if ODM and the Luo community failed to follow Raila’s roadmap and withdraw from the broad-based government, they risked long-term political isolation. He called on party members to rally behind Oburu Odinga and the ODM leadership to sustain Raila’s agenda of cooperation, inclusivity, and continued engagement with President Ruto’s administration.

    “He knew that staying close to government was not surrender; it was strategy,” Salah said.

    “He wanted to see a Kenya where competition would not translate into division, and where ODM’s ideas would shape policy even from within government.”

    The revelation has stirred intense discussion within ODM and among political analysts.

    While a section of party loyalists welcomed the statement as consistent with Raila’s recent overtures to State House before his death, others have expressed scepticism.

    Political analyst Herman Manyora dismissed the claims, warning ODM members against what he termed “an attempt to rewrite history.” Manyora argued that Raila never publicly announced an endorsement of Ruto and that his commitment to multi-party democracy was rooted in holding power to account.

    Nevertheless, Salah’s remarks have added a new dimension to the post-Raila political discourse, coming at a time when ODM is grappling with questions about succession, direction, and unity following the death of its founding leader. They also coincide with growing signals from President Ruto that his administration is open to collaboration with ODM, with the Head of State recently saying that “ODM will either form the next government or be part of it.”

    As the debate rages, one thing is clear: Raila Odinga’s influence continues to define Kenya’s political conversation, even in death.

    If Salah’s account is accurate, then the former Prime Minister’s final act was not of defiance, but of foresight — a carefully laid plan to keep ODM relevant and Kenya united long after he was gone. Whether the party chooses to follow that path remains the next great test of his enduring legacy.

    Raila-Ruto handshake.
    President William Ruto and ODM leader Raila Odinga.
  • US Vice President JD Vance Set to Visit Kenya in November

    US Vice President JD Vance Set to Visit Kenya in November

    US Vice President JD Vance is expected to travel to Kenya at the end of November, marking his inaugural official visit to Africa since President Donald Trump assumed office earlier this year.

    The trip, anticipated to follow Vance’s attendance at the G20 Leaders’ Summit in Johannesburg, South Africa, aims to strengthen diplomatic and economic relations between Washington and Nairobi at a time of uncertainty in US foreign policy.

    The visit, reported by multiple sources, is slated to begin around November 24 and last approximately four days, with Vance leading a large delegation to the Kenyan capital.

    While exact details of the itinerary remain undisclosed, Vance is scheduled to meet with Kenyan President William Ruto and other senior officials to discuss key issues including trade agreements and international security cooperation.

    Central to the agenda is the renewal of the Africa Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA), a pivotal trade pact that expired on September 30, 2025, allowing duty-free exports of Kenyan goods such as textiles, tea, and coffee to the US market.

    President Ruto has publicly stated that a one-year extension has been secured, but this remains unconfirmed by Washington and requires approval from the US Congress by year’s end.

    The lapse of AGOA has sparked concerns in Kenya over potential job losses and reduced revenues in export-dependent sectors, making Vance’s visit a critical opportunity for lobbying Trump’s support.

    Another focal point is Kenya’s role in the Haiti security mission.

    Kenyan police in Haiti.
    Kenyan police in Haiti.

    Kenyan forces have led the US-backed Multinational Security Support (MSS) Mission for over a year, but its mandate expired in October 2025. The initiative has since been upgraded to the UN-led Gang Suppression Force (GSF), aimed at attracting more international funding and resources.

    Ruto has emphasized that Kenya will only rejoin with guaranteed enhancements, including better equipment and financing, issues that could be resolved during the bilateral talks.

    The visit comes amid strains in US-Kenya relations influenced by the Trump administration’s “America First” policy, which has prompted diplomatic efforts to preserve key partnerships.

    It follows a canceled trip earlier this year by US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who had planned to include Kenya in his African tour but withdrew at the last minute.

    Sources suggest the Vance delegation’s arrival signals Washington’s intent to counterbalance growing Chinese influence in Kenya, with discussions potentially extending to tech investments and regional peace initiatives.

    Reactions on social media platform X have been largely positive, highlighting Kenya’s strategic importance as a gateway to Africa.

    One user noted, “There’s something about Kenya. Prince Charles came here first after succeeding Queen Elizabeth, and now JD Vance’s first official visit is Kenya.”

    Others expressed optimism for tangible benefits in trade and security, though some questioned whether the outcomes will prioritize Kenyan interests over US priorities.

    Neither the Kenyan State House nor the US Embassy in Nairobi has issued an official confirmation of the visit as of this reporting.

    If realized, it could pave the way for renewed commitments, potentially averting economic setbacks for Kenya and reinforcing collaborative efforts on global security challenges.

    Analysts view this as a pivotal moment in US-Africa relations, with Kenya positioned as a key ally in Washington’s broader strategy on the continent.

  • Interpol Goes After 14 Kenyans Linked to International Crypto Scams

    Interpol Goes After 14 Kenyans Linked to International Crypto Scams

    Fourteen Kenyans have been flagged by Interpol for allegedly financing terrorism through cryptocurrency and other virtual assets, with four already arrested as part of a continental crackdown on illicit financial flows.

    The arrests are part of Operation Catalyst, a landmark operation conducted between July and September 2025 that resulted in 83 arrests across six African countries and identified 160 persons of interest. The countries involved in the sweep include Angola, Cameroon, Kenya, Namibia, Nigeria, and South Sudan.

    In Kenya, investigators uncovered a suspected money laundering operation using a virtual asset service provider with potential links to terrorism financing, involving a scheme worth approximately 430,000 US dollars, equivalent to 55.55 million shillings, with 12 people implicated and two arrested so far .

    In a separate Kenyan case, two individuals were arrested for online recruitment of young people from East and North Africa into terrorist groups, with funds traced through a cryptocurrency trading platform back to individuals in Tanzania .

    The operation, jointly coordinated by Interpol and AFRIPOL, represents the first time financial crime, cybercrime and counter-terrorism units from multiple African countries have joined forces to specifically target terrorism financing. Authorities screened more than 15,000 persons of interest and entities, uncovering around 260 million US dollars in both traditional and virtual currencies potentially linked to terrorism-related activities .

    Terror groups have increasingly turned to cryptocurrencies as a means of payment, exploiting the pseudonymous and decentralised nature of digital assets to conduct money laundering and other financial crimes. The criminals favour cryptocurrencies over formal banking systems because transactions carry a lower risk of detection by law enforcement or traditional banks, which are required to submit suspicious transaction reports.

    Of the 83 arrests made, 21 were for terrorism-related crimes, 28 were for financial fraud and money laundering, 16 were linked to cyber-enabled scams and 18 were related to the illicit use of virtual assets . Approximately 600,000 dollars has already been seized, with additional investigations underway to trace and recover further assets.

    The operation also exposed a massive transnational cryptocurrency-based Ponzi scheme that masqueraded as a legitimate online trading platform. The scheme affected at least 17 countries, including Cameroon, Kenya, and Nigeria, accumulating more than 100,000 victims worldwide, with estimated losses of 562 million US dollars .

    As part of Operation Catalyst, a Red Notice was issued for an individual believed to be behind a sophisticated cryptocurrency scheme that scammed victims of approximately 5 million US dollars . The suspect allegedly redirected funds to multiple addresses and centralised exchange platforms to obscure the trail and convert the assets into regular currency. Investigators believe the case exhibits several traits consistent with known terrorist financing methodologies.

    The crackdown comes as Kenya moves to regulate its burgeoning cryptocurrency sector. President William Ruto recently signed the Virtual Asset Service Providers Act, 2025, establishing a legal framework to regulate cryptocurrencies and other digital assets . The law creates a dual-regulator model where the Central Bank of Kenya will supervise payment processors and stablecoin issuers, while the Capital Markets Authority oversees trading platforms, exchanges, brokers, and investment advisers.

    According to Chainalysis, Kenya ranked fourth in Africa by transaction volume between July 2024 and June 2025, receiving nearly 20 billion dollars in crypto assets . A large number of Kenyan firms have reportedly turned to cryptocurrencies for payments to foreign suppliers whenever there are dollar shortages or a weakening of the shilling, according to recent revelations by the International Monetary Fund.

    The new regulatory framework requires all virtual asset service providers to obtain licenses and meet capital and cybersecurity requirements. Licensed platforms must segregate client funds, hold adequate reserves, protect customer data, and implement strict Know Your Customer checks and suspicious transaction reporting to curb money laundering and terrorism financing.

    Interpol Secretary General Valdecy Urquiza emphasised the significance of the operation. “By sharing intelligence, expertise and resources, we can more effectively identify and disrupt the financial flows that support terrorist activities to stay one step ahead of these threats and keep our communities safe,” he said.

    The operation received strategic cyber intelligence support from private sector entities including Binance, Moody’s and Uppsala Security, underscoring the growing importance of public-private partnerships in combating financial crime in the digital age.

