Category: News

  • Lawyer in Sh65 Million Fake Gold Scandal Dragged to Court as Investigators Uncover Web of Suspicious Deals

    Lawyer in Sh65 Million Fake Gold Scandal Dragged to Court as Investigators Uncover Web of Suspicious Deals

    A prominent Nairobi lawyer has found himself at the centre of a multi-million-shilling fake gold scandal after investigators linked him to an alleged scheme that saw a Dubai-based businessman lose more than Sh65 million in what authorities describe as a fictitious precious metals deal.

    The case, which has reignited concerns over Kenya’s long-running fake gold syndicates, pits lawyer Conrad Anangwe Maloba and his law firm against the state, with prosecutors insisting that criminal charges should proceed despite attempts to halt the case through the courts.

    Director of Public Prosecutions Renson Igonga has urged the High Court in Kiambu to throw out an application filed by Maloba and Conrad Law Advocates LLP seeking protection from arrest and prosecution.

    The lawyer is accused of playing a role in a transaction that investigators say was carefully orchestrated to convince foreign investors that they were purchasing a lucrative gold consignment from Kenya.

    Court documents reveal that the complaint was lodged by Andrew Adel Gaballa, a director of Sakina Commodities FZCO, who claims he was duped out of more than USD 505,000, equivalent to about Sh65 million, after being drawn into a purported gold export deal.

    According to investigators, Gaballa entered into agreements witnessed by Maloba before wiring hundreds of thousands of dollars into accounts operated by the law firm. The transfers reportedly included USD 10,000 in legal fees and USD 495,000 allegedly held in trust pending completion of the transaction.

    The complainant later travelled to Kenya expecting to finalize the purchase and was allegedly shown what appeared to be a genuine gold consignment. Investigators say he was even provided with three boxes said to contain 10 kilograms of gold as security under a collateral management arrangement.

    But what initially appeared to be a high-value commodity transaction quickly began to unravel.

    Detectives told the court that Gaballa became alarmed after inconsistencies emerged regarding insurance arrangements linked to the shipment. Documents allegedly indicated cryptocurrency payments worth hundreds of thousands of dollars had been made despite vastly different insurance quotations.

    Further suspicion arose when he was reportedly issued with what investigators believe was merely a receipt rather than a valid insurance policy.

    Authorities say requests for proof that insurance payments had actually been remitted went unanswered.

    The biggest red flag emerged when Gaballa was informed that the gold had been flown to Oman aboard a private jet in March.

    Investigators subsequently checked aviation records and allegedly found no evidence that such an aircraft departed Nairobi on the stated date. Detectives also say no shipping documentation was produced to support claims that the gold had ever left the country.

    By then, investigators say, the businessman had concluded that he had been caught in a sophisticated fraud scheme and reported the matter to the Directorate of Criminal Investigations.

    The case adds to a growing list of high-profile gold scams that have repeatedly tarnished Kenya’s reputation as a regional trading hub.

    Over the past decade, foreign investors from the Middle East, Asia and Europe have lost millions of dollars in elaborate fake gold transactions involving forged export permits, counterfeit refinery documents, fake security companies and non-existent consignments.

    Several investigations have previously exposed criminal networks that use luxury hotels, rented offices, lawyers, brokers and individuals posing as government officials to create the appearance of legitimacy before victims are persuaded to release large sums of money.

    In the latest case, detectives arrested Duncan Okonji Okaka, whom they describe as an intermediary linking the complainant to the alleged deal. He has already been charged and released on bail pending trial.

    Maloba’s legal troubles do not end there.

    Court records indicate that prosecutors are also pursuing a separate conspiracy to defraud case in which he is accused of participating in a scheme involving a purported Kenyan government contract for the supply of 500 Toyota Hiace ambulances.

    In that matter, authorities allege that a foreign investor was induced to part with USD 470,750 after being promised access to the lucrative tender. Maloba has denied the accusations.

    The lawyer maintains that he acted strictly within the confines of his professional duties and insists that the money received by his firm was held in escrow on behalf of a client. He argues that he neither negotiated nor executed the underlying commercial transaction and merely processed payments based on written instructions.

    He has also told the court that no complaint has been lodged against him before the Advocates Complaints Commission or the Advocates Disciplinary Tribunal, arguing that the dispute is fundamentally commercial rather than criminal.

    However, investigators have dismissed claims that he is being targeted unfairly.

    In court filings, detectives insisted that the probe was conducted professionally and that there is sufficient evidence to warrant prosecution. They argue that granting the orders sought by the lawyer would effectively shield him from lawful criminal proceedings and frustrate efforts to establish the truth behind the missing millions.

    The High Court’s decision is now expected to determine whether Maloba will face trial in a case that has once again cast a spotlight on Kenya’s notorious fake gold underworld, where promises of vast fortunes have repeatedly ended in allegations of deception, vanished money and bitter international disputes.