  • Ruto Asked To Rejoin ODM Party As UDA Merger Is Hinted

    Ruto Asked To Rejoin ODM Party As UDA Merger Is Hinted

    NAIROBI, Kenya – In a stunning political development that could reshape Kenya’s electoral landscape, President William Ruto is being actively courted to join the Orange Democratic Movement, with Governor Simba Arati making an unprecedented public appeal during Mashujaa Day celebrations that has sent shockwaves through the country’s political establishment.

    Speaking at Marani grounds in Kisii County on Monday, Arati, who serves as ODM’s Deputy Party leader, went beyond mere political courtesy to explicitly urge the sitting president to register as a member of the opposition party, framing the audacious proposal as essential to fulfilling the late Raila Odinga’s vision of building a formidable political vehicle capable of delivering transformative governance to Kenyans.

    The timing of Arati’s appeal carries profound symbolism.

    It came as the nation mourned Raila Odinga, with flags flying at half-mast and moments of silence observed across the country.

    Yet rather than eulogizing a political era’s end, the governor painted a picture of continuity and expansion, one where the president himself could become the torchbearer of Raila’s legacy.

    “The party has plans of fronting a presidential candidate to enable it either to form the next government, or be in the coalition that will win the election,” Arati declared, putting dissenters on notice while simultaneously leaving the door wide open for Ruto’s entry into ODM ranks.

    The statement was carefully calibrated, acknowledging ODM’s presidential ambitions while hinting at coalition possibilities that would naturally accommodate a sitting president.

    What makes this political theater particularly intriguing is the broader context. Ruto has been publicly credited with “seeking to strengthen” ODM ahead of the 2027 General Elections, a characterization that would have seemed fantastical just months ago when the president and the opposition appeared locked in perpetual confrontation.

    The relationship between State House and Orange House has undergone a metamorphosis that even seasoned political observers struggle to fully comprehend.

    The implications of Arati’s proposal extend far beyond individual party membership. Political analysts are already gaming out scenarios where a Ruto-led ODM or a formal UDA-ODM merger could fundamentally alter Kenya’s democratic architecture.

    Such a consolidation would create a political juggernaut with unparalleled reach, combining UDA’s Rift Valley stronghold with ODM’s dominance in Nyanza and significant coastal presence.

    The proposal has sparked fierce debate about the future of multi-party democracy in Kenya. Critics warn that absorbing the president into ODM, or engineering a merger between the ruling party and the main opposition vehicle, would effectively eliminate meaningful political competition.

    The specter of a de facto one-party state looms large in these discussions, evoking memories of Kenya’s authoritarian past when KANU’s hegemony stifled dissent and concentrated power dangerously.

    Yet proponents argue that Kenya’s fragmented political landscape, characterized by ethnic coalition building and fleeting party loyalties, has produced governance paralysis.

    They point to the current administration’s struggle to implement its agenda amid legislative gridlock and suggest that a grand coalition might provide the stability necessary for transformative policy implementation.

    The late Raila Odinga’s shadow looms large over these machinations.

    Arati’s speech painted the former prime minister as “a visionary leader, a champion of democracy, and a beacon of hope,” whose legacy demands protection and advancement.

    The governor’s assertion that ODM would “commit to carrying forward Baba’s dream” raises profound questions about what that dream actually entailed and whether it included the possibility of his longtime rival inheriting his political machinery.

    Raila spent decades building ODM into a formidable opposition force, surviving detention, exile, and numerous electoral disappointments.

    His vision encompassed not just party building but fundamental restructuring of Kenya’s governance through devolution, constitutional reform, and expanded democratic space.

    Whether folding ODM into the ruling coalition serves or betrays that vision depends largely on one’s perspective about pragmatism versus principle in Kenyan politics.

    The proposal also exposes deepening fissures within ODM itself. Recent reports indicate competing factions are already jockeying for position in a post-Raila era, with some leaders wary of becoming junior partners in what would effectively be a Ruto-dominated political arrangement.

    The party’s traditional base in Nyanza and coastal regions may resist any perceived capitulation to a president many still view with suspicion.

    Kisii County Commissioner Joseph Kibet’s emphasis on voter registration during the same Mashujaa Day event adds another dimension to the unfolding drama.

    His appeal for eligible residents to register before the deadline suggests that both national and county officials anticipate significant political realignment ahead of 2027, with control of the expanded voter roll becoming crucial to whatever configuration emerges from current negotiations.

    The stark warning Kibet issued to drug traffickers and illicit brew peddlers, promising ruthless government action, underscores the administration’s desire to demonstrate effective governance credentials regardless of political complications.

    It is a reminder that policy implementation and service delivery continue even as seismic political realignment discussions occur behind closed doors and occasionally burst into public view.

    For President Ruto, the calculus involves weighing the benefits of absorbing a weakened but still significant opposition party against the risks of alienating his UDA base and appearing to abandon the party that brought him to power.

    His 2022 victory was predicated partly on a “hustler versus dynasty” narrative that positioned him against establishment figures like Raila. Joining or merging with ODM would require careful reframing of that narrative to maintain credibility with his core supporters.

    The international community will watch these developments closely. Kenya’s reputation as East Africa’s most vibrant democracy rests partly on its competitive electoral environment and peaceful power transitions.

    Any moves toward consolidating political power, even through ostensibly democratic means, will invite scrutiny about democratic backsliding and the health of Kenya’s institutional framework.

    As the 2027 elections approach, Arati’s call for Ruto to join ODM represents more than political theater.

    It signals a potential fundamental restructuring of Kenya’s party system, with implications for democratic competition, ethnic coalition building, and the balance between stability and pluralism.

    Whether this audacious proposal gains traction or fades into political obscurity will shape Kenyan politics for years to come, determining whether the country moves toward greater consolidation or maintains its tradition of competitive, if often chaotic, multi-party democracy.

    The coming months will reveal whether Arati was floating a trial balloon, articulating a consensus view within ODM’s leadership, or simply engaging in the kind of political speculation that thrives in Kenya’s ever-turbulent political environment.

    What remains certain is that the late Raila Odinga’s passing has opened space for political reconfiguration that seemed impossible during his lifetime, and ambitious politicians across the spectrum are racing to shape the emerging order to their advantage.

  • Why the Military Honored Raila Odinga With a 17-Gun Salute

    Why the Military Honored Raila Odinga With a 17-Gun Salute

    Bondo, Kenya — The rhythmic cracks of a 17-gun salute echoed across Kang’o ka Jaramogi in Bondo on Sunday evening as the late former Prime Minister Raila Amollo Odinga was laid to rest beside his father, Jaramogi Oginga Odinga.

    The military honours, rarely accorded to a civilian leader, reflected the extraordinary stature Raila held in Kenya’s public life, a man who was never president yet carried the hopes of a nation for decades.

    Moments after the coffin was lowered into the grave, Raila’s trademark cap and fly whisk, symbols of his political identity, were placed gently atop the casket by his longtime bodyguard Maurice Ogeta.

    The quiet moment was followed by the sharp volleys of gunfire from the Kenya Defence Forces rifles.

    Seventeen rounds pierced the Bondo sky in a powerful farewell befitting a statesman.

    Casket of late former PM Raila Odinga surrounded by security offficers during the funeral services at Jaramogi Oginga Odinga University of Science and Technology in Bondo.
    Casket of late former PM Raila Odinga surrounded by security offficers during the funeral services at Jaramogi Oginga Odinga University of Science and Technology in Bondo.

    Although debate surrounded whether Raila would be granted a State funeral, President William Ruto confirmed during his address that he personally sanctioned the military honours.

    “Some people tried to persuade me not to give Raila a State funeral with military honours,” Ruto said. “But I felt that as the people’s president, he deserved the honour given to heads of state.”

    From the moment the government declared a seven-day period of national mourning and ordered flags to fly at half-mast, the tone of Raila’s send-off was unmistakably that of a State leader.

    His body was flown back from India aboard a chartered aircraft and received a water cannon salute at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport, a ceremony reserved for national figures.

    The following day, his body lay in state at Parliament Buildings, where thousands of Kenyans and dignitaries, including President Ruto and former President Uhuru Kenyatta, paid their final respects.

    At Nyayo National Stadium, during the national requiem mass, thousands of mourners gathered from all walks of life to honour the man many called Baba.

    Later, his remains were flown to Kisumu aboard a Kenya Air Force C-27J Spartan, an aircraft usually designated for the President and senior military officers. Upon arrival, another water cannon salute greeted the flight, reaffirming the significance of the occasion.

    According to the Defence Forces Standing Orders, the number of gun salutes given corresponds to a leader’s rank or position.

    A 21-gun salute is reserved for a sitting head of state, while 19 guns honour retired presidents or those of equivalent authority such as the Chief of Defence Forces.

    A 17-gun salute, which was accorded to Raila, is reserved for a retired Prime Minister, Vice President, or senior military officer.

    Casket of late former PM Raila Odinga surrounded by security offficers during the funeral services at Jaramogi Oginga Odinga University of Science and Technology in Bondo.
    Casket of late former PM Raila Odinga surrounded by security offficers during the funeral services at Jaramogi Oginga Odinga University of Science and Technology in Bondo.

    This classification made Raila Odinga’s honour not only symbolic but also grounded in established military protocol. His service as Kenya’s Prime Minister from 2008 to 2013 placed him within that tier, making the salute a fitting tribute.

    Previous state funerals help place the gesture in perspective. Retired Presidents Daniel arap Moi in 2020 and Mwai Kibaki in 2022 both received 19-gun salutes, while the late General Francis Ogolla, who served as Chief of Defence Forces, received the same. Raila’s 17-gun salute therefore matched his former national position and his standing as one of Kenya’s most influential leaders.

    During the burial, which was conducted under Anglican rites, the military flag that had draped Raila’s coffin was formally handed to his widow, Mama Ida Odinga, in a solemn act of respect. National Assembly Speaker Moses Wetang’ula presented a compilation of Raila’s parliamentary contributions, drawn from the Hansard and the tributes made in Parliament after his death.

    As the final shots faded over Bondo, the ceremony closed a monumental chapter in Kenya’s political journey. Though Raila Odinga never wore the presidential sash, the sound of those 17 guns affirmed what millions of Kenyans already knew — that he had long earned his place among the nation’s greatest sons.

    “He was never president, but he was presidential,” a senior officer quietly remarked after the ceremony. “That salute was not just for protocol. It was for history.”

    Raila’s casket lowered to the grave.

  • Inside Controversial Bills Ruto Signed Into Law On The Day Raila Died and The Online Backlash

    Inside Controversial Bills Ruto Signed Into Law On The Day Raila Died and The Online Backlash

    The nation mourned former Prime Minister Raila Odinga on Wednesday, October 15, but even as grief swept across Kenya, President William Ruto was busy at State House signing eight pieces of legislation that would fundamentally reshape how Kenyans live, work and express themselves online.

    Among the bills assented to law that day was the Computer Misuse and Cybercrimes (Amendment) Act 2024, a piece of legislation so contentious it had drawn fierce opposition from digital rights groups, civil society organizations and even some members of parliament who warned it could be weaponized to silence dissent under the guise of fighting crime.

    The timing has become a subject of intense debate. Civil society activists and legal experts have questioned whether the government deliberately chose a moment of national grief to push through controversial legislation, hoping it would escape the scrutiny it deserved.

    As Kenyans turned their attention to the death of one of Africa’s most prominent statesmen, Ruto was quietly expanding government powers over the digital space in ways that alarm anyone who understands the delicate balance between security and freedom.

    The Computer Misuse law grants the government authority to seek court orders for pre-emptive shutdowns of online platforms believed to be facilitating criminal activity, even before any actual harm occurs.

    This marks a dramatic shift in how Kenya polices the internet, moving from reactive enforcement to predictive censorship.

    The law empowers the National Computer and Cyber-Crimes Coordination Committee, an authorized person, to issue a directive to render a website or application inaccessible where it is proved that the website or application promotes unlawful activities.

    The categories are broad and troubling.

    Child pornography, terrorism, extreme religious activities and cultist practices can now trigger website shutdowns and content removal orders.

    The private member’s bill sponsored by Wajir East MP Aden Mohamed amends the 2018 Computer Misuse and Cybercrimes Act to introduce new definitions that expand what the government considers cybercrime.

    The law now introduces specific offenses for phishing and scams, with general cybercrime penalties raised to Sh10 million or 20 years imprisonment for severe cases .

    During parliamentary debate, Dagoretti South MP John Kiarie, who chairs the Departmental Committee on Information, Communication and Innovation, defended the amendments as necessary.

    He pointed to statistics showing that Kenyans spend an average of four hours and twelve minutes online daily, making the country vulnerable to phishing attacks, fake news, cyberbullying and AI-generated disinformation . Kiarie told the House that with more than eight out of every ten posts likely to be fake or toxic, the country needed to fortify its digital laws.

    His colleague from Dagoretti North, Beatrice Elachi, argued the changes would help Kenya respond to mounting international pressure, particularly from the European Union, which has criticized the country for failing to adequately police digital child abuse.

    She warned that young Kenyans seeking educational opportunities abroad could find their prospects damaged by harmful digital footprints.

    But not everyone in parliament celebrated.

    Funyula MP Wilberforce Oundo issued a stark warning during debate, cautioning that the inclusion of terrorism as grounds for content removal could be abused by authorities to target legitimate political activity.

    He regretted that under the provision, even citizens sharing photos of protests could be unfairly targeted , noting that Kenya already has an Anti-Terrorism Act.

    The online backlash has been swift and unforgiving. Digital rights advocates have characterized the law as a tool of control rather than protection, pointing to Kenya’s recent history of internet shutdowns and restrictions.

    The Kenya ICT Action Network warned in an earlier statement that given Kenya’s recent history of shutting down the internet in June 2024 and blocking messaging applications like Telegram in November 2023, the proposal appeared to be yet another attempt to formalize and expand government censorship .

    Legal experts have raised constitutional concerns, arguing that the law blurs the line between security enforcement and policing of speech, leaving too much room for abuse.

    Terms like offensive content and false publication are vague enough to criminalize satire, commentary or even genuine mistakes .

    The heavy penalties have also sparked outrage. Individuals found guilty of sending messages that incite fear, violence or serious offense could face fines of up to Sh20 million or imprisonment of up to 10 years.

    Critics argue these penalties are disproportionate and could devastate ordinary internet users who fall afoul of the law.

    In a country where online dissent is a powerful tool and government critics have faced abduction, this law hands the state a very sharp, double-edged sword , warned one digital rights publication.

    The fears are not unfounded.

    Kenya has seen a pattern of using existing cybercrime laws to target activists and bloggers who criticize the government.

    The law also expands the definition of identity theft to include passwords and explicitly criminalizes digital impersonation, data harvesting and phishing.

    Anyone who willfully causes unauthorized alteration and unlawfully takes ownership of another person’s SIM card with intent to commit an offense will face imprisonment for up to two years or a fine not exceeding Sh200,000.

    Beyond the cybercrime law, the other seven bills signed that day carry their own weight. The Privatization Act 2025 introduces what the government calls a transparent, accountable legal blueprint to accelerate privatization of State-owned companies.

    The initiative aligns with Ruto’s plan to privatize entities including Kenya Pipeline Company, which the government hopes will raise Sh100 billion to help plug the Sh871 billion deficit in the Sh4.3 trillion budget for the 2025/26 financial year.

    The new law creates a Privatization Authority to replace the Privatization Commission and establishes a Privatization Appeals Board to handle disputes.

    The board will consist of a chairperson appointed by the president, an accredited arbitrator and three other persons appointed by the Cabinet Secretary of the National Treasury.

    The National Police Service Commission (Amendment) Act, sponsored by Suna West MP Peter Masara, recognizes the importance of mental health of police officers.

    The law mandates the NPSC to establish a counseling and psychosocial support unit devolved to all counties to promote the mental health and wellbeing of police officers as well as civilian members of the service.

    This comes after recent reports of injury and loss of life among police due to mental wellness challenges.

    The Land (Amendment) Act, sponsored by Ruiru MP Simon King’ara, requires the Chief Land Registrar to register all public land allocated to a public body or institution by the National Land Commission and any land set aside by a developer for a public purpose.

    The move is designed to prevent land grabbing by ensuring all public land has title deeds and is published in the Kenya Gazette.

    The National Land Commission (Amendment) Act by Kilifi North MP Owen Baya extends NLC’s power to interrogate past land injustices for an additional five years. The commission will now review all grants or dispositions of public land to establish their propriety or legality until October 2030.

    Baya says the extension will allow the commission to resolve land issues in Coastal counties and issues relating to public land previously earmarked for settlement of landless persons.

    The Air Passenger Service Charge (Amendment) Act reallocates funds from the Tourism Promotion Fund to the Tourism Fund to eliminate duplication of roles and improve efficiency.

    The Wildlife Conservation and Management (Amendment) Act, sponsored by Lamu East MP Captain Ruweida Obo, includes additional marine wildlife among species for which victims may be compensated for injury or death. Kenyan communities living adjacent to marine areas can now be compensated for injuries suffered from attacks by sharks, stonefish, whales and stingrays.

    But it is the cybercrime law that has dominated conversations online and in civil society circles.

    As Kenya grapples with the implications of this new legal regime, questions remain about how authorities will balance legitimate law enforcement concerns with constitutional protections for freedom of expression and media freedom.

    Civil society organizations have indicated they are studying the law for potential constitutional challenges, setting the stage for what could be a protracted legal battle over the future of Kenya’s digital space.

    In a country where the internet has become the primary battleground for political discourse, particularly among the youth who drove last year’s Gen Z protests, any law that gives the government power to shut down platforms and remove content will face fierce resistance.

    The signing ceremony on October 15 may have been overshadowed by Raila’s death, but the laws enacted that day will shape Kenya long after the grief subsides. Whether they protect Kenyans or police them remains the subject of an angry, urgent debate that shows no signs of ending.

  • The Story Behind Raila’s Favourite Song ‘Jamaican Farewell’

    The Story Behind Raila’s Favourite Song ‘Jamaican Farewell’

    LWhen Raila Odinga’s voice filled the television studio that January evening in 2020, softly singing the opening lines of Jamaican Farewell, few could have imagined how prophetic that moment would become.

    The veteran politician, relaxed in his Karen home, had chosen to share with NTV’s Joseph Warungu not a political manifesto or a campaign promise, but something more intimate: a song that had travelled with him through seven decades of life.

    The melody itself carries a history as layered and complex as the man who made it his anthem. Jamaican Farewell emerged in 1956 from the pen of Irving Burgie, a Brooklyn-born songwriter who performed under the name Lord Burgess.

    Burgie, whose mother hailed from Barbados, had served in an all-black United States Army battalion during World War II.

    It was during those years, stationed far from home, that he first picked up a guitar and began weaving together the Caribbean folk melodies his mother had shared with him as a child.

    After the war, Burgie attended the prestigious Juilliard School on the GI Bill, studying voice and honing his craft. By the early 1950s, he was performing at Manhattan’s Village Vanguard, singing Caribbean folk songs to audiences hungry for something beyond the conventional pop fare of post-war America.

    It was there that fate intervened in the form of a mutual friend, William Attaway, who introduced Burgie to a young singer of Jamaican descent named Harry Belafonte.

    Belafonte himself embodied the Caribbean diaspora experience.

    Born in Harlem in 1927 to a Martinican father and Jamaican mother, he had spent eight formative years of his childhood in rural St. Ann, Jamaica, attending Wolmer’s School in Kingston.

    Those years in Jamaica, breathing in the island’s music and folklore, would later become the wellspring from which his artistic identity flowed.

    The collaboration between Burgie and Belafonte proved alchemical. Together with Attaway, Burgie composed eight of the eleven songs on Belafonte’s 1956 album Calypso, including both Day-O (The Banana Boat Song) and Jamaica Farewell.

    The album made history as the first long-playing record by a single artist to sell over one million copies in the United States, remaining at the top of the Billboard charts for 31 weeks.

    Jamaica Farewell is written in the mento style, a Jamaican folk music tradition that predates reggae and ska. Burgie crafted the lyrics as a meditation on departure and longing, painting vivid images of a sun-drenched Caribbean coast and the bittersweet pain of leaving behind a loved one in Kingston Town.

    The song’s gentle melancholy, wrapped in a lilting Caribbean rhythm, created something that transcended geography and spoke to anyone who had ever said goodbye.

    What Burgie and Belafonte could not have known was how this song would ripple across continents and generations.

    The song was translated into multiple languages, including Swedish, German, Vietnamese, and Bengali. In Bengal, one version even became an anthem for the Naxalite revolutionary movement in the 1970s, proof that a song about personal farewell could resonate with political struggle.

    It was this universal quality that drew Raila Odinga to Jamaican Farewell.

    As the son of Jaramogi Oginga Odinga, Kenya’s first vice president and a towering figure in the independence movement, Raila grew up in a household where politics and music intertwined.

    The 1950s and 1960s, when Belafonte’s calypso craze swept the world, coincided with Kenya’s own journey toward independence and Raila’s coming of age.

    In that 2020 interview, Raila recalled the musical landscape of his youth with evident nostalgia. “When we were growing up, Harry was up there. We had Cliff Richards, Elvis Presley, Jim Reeves, Ray Charles, and there was also Louis Armstrong. But Harry was my favourite, and my best one was the Jamaican Farewell,” he said. The song had even been translated into Kiswahili, he remembered with a chuckle, making it part of East Africa’s musical vocabulary.

    But Jamaican Farewell was more than nostalgia for Raila.

    The lyrics spoke directly to his own life’s trajectory: the constant motion, the departures, the partings from comrades and causes.

    “Down the way where the nights are gay, and the sun shines daily on the mountain top, I took a trip on a sailing ship, and when I reached Jamaica, I made a stop,” he sang in his interview.

    Those lines could have been written about his own political odyssey, from the lecture halls of East Germany to the detention cells of Nyayo House, from the opposition trenches to the grand halls of power.

    The refrain held particular poignancy: “But I’m sad to say, I’m on my way, won’t be back for many a day.”

    For a man who spent years in detention, who watched political alliances form and fracture, who campaigned for the presidency five times, the song became a kind of personal psalm.

    Three years earlier, in 2017, he had sung the same song for KTN News anchor Betty Kyallo, suggesting it had become a ritual of self-expression, a way of articulating what mere political speech could not.

    Harry Belafonte himself understood this power. Beyond his musical success, he became deeply involved in the civil rights movement, maintaining a life insurance policy on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. with Coretta Scott King as the beneficiary because Dr. King believed he couldn’t afford it. Belafonte used his platform to advance justice, much as Raila would dedicate his life to the pursuit of democracy and reform in Kenya.

    The song’s composer, Irving Burgie, lived to see his creation become a standard covered by artists from Jimmy Buffett to Carly Simon.

    His songs sold over 100 million records worldwide, and he also wrote the national anthem of Barbados after the island achieved independence in 1966. Burgie passed away in 2019 at age 95, never meeting Raila Odinga but having touched his life profoundly through six minutes of melody and verse.

    In those final years, visitors to Raila’s Karen home often heard music playing softly in the background during their conversations, the classics from his youth providing a soundtrack to reflection.

    He spoke less about politics and more about life’s simple pleasures: a cup of tea, an old record, time with family. The restless sailor seemed, finally, to be contemplating harbour.

    The symbolism of Jamaican Farewell cuts deeper still.

    In Burgie’s lyrics, the sailor must leave “a little girl in Kingston Town,” his heart remaining behind even as his ship sails on.

    For Raila, Kingston Town was Kenya itself, the land he could never fully abandon despite the personal cost of his political journey.

    His heart remained embedded in the soil of his struggles and triumphs, among the people whose hopes he had carried for more than half a century.

    There is a particular kind of wisdom in choosing a song like Jamaican Farewell as one’s favourite.

    It acknowledges that life is movement, that commitment requires sacrifice, that the pursuit of distant horizons means leaving safe harbours behind.

    Yet the song is not bitter.

    Its melody is gentle, even hopeful. It speaks of return, of memory, of love that persists across distance and time.

    Belafonte once described his childhood years in Jamaica as formative, the place where he absorbed the rhythms and stories that would define his art.

    Similarly, Raila’s political consciousness was forged in the crucible of Kenya’s post-independence struggles, in the stories of resistance his father told, in the contradictions between the promise of uhuru and the reality of power.

    When news of Raila’s passing broke, Kenyans turned to social media to share their grief. Among the tributes, the lyrics of Jamaican Farewell resurfaced again and again.

    It was as though the nation had collectively remembered that their departed leader had already told them, in song, how his story would end: with departure, with longing, with a promise that though the voyage must be made, the heart remains.

    The song’s final verse carries a weight that seems almost unbearable now: “My heart is down, my head is turning around, I had to leave a little girl in Kingston Town.”

    In the grammar of metaphor, this became Raila’s relationship with Kenya, a love story marked by devotion and disappointment, by hope and heartbreak, by an unwillingness to give up even when victory seemed impossible.

    Irving Burgie died in 2019, Harry Belafonte in 2023, and Raila Odinga in 2025.

    Three men from different continents, connected by a song that speaks to the universal human experience of departure. Burgie’s autobiography, published in 2007, was titled after his most famous composition: Day-O. One wonders what title Raila might have chosen for his own memoir, had he written one. Perhaps simply Jamaican Farewell would have sufficed.

    The song endures not because it offers easy answers or happy endings, but because it acknowledges a fundamental truth: that meaningful lives are often lived in motion, sailing toward uncertain destinations, leaving behind what we love in pursuit of what we believe.

    For Raila Odinga, who spent eight decades navigating the turbulent waters of Kenyan politics, Belafonte’s gentle ballad was more than a favourite song. It was a mirror, reflecting back his own journey in melody and verse.

    As Kenya lowers her flags and raises her voice in remembrance, perhaps we should all listen again to Jamaican Farewell.

    Not as background music or nostalgia, but as what it became for one man: a philosophy, a prayer, a promise that even in departure, even in farewell, the voyage was worth taking.

    The sun still shines daily on the mountain top. The ship has sailed. But the song, like the man who sang it, lingers on.

  • Bondo Bishop Rebukes Looters, Handouts Culture During Raila’s State Funeral

    Bondo Bishop Rebukes Looters, Handouts Culture During Raila’s State Funeral

    Fiery sermon by Rt Rev Prof. David Kodia draws thunderous applause as he condemns corruption and money-driven politics

    NAIROBI, Kenya – A wave of thunderous applause and emotional reactions swept through Nyayo National Stadium on Friday when the Bishop of the Anglican Diocese of Bondo delivered a fiery sermon that electrified thousands of mourners at the state funeral of former Prime Minister Raila Odinga.

    Rt Rev Prof. David Kodia’s powerful message, which condemned corruption and the culture of handouts in Kenyan politics, struck a chord with the crowd as he called for moral renewal and justice in the nation.

    Standing before a sea of mourners waving flags, twigs and white handkerchiefs, Bishop Kodia’s words cut through the air with prophetic force as he delivered what many described as both a sermon and a rallying cry.

    “When we are proclaiming the word, we should not be fearful,” he began, his voice rising with conviction. “The word proclaimed must have the power to transform and renew our strength, for the liberation of a country from those who are looting everything from us, from the county levels to everywhere.”

    The crowd erupted in cheers, whistling and clapping, with some mourners rising to their feet as if echoing the bishop’s warning against corruption. Others clapped rhythmically, shouting approval as the sermon gained momentum.

    But Bishop Kodia was not done. In a moment that drew even louder reactions, he issued a direct warning to corrupt leaders present at the ceremony.

    “I want us to make a testament with the people of Kenya. If there is anyone here, at whatever level, be you a governor, an MCA, whoever it is who has looted this country, you know you stand the chance to be condemned,” he declared.

    The crowd roared in approval, with mourners jumping to their feet and waving white handkerchiefs toward the sky. The atmosphere shifted from mourning to defiant reflection, a fusion of grief and political truth.

    The bishop also took aim at what he termed the “bad manners” of Kenya’s current political class, lamenting the spread of a handout culture that has eroded integrity and genuine public service.

    “Baba never used the power of money to intimidate people or lure followers,” Bishop Kodia said to resounding applause. “He used the power of persuasion, the power of the word. Today, we have bad manners among our politicians. They have taught our people the culture of handouts, where one is only seen in terms of what they can give.”

    He praised Odinga’s integrity and commitment to principle, contrasting his leadership with the money-driven politics that have taken root in the country.

    Revealing a recent personal encounter, Bishop Kodia said he had shared breakfast with Raila and Mama Ida Odinga barely a month before his passing, describing the ODM leader as “a man at peace with himself and with God.”

    “I saw a humble servant who was ready to meet his Maker at any time,” he said. “He remained deeply connected to the church and committed to the values of justice, peace and unity.”

    Turning his focus to the ideals that Raila embodied, Bishop Kodia reflected on the late leader’s lifelong pursuit of justice and nationhood.

    “When we are talking about the person of the stature of Raila Amollo Odinga, we are seeing in him those strengths of justice which are yet to be won,” he said. “We are seeing in him those trends of peace which are yet to be achieved. The strengths of reconciliation are yet to be seen. We are seeing in him the Kenyanhood being at the centre of everything else.”

    The bishop also called for moral renewal and unity among Kenyans, warning against tribalism and corruption that continue to divide the nation.

    “Kenya is too small to be subdivided into tribes and regions,” he declared. “Let us see ourselves first as Kenyans, not as members of tribes or classes.”

    Bishop Kodia commended President William Ruto for honouring Odinga with a state funeral, saying no leader was more deserving of national recognition.

    By the time Bishop Kodia concluded with a solemn blessing, “May God lift you all as we bid farewell to Baba,” many in the audience were in tears. The sermon, though brief, captured the emotional heartbeat of the day, grief interwoven with a collective yearning for a just Kenya.

    The state funeral brought together government officials, foreign dignitaries and thousands of ordinary Kenyans who came to pay their respects to the veteran opposition leader who spent decades fighting for democracy and justice in Kenya.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

  • Oburu Odinga Appointed Interim ODM Leader as Kenya Mourns Raila

    Oburu Odinga Appointed Interim ODM Leader as Kenya Mourns Raila

    Nairobi, Kenya – The Orange Democratic Movement has appointed Siaya Senator Oburu Odinga as acting party leader following the sudden death of his younger brother, Raila Odinga, the party’s founder and longtime opposition stalwart.

    The appointment was announced early Thursday morning after an emergency meeting of ODM’s National Executive Committee.

    The decision comes as the nation prepares for the arrival of Raila Odinga’s body at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport at 9:30 a.m., where it is expected to be received by family, party officials, and dignitaries.

    Raila Odinga, 80, died of a heart attack on Wednesday, October 15, while undergoing medical treatment in Koothattukulam, Kerala, India.

    He reportedly collapsed during a morning walk, according to hospital officials at Devamatha Hospital.

    The veteran politician, who served as Kenya’s Prime Minister from 2008 to 2013 and ran for president five times, was a towering figure in African politics, known for his relentless advocacy for democracy and reform.

    President William Ruto, a former political rival, described him as “truly a once-in-a-generation leader” in a statement mourning his passing.

    Oburu Odinga, 82, a seasoned politician and economist who has represented Siaya County in the Senate since 2013, was unanimously endorsed by the NEC to step in as interim leader.

    The appointment is temporary, pending a final decision by the party’s top organs, as ODM navigates the emotional and political vacuum left by Raila’s death.

    “The National Executive Committee has this morning met and unanimously endorsed the designation of the Senator of Siaya County, Dr Oburu Oginga, as the Acting Party Leader. This appointment takes effect immediately,” read an official ODM statement.

    Mombasa Governor Abdulswamad Nassir, speaking after the NEC meeting, confirmed the decision and announced that condolence books have been opened in all ODM offices nationwide for the public to pay tribute to Raila. Kileleshwa MCA Robert Alai, an ODM member, echoed the announcement on social media, urging party supporters to ignore misinformation and rally behind the new interim leadership.

    The Odinga family, long synonymous with Kenyan opposition politics stemming from their father, Jaramogi Oginga Odinga, Kenya’s first vice president, now faces the challenge of preserving Raila’s legacy.

    Oburu, who has served in various roles including as a nominated MP and assistant minister, is seen as a stabilizing force due to his close ties to Raila and deep roots in the party.

    Analysts suggest this interim role will help ODM maintain cohesion as it contemplates a permanent successor, amid speculation about potential internal contests.

    Reactions to the appointment have been largely supportive within ODM circles, with members expressing resolve to honor Raila’s vision of justice and equality.

    However, the party’s future remains uncertain, as Raila’s charismatic leadership was central to its identity and electoral success.

    As Kenya mourns a political icon, attention turns to how ODM will evolve under new stewardship in a rapidly changing political landscape.

  • Doctor Who Attended to Raila Reveals Final Moments Before His Death and the Battle to Save His Life

    Doctor Who Attended to Raila Reveals Final Moments Before His Death and the Battle to Save His Life

    KOCHI, INDIA — Inside the quiet corridors of Devamatha Hospital in Kerala, the final moments of Raila Amolo Odinga — one of Africa’s most enduring political figures — were marked by urgency, panic, and desperate medical intervention.

    Dr. Alphons Mathew, the cardiologist who led the emergency response, recounted the dark moments before the former Prime Minister’s death, describing an intense battle to save a man who had, for decades, defined Kenya’s political destiny.

    “Considering all the circumstances, we performed continuous CPR — cardiopulmonary resuscitation — and applied all available cardiac emergency procedures,” Dr. Alphons told Reuters on Wednesday.

    “Despite our very sincere and persistent efforts, including other medical measures, we were unable to save him. We are deeply sorry to inform you that he is no longer with us.”

    Raila, 80, had been in India for routine medical treatment and was staying at an Ayurvedic wellness facility in Kochi.

    According to hospital and police sources, he set out for his usual morning walk at around 8:30 a.m., accompanied by his sister, daughter, personal physician, and security detail. Moments into the walk, he suddenly collapsed.

    “He was immediately attended to by his Kenyan doctor and Indian paramedics stationed nearby,” said Krishnan M, the Additional Superintendent of Police in Ernakulam.

    “He was rushed to a nearby private hospital but was declared dead shortly after arrival.”

    Doctors at Devamatha Hospital confirmed that Raila had suffered a severe cardiac arrest — a sudden failure of the heart’s electrical system — and did not respond to resuscitation. “We worked on him continuously for several minutes,” Dr. Alphons said, “but there was no cardiac activity despite the interventions.”

    Footage later shared by Reuters showed Raila’s body being wheeled out of the hospital, wrapped in a green cloth, as a somber group of medics and aides watched in silence.

    The death of the long-serving opposition leader has plunged Kenya into mourning.

    A statesman who served as Prime Minister from 2008 to 2013 and ran for president five times, Raila Odinga was widely regarded as one of the most influential figures in Kenya’s post-independence politics — a symbol of resilience and reform.

    Back home, President William Ruto led the nation in grief, declaring seven days of national mourning and announcing that Odinga would be accorded a State funeral.

    “As a mark of respect, I have postponed all my public engagements for the coming days,” President Ruto said in a televised address from State House, Nairobi.

    “I ask all other public servants and leaders to do the same so that we can join the nation in this period of mourning and deep reflection. Our former Prime Minister, Raila Amolo Odinga, shall be accorded a State funeral with all attendant honours, in consultation with his family.”

    Flags across Kenya and in diplomatic missions abroad are flying at half-mast as tributes continue to pour in from across the world.

    In Kochi, Dr. Alphons and his team — now etched in Kenya’s collective memory — quietly reflect on the morning they fought, and failed, to save one of Africa’s political giants.

    “He was a man of great presence, even in illness,” said one nurse who assisted in the emergency. “Everyone in that room could feel the weight of who he was.”

    Raila Odinga’s body is expected to be flown back to Kenya later this week, where he will be laid to rest according to his wishes — within 72 hours of his passing.

  • The Return of NMS? Ruto and Sakaja To Sign A Pact on Managing Nairobi

    The Return of NMS? Ruto and Sakaja To Sign A Pact on Managing Nairobi

    President William Ruto’s announcement of a partnership with Nairobi Governor Johnson Sakaja to manage the capital has triggered memories of the controversial Nairobi Metropolitan Services and raised questions about the county government’s capacity to deliver services.

    Nairobi residents nursing memories of the Nairobi Metropolitan Services (NMS) were caught off guard on Sunday when President William Ruto announced plans to enter into a partnership with Governor Johnson Sakaja to restore the capital’s image.

    The announcement has sparked debate about whether this marks a return to the transfer of functions that characterized the Mohammed Badi-led NMS era.

    Speaking at a public event, President Ruto did not mince his words about the state of the capital.

    “Nairobi cannot continue to be the city in filth,” he declared, outlining an ambitious plan to tackle waste management, improve roads, and install street lighting across the metropolis.

    The partnership, according to Governor Sakaja, will involve the private sector and focus purely on development.

    He cited a collaboration with a Chinese company to generate 45 megawatts of power from waste processed at the Dandora dumpsite as an example of what the initiative could achieve.

    However, the announcement has exposed deep divisions among Nairobi’s political leadership.

    Kileleshwa Ward Representative Robert Alai was particularly scathing in his assessment, describing the partnership as an indictment of Sakaja’s administration.

    “The problems in Nairobi is the incompetence of the governor. The governor cannot bring services, he cannot talk with the corporates, he cannot talk to the private sector,” Alai said.

    The criticism speaks to broader frustrations with service delivery in Nairobi. Despite receiving the largest allocation from the County Allocation Revenue, the capital continues to grapple with mountains of uncollected garbage, potholed roads, broken street lights, and clogged drainage systems.

    Images of waste heaps along Juja Road and in Eastleigh have become emblematic of a city struggling with basic sanitation.

    Embakasi Central MP Benjamin Gathiru echoed concerns about accountability, questioning why additional resources should be channeled to City Hall when current allocations appear to be mismanaged.

    “It is just that the money is being stolen by diverting it to pay lawyers and the companies that are said to be collecting garbage, yet we still have a problem with uncollected garbage,” he said.

    Nevertheless, not all leaders view the partnership negatively.

    Makadara MP George Aladwa welcomed the President’s intervention, noting that a clean and attractive capital is essential for attracting investors and spurring development.

    President Ruto revealed that cleanup efforts are already underway through the Nairobi River Regeneration Project, which has employed thousands of young people.

    He committed the national government to providing resources for the initiative and pledged that all roads in the capital would be tarmacked.

    “We must not have mud along our roads. This city will have street lights so that we make sure that Nairobi is clean, becomes motorable and a city in the light, not in darkness,” he said.

    The announcement inevitably draws comparisons to the NMS, which was established in 2020 through a deed of transfer that saw four key county functions—health, transport, public works, and planning—moved to the national government under Major General Badi.

    Defunct Nairobi Metropolitan Services ex-boss General Mohamed Badi
    Defunct Nairobi Metropolitan Services ex-boss General Mohamed Badi

    While the NMS achieved notable successes in road construction and market renovations, it was also criticized for undermining devolution and sidelining elected county leadership.

    The NMS was eventually dissolved after the 2022 elections, with functions reverting to the county government.

    Governor Sakaja, who campaigned on a platform of reclaiming Nairobi’s autonomy, now finds himself in the awkward position of inviting national government intervention barely three years into his term.

    Critical questions remain unanswered.

    What specific functions, if any, will be transferred under this new partnership? Will the county retain control over revenue collection and budget allocation? And most importantly, how will this arrangement differ from the NMS model that many saw as an affront to devolution?

    The President has promised that details of the partnership will be finalized soon.

    Until then, Nairobi residents can only watch and wait, hoping that this latest intervention will finally deliver the clean, functional city they have long been promised, rather than another experiment in governance that prioritizes politics over service delivery.

  • KEMRI Receives Sh516 Million Gates Foundation Grant for Women’s Health Research

    KEMRI Receives Sh516 Million Gates Foundation Grant for Women’s Health Research

    Nairobi, Kenya – The Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI) has secured a Sh516 million grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to launch a three-year initiative advancing women’s health research across sub-Saharan Africa, the institute announced last Friday.

    The program, named Leadership for Innovation and Excellence in Accelerating Research on Women’s Health (LEA-WH), will commence in January 2026 and aims to empower mid-career African researchers to develop local solutions for pressing women’s health challenges including maternal mortality, gynecological disorders and reproductive health issues.

    KEMRI’s Acting Director General Prof. Elijah Songok said the initiative represents a significant investment in Africa’s health future. “The LEA-WH Programme represents KEMRI’s commitment to building scientific leadership that is inclusive, innovative and African-led,” Prof. Songok stated.

    The program will train 60 sub-Saharan African mid-career researchers and innovators through a 480-hour annual hybrid curriculum developed in collaboration with the US National Academy of Medicine and the Gates Foundation. The training allocates 70 percent to research and development, 15 percent to women’s health and 15 percent to leadership development.

    Participants will follow one of two tracks: an Innovation and Product Development Track for engineers, entrepreneurs and clinicians focused on creating women’s health products, or an Academic Research Track for mid-career women’s health researchers.

    By 2033, KEMRI expects the program to yield five to 10 products reaching market testing, establish five to 10 startup companies, file five to 10 patent applications and secure additional research grants for 20 to 50 percent of scholars. The initiative also anticipates catalyzing $3 million to $5 million in follow-on funding.

    Prof. Elizabeth Anne Bukusi, who will direct the program, emphasized the vision of African-led innovation. “We aim to cultivate a vibrant ecosystem where African researchers and innovators lead in developing transformative solutions for women’s health,” she said.

    The leadership team includes Dr. Martin Bundi for curriculum development, Prof. Nelly Mugo for research and technical training, and Dr. Rose Bosire for leadership development, all operating under an advisory council chaired by Prof. Songok.

    Backlash on Social Media

    The announcement has triggered renewed criticism on social media, where skeptics have revived conspiracy theories about the Gates Foundation’s work in Africa. Critics on X, formerly Twitter, have questioned whether foreign-funded programs genuinely serve public health or push hidden agendas.

    Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI). PHOTO/Print
    Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI). PHOTO/Print

    One user claimed KEMRI is now “owned by Bill Gates,” linking the grant to fears about population control in Africa. Others warned that reliance on “billionaire philanthropy” turns African institutions into “testing grounds” for external interests.

    These theories, which allege Gates aims to depopulate Africa through vaccines or health programs, have circulated for years despite repeated debunkings by fact-checkers and health experts. Gates has publicly addressed population concerns, stating that improving health and education naturally leads to lower birth rates without coercive measures.

    Some users also raised unverified allegations about KEMRI’s past research practices, calling for greater ethical oversight in foreign-funded research.

    The Gates Foundation has committed up to $2.5 billion globally by 2030 to address chronically underfunded women’s health areas including obstetric care, maternal nutrition and gynecological health.

    As KEMRI positions itself as a regional hub for medical excellence, addressing public skepticism will be crucial to maintaining trust in international health partnerships and ensuring the program’s success.

  • Former Nairobi CEC Newton Munene Found Dead as Sonko Alleges Cartel Involvement

    Former Nairobi CEC Newton Munene Found Dead as Sonko Alleges Cartel Involvement

    Former Nairobi County Information Communication Technology Executive Committee Member Newton Munene has been found dead at his Karen home under unclear circumstances, barely a week after testifying in former Governor Mike Sonko’s corruption trial.

    The body of Munene, who served under Sonko’s administration, was moved to Lee Funeral Home on Saturday morning.

    Police have launched investigations into the death, which has sent shockwaves through the capital’s political circles.

    In a statement expressing shock at the development, Sonko alleged that cartels were behind the death of his former aide, linking it to Munene’s recent testimony as a defense witness in the Web Tribe JamboPay corruption case.

    “Mr. Munene’s death occurred just a week after he provided testimony as my defense witness in a case in which I have been wrongfully accused regarding Webtribe’s Jambo Pay contract. It is deeply regrettable that the cartels have retaliated by taking Munene’s life,” Sonko stated.

    The former governor condemned what he termed an act of cowardice, challenging his accusers to face him in court if they possess evidence linking him to corruption.

    He maintained he would not bow to threats and intimidation while innocent individuals were being murdered for exercising their constitutional right to defend him.

    Former Nairobi governor Mike Sonko.
    Former Nairobi governor Mike Sonko.

    Sonko further revealed that other former County Executive Committee Members who served under his administration and volunteered to testify in his defense were facing threats and intimidation aimed at preventing them from appearing in court.

    “I have reliable information indicating that some former CECMs who served under my leadership and who have volunteered to be my defense witnesses are being threatened and intimidated to stop coming to court to testify. No level of intimidation or threats will deter me from seeking justice,” he declared.

    Munene was among three key witnesses who testified in Sonko’s defense at the Anti-Corruption Court in Nairobi.

    During the October 6 hearing, the court heard audio recordings in which Sonko instructed his team to abandon the JamboPay system, declaring that Nairobi would not inherit corrupt practices from previous administrations.

    “I don’t want to hear the issue of JamboPay. Let’s move to a new system. Nairobi must not inherit corruption or inefficiency from previous administrations,” Sonko was heard saying in one of the recordings presented by his defense team.

    The case stems from graft-related charges linked to procurement and revenue collection systems at City Hall.

    Sonko faces charges alongside Anthony Otieno Ombok and ROG Security Limited over allegations involving the contentious Web Tribe JamboPay contract that was initially awarded by the defunct Nairobi City Council.

    During the hearing, former County Attorney Lydia Kwamboka testified that Web Tribe had been engaged by the previous administration to handle revenue collection through an electronic payment platform. She clarified that her office did not have the mandate to institute criminal proceedings against the company.

    Former Finance CEC Allan Esabwa Igambi, who also testified in Sonko’s defense, revealed that he was once allegedly asked by a former Solicitor General to find incriminating evidence against the governor but declined to comply.

    The court ruled earlier this year that the three accused have a case to answer, with the matter set to proceed to defense hearing next year.

    However, in a separate development in July, the court heard another explosive audio recording from January 2019 in which JamboPay Director Danson Muchemi allegedly promised Sonko between three million and five million shillings daily as kickbacks for awarding him the revenue collection tender.

    The 57-minute recording was presented by Chief Inspector Kiptoo Kisoroi, who testified that he recorded the conversation at Sonko’s Kanamai residence in Kilifi County after the former governor sought police assistance in capturing the alleged bribery attempt.

    According to the recording, Muchemi told Sonko how the revenue collection system operated under his predecessor Evans Kidero while outlining plans to continue similar practices.

    Police have cordoned off Munene’s Karen residence as they conduct forensic investigations into his death. Detectives from the Directorate of Criminal Investigations are expected to release a preliminary report on the cause of death after an autopsy is conducted.

    The death has raised fresh concerns about witness protection in high-profile corruption cases, with human rights activists calling for enhanced security for individuals testifying in sensitive matters.

    Newton Munene when he appeared in court to testify in Sonko’s corruption case.
    Newton Munene when he appeared in court to testify in Sonko’s corruption case.
  • They Have No Ideas, Can’t Bring Change,” Prof Manyora Blames Opposition For Gen Z’s Low Voter Registration Turnout

    They Have No Ideas, Can’t Bring Change,” Prof Manyora Blames Opposition For Gen Z’s Low Voter Registration Turnout

    Political analyst Prof Herman Manyora has blamed the opposition for the low voter registration turnout, accusing its leaders of lacking fresh ideas to inspire young people to participate in elections.

    Speaking on his YouTube channel on Tuesday, Manyora said the opposition has failed to connect with Gen Zs who have been demanding change and accountability but now see no hope in the country’s political class.

    He argued that if the opposition had presented a credible vision for change, young people would have flooded voter registration centres in large numbers.

    “I blame the opposition more than I blame the government. Why the opposition? What are they doing about involving young people? What have they done? Is there anything they are doing? They can’t bring any change. None of these political leaders seeking to remove Ruto, even if they go to State House now, will change anything,” he said.

    Manyora said that if opposition parties had new and practical ideas for transforming the country, the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) would be overwhelmed with new voter registrations.

    He described the opposition as “bankrupt of ideas” and unable to provide meaningful leadership that excites the youth.

    “If they had new ideas, there would be such long queues that the IEBC would rush to Parliament for emergency funds to handle the overwhelming registration numbers. But they didn’t, even though continuous voter registration is something they should have been doing all along,” he added.

    Manyora said Gen Zs are not registering as voters because they no longer believe in Kenya’s political system.

    The United Opposition top leadership have hinted at coming with a name for their political outfit that comprises different parties. PHOTO@skmusyoka/ X.com
    The United Opposition top leadership have hinted at coming with a name for their political outfit that comprises different parties. PHOTO@skmusyoka/ X.com

    He noted that the young people who led the 2024 anti-finance bill protests have since grown disillusioned by both the government and the opposition, seeing no real difference between them.

    “The main reason Gen Zs are not registering is that things do not make sense to them anymore. There is no better political alternative. They are tired of the same old, recycled politicians who bring little or no change,” he said.

    The ongoing national mass voter registration exercise has recorded a low turnout across most counties.

    In the first week, Trans Nzoia registered only 71 new voters, with just four from Kwanza Constituency. The IEBC had targeted 6.3 million new voters but now faces a slow start amid public apathy and lack of enthusiasm.

    Meanwhile, opposition leaders under the United Opposition banner are still in talks to formalize their coalition ahead of the 2027 General Election. The alliance brings together leaders such as Raila Odinga, Kalonzo Musyoka, Martha Karua and Eugene Wamalwa.

    Former Interior Cabinet Secretary Fred Matiang’i, who is positioning himself for a 2027 presidential run, said his Jubilee Party will help the IEBC mobilize young voters.

    Speaking in Nakuru over the weekend, Matiang’i said his team would engage youth groups and universities to encourage voter registration.

    Manyora warned that unless the opposition changes its approach and genuinely involves the youth in political processes, young Kenyans will continue to lose faith in elections.

    “The young people will do things their own way,” he said. “If the opposition doesn’t wake up, Gen Zs might completely abandon the ballot and look for new ways to express their power.”

  • Land Fraud Exposed: How Forged Death Certificates Are Being Used to Steal Property in Kenya

    Land Fraud Exposed: How Forged Death Certificates Are Being Used to Steal Property in Kenya

    NAIROBI, Kenya — Kenyans who bought land decades ago are losing their property to an elaborate fraud scheme involving forged death certificates and corrupt government officials, a Nairobi lawyer has warned.

    Peter Wanyama, who has practiced law for 18 years, says he has seen the same devastating pattern repeat itself across Kenya’s Environment and Land Courts.

    Property owners who have lived on their land for 40 years or more are being evicted after fraudsters use backdated death certificates to make legitimate sales appear illegal.

    The scheme is as simple as it is cruel.

    A man sells his land in 1980, and the buyer moves in, builds a home, and raises a family.

    When the seller dies years later, nothing seems wrong. But decades after the sale, the seller’s widow approaches a lawyer claiming she was mentally ill and has only now recovered. She wants to challenge what she calls a fraudulent sale.

    What happens next exposes deep cracks in Kenya’s land administration system.

    The widow walks into a government registry, pays a bribe, and walks out with an official death certificate for her late husband.

    But this certificate has been doctored to show he died before the 1980 sale, making it appear that a dead man somehow sold property.

    With this fraudulent document in hand, the widow applies to court for permission to sue outside the normal time limits.

    She explains that her mental illness prevented her from acting earlier. Courts routinely grant such requests. Armed with the forged death certificate and court approval, she then sues the current occupant in the land court.

    When the case reaches a judge, the outcome is almost predetermined.

    The death certificate shows the seller died before the transaction took place. Under Kenyan law, a dead person cannot execute a valid sale.

    The judge nullifies the transaction and orders the buyer to vacate land she has occupied for four decades.

    The woman who built her life on that property, who watched her children grow up there, who invested everything she had into her home, suddenly finds herself homeless.

    The fraud has worked perfectly.

    Wanyama says variations of this scheme are appearing with alarming frequency as land values rise across Kenya.

    The fraud works because it exploits several weaknesses at once: corrupt registry officials willing to forge documents for a bribe, court rules that allow late claims under certain circumstances, and the difficulty of proving a decades-old fraud when memories have faded and witnesses may be dead.

    What makes the scheme particularly vicious is that it targets people who did everything right.

    They completed legitimate transactions, obtained proper documentation, and lived peacefully on their land for years.

    By the time the fraud emerges, original documents may be lost and proving the truth becomes nearly impossible.

    The cases reveal how vulnerable Kenya’s property rights system remains to corruption.

    When government officials can be bribed to issue backdated death certificates, no land transaction is truly secure.

    A purchase that seemed settled 40 years ago can suddenly unravel because of a forged document obtained yesterday.

    Wanyama’s warning to landowners is stark: hire lawyers for every property transaction, keep meticulous records, and never assume an old transaction is safe from challenge.

    But for many Kenyans now facing eviction from homes they have occupied for decades, that advice comes too late.

    They are discovering that in Kenya’s land sector, even living on your property for 40 years offers no protection against a well-executed fraud and a corrupt official willing to forge a death certificate.

    The growing crisis underscores the urgent need for reform of Kenya’s land registries and stricter safeguards against document forgery.

    Until then, thousands of legitimate property owners remain at risk of losing everything to fraudsters who have learned to game a system riddled with corruption.

  • Striking Students Not Allowed For Transfer to Other Schools, To Sit Exams From Home Under New State’s Stringent Rules

    Striking Students Not Allowed For Transfer to Other Schools, To Sit Exams From Home Under New State’s Stringent Rules

    The government has moved to seal loopholes that have allowed indisciplined students to escape consequences by transferring to other schools, as education authorities intensify the crackdown on learners involved in school unrest.

    In a hard-hitting directive that signals zero tolerance for student riots, Education Cabinet Secretary Julius Ogamba has declared that candidates involved in serious indiscipline cases will be barred from sitting their Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education examinations within school premises, forcing them to write their papers at alternative centres.

    The announcement comes as the Ministry of Education grapples with a wave of destruction that has swept across secondary schools, particularly in the South Rift region, where more than 10 institutions have been hit by violence that has destroyed property worth hundreds of millions of shillings.

    But in a move that tightens the noose further, the Kericho County Director of Education has issued a stern circular blocking principals from admitting students who are fleeing other schools after participating in strikes.

    The directive, dated September 30, 2025, warns that some principals have been flouting transfer guidelines by admitting students with serious discipline issues that have not been handled by their respective Boards of Management.

    “It has been noted that some Principals are flouting the above guidelines and admitting students who are changing schools after being involved in strikes,” reads the circular signed by Julius A. Ngoneshi, County Director of Education for Kericho.

    The new rules require that no school shall admit a student without a proper letter of transfer signed by the appropriate education officer, with release letters now mandated to clearly state the conduct of students concerned.

    Any principal who covers up a student’s conduct will be held responsible for subsequent problems.

    CS Ogamba has made it clear that the days of students destroying school property and walking away scot-free are over. Speaking during a press briefing, he emphasized that such acts are criminal in nature and perpetrators will face the full force of the law.

    “These students are now in custody. It is a crime. There has to be a process of ensuring the child is disciplined. You have to weigh: do you leave the student to burn the school because he or she has a right to education? Let the chips fall where they may,” Ogamba said.

    The stringent measures will apply not only to examination candidates but also to Form Two and Form Three students, who will be required to learn from home if found guilty of involvement in unrest.

    However, the CS outlined that established legal processes must be followed before any expulsion, including disciplinary proceedings involving parents and students.

    Principal Secretary for Basic Education Prof Julius Bitok warned that no student will be allowed to destroy property and escape consequences, adding that rigorous disciplinary action awaits offenders. He has instructed county and sub-county directors of education to remain vigilant and call emergency meetings with teachers and students at the first sign of trouble.

    The financial burden of student unrest continues to haunt parents.

    In one incident at a national school with 1,800 students, parents were forced to pay Sh2,000 per child after their children torched a dormitory, raising more than Sh3 million for reconstruction. Students who requested transfer letters were denied, and the school remained closed for two weeks.

    Schools affected by recent violence include Tengecha Boys, Koiwa Boys, AIC Litein Boys, Kiptewit, Cheptenye Boys and Lelwak Boys, where buildings have been razed and property worth millions destroyed.

    National Parents Association chairperson Silas Obuhatsa has backed the government’s hardline stance, saying parents are at a loss paying both school fees and for properties destroyed by their children.

    “We do not allow students to destroy school property; it is illegal. If they are found culpable with evidence, the State must take stiff measures; we support the government,” Obuhatsa said.

    With corporal punishment banned in Kenya, stakeholders are calling for enhanced dialogue between students and teachers to address the root causes of unrest, even as the government maintains its tough position that discipline must be restored in educational institutions at all costs.

  • How State Blew Sh607 Million In Consultancy Fees For Ghost Stadiums

    How State Blew Sh607 Million In Consultancy Fees For Ghost Stadiums

    The dream of world-class sports infrastructure in Kenya has turned into a nightmarish tale of squandered public funds, with Sports Kenya spending a staggering Sh156.6 million on consultancy and architectural fees for three national stadiums that exist only on paper.

    Parliament’s Public Investments Committee on Social Services, Administration and Agriculture has uncovered a scandal that epitomises everything wrong with project implementation in Kenya’s public sector.

    The revelations, made during a heated Wednesday session, paint a damning picture of an agency that spent taxpayers’ money with reckless abandon while lacking the most basic requirement for construction: land ownership documents.

    The proposed national stadiums in Nairobi, Kisumu and Eldoret were meant to be flagship projects under Vision 2030, with a combined estimated cost of Sh42 billion.

    Yet more than a decade after the feasibility studies were commissioned, not a single brick has been laid. What remains are hefty consultancy invoices and uncomfortable questions about accountability.

    Sports Kenya paid Sh99.6 million for feasibility studies and another Sh57 million for architectural and project management services.

    These payments were made despite the parastatal’s failure to secure formal land titles for any of the three proposed sites.

    It is the equivalent of hiring an architect to design your dream home before you own the plot.

    “How do you justify spending millions on consultancy when you don’t even have land titles for these projects?” Saboti MP Caleb Amisi, who chaired the session, demanded. His question hung in the air, exposing the absurdity of the situation.

    Acting Director General Gabriel Komora and his senior management team struggled to provide satisfactory answers.

    Their appearance before the committee revealed an agency hamstrung by poor planning, questionable priorities and a disturbing disconnect between expenditure and tangible results.

    The ghost stadiums are not Sports Kenya’s only embarrassment.

    The Kipchoge Keino Stadium in Eldoret, which actually exists, has become a monument to cost inflation.

    Initially contracted at Sh109.7 million, the project’s cost ballooned to Sh355.1 million, an eye-watering increase of over 200 per cent.

    The agency has now requested a fresh Sh3.5 billion for rehabilitation work, raising fresh concerns about value for money.

    Even Kenya’s existing premier sports facilities operate under a cloud of legal uncertainty. Sports Kenya admitted it lacks proper land ownership documents for both Kasarani National Stadium and Moi International Sports Centre.

    Komora told MPs the agency is pursuing titles through the National Land Commission but faces challenges from encroachment and historical land issues. It is a stunning admission that speaks volumes about institutional incompetence.

    The audit queries dating back to the 2014/2015 and 2015/2016 financial years revealed other troubling practices.

    Sports Kenya withheld Sh16.3 million in employee PAYE taxes and Sh96,388 in pension contributions without remitting them to the relevant authorities. This is not just poor accounting; it is illegal retention of workers’ deductions.

    “Money deducted from employees’ pay is not your money to hold or divert,” MP Wambugu Michael cautioned. “Failure to remit attracts unnecessary interest and penalties.”

    Management’s defence that insufficient funds made it difficult to balance net salaries and statutory deductions rings hollow. You cannot rob Peter’s pension to pay Paul’s salary.

    The session turned confrontational when committee members reminded Sports Kenya’s head of finance, Fredrick Mwema, that the proceedings were judicial in nature.

    Amisi warned that providing false information could trigger standing orders and even subpoenas. It was a necessary reminder that parliamentary oversight has teeth.

    Among the questionable expenditures flagged was a Sh24.4 million payment linked to a Moscow football club.

    While Komora insisted the matter fell under the Ministry of Sports rather than his agency, MPs rightly demanded greater accountability.

    The buck-passing and finger-pointing must stop.

    The committee has resolved to conduct physical inspections of disputed sites, including Kipchoge Keino Stadium, and demanded a comprehensive report on all proposed stadia from 2015 to date.

    These are welcome steps, but they come painfully late.

    “This Committee will not allow billions of public funds to vanish under the guise of stalled projects,” Amisi declared. It is a commendable stance, but the damage has already been done.

    The Sports Kenya scandal is a microcosm of Kenya’s governance challenges. Agencies spend freely on consultants and feasibility studies while basic due diligence is ignored.

    Projects are approved without critical prerequisites being met. Cost overruns are treated as inevitable rather than scandalous.

    And when the music stops, taxpayers are left holding the bag.

    Kenya’s athletes continue to bring glory to the nation on the world stage, often training in facilities that are barely fit for purpose.

    They deserve better.

    The public deserves better. The Sh156.6 million wasted on ghost stadiums could have upgraded dozens of grassroots sports facilities across the country.

    As Parliament digs deeper into this mess, one thing is clear: someone must be held accountable.

    Feasibility studies and architectural plans for non-existent stadiums are not just wasteful; they are a betrayal of public trust. The era of consequence-free mismanagement must end.