  • Couple Charged With Sh13.8 Million Forex Fraud

    Couple Charged With Sh13.8 Million Forex Fraud

    Two traders have been charged with obtaining Sh13.8 million from forex investors.

    Timothy Iguta Macharia and Norah Gatugi Micheni appeared before Milimani Principal Magistrate Mutahi for allegedly obtaining the money by claiming they were in forex business. They denied the fraud charges.

    The prosecution told the court that they obtained the money from Stacey Kabura Njoroge, with intent to defraud.

    The charge sheet stated that they committed the offence on diverse dates between September 2025 and February 2026 in Nairobi County.

    According to the prosecution, the traders obtained the money by pretending that they would be remitting a 10 percent interest from the principal amount every month, a fact they knew to be false.

    The court heard that between September 2025 and February 2026 in Nairobi County, they deposited the money into their bank accounts at Stanbic and KCB, as well as Safaricom Mpesa account numbers registered, while aware that they were proceeds of crime.

    It is further alleged that they obtained another Sh1.5 million during the same period and claimed that they would pay the investor 15 percent of the principal amount every month, a fact they knew to be false.

    They were released on a bond of Sh2 million.

  • KDF Cordon Off Laikipia Air Base As Hundreds Protest Planned Ebola Facility

    KDF Cordon Off Laikipia Air Base As Hundreds Protest Planned Ebola Facility

    NAIROBI, Kenya, Jun 1 — Hundreds of residents in Nanyuki staged a protest on Monday against the proposed establishment of an Ebola quarantine and isolation facility at Laikipia Airbase, amid growing national debate over Kenya’s preparedness and role in managing cross-border infectious disease cases.

    The demonstrators initially marched toward the perimeter of Laikipia Airbase but were blocked by heavily armed Kenya Air Force personnel, who denied them access to the military installation.

    Security forces established a cordon around the facility, forcing the crowd to retreat and redirect their procession toward Nanyuki town.

    According to a security advisory, the demonstration later moved into the Nanyuki Central Business District, where police escorted protesters along designated routes.

    Authorities reported that the protest remained largely peaceful, although localized disruptions were recorded, including traffic congestion, slower vehicle movement, and intermittent interruptions to business activities as the crowd passed through major streets.

    Despite heightened tensions earlier in the day, no major incidents of violence were reported, with security agencies maintaining what officials described as controlled containment of the procession.

    The protests come amid intensified public debate following reports that Kenya could host an Ebola isolation or treatment facility under a proposed international arrangement involving the United States.

    The Law Society of Kenya, led by Charles Kanjama, has opposed the proposal, arguing that Ebola treatment centres should be located closer to outbreak epicentres rather than in countries without active cases.

    Kanjama warned that hosting Ebola-exposed individuals in Kenya could expose the country to unnecessary public health risks and urged authorities to prioritize containment efforts nearer affected regions such as Democratic Republic of the Congo and Uganda.

    “We owe patients human solidarity, but public health requires facilities to be placed near outbreak epicentres,” he said, while calling for stronger border protection measures against the importation of infectious diseases.

    Health Cabinet Secretary Aden Duale has maintained that any international arrangement involving Ebola exposure or treatment must strictly comply with Kenyan law and public health protocols.

    Duale emphasized that Kenya’s sovereignty, immigration procedures, and health safeguards cannot be bypassed under any agreement, noting that screening, quarantine, and surveillance systems remain operational at points of entry.

    Public Health Principal Secretary Mary Muthoni also defended ongoing discussions with international partners, saying isolation facilities are a standard component of epidemic preparedness.

    Muthoni said Kenya’s laboratories are capable of rapid testing and that the country has mapped high-risk zones while strengthening border surveillance systems.

    Local leaders have also voiced opposition to the proposed facility. Sarah Korere argued that Nanyuki, a key tourism and commercial hub, should not host an Ebola-related centre and suggested such facilities should instead be located closer to affected countries.

    Korere warned that the proposal could harm the region’s tourism industry and undermine public confidence.

    “As residents of Nanyuki, we have said we do not want that Ebola rescue centre in Nanyuki. And it’s not just Nanyuki; we’ve said we don’t want it in Laikipia, and not just Laikipia, we don’t want it in Kenya,” she said.

    Three days earlier, the High Court issued conservatory orders temporarily blocking the establishment or operationalisation of any Ebola quarantine, isolation, or treatment facility in Kenya under the disputed arrangement.

    The court also barred the admission or transfer of Ebola-exposed individuals into the country until the matter is fully heard and determined. The petition was filed by Katiba Institute and certified as urgent.

    The ruling effectively suspends all related preparations pending further judicial directions.

    The debate comes amid heightened regional concern over Ebola preparedness. Ebola Virus Disease is a highly infectious disease transmitted through direct contact with infected bodily fluids and has caused deadly outbreaks in parts of Central and West Africa.

    While Kenya has strengthened surveillance systems at airports and border points in recent years, public anxiety remains high over the possibility of hosting foreign Ebola-exposed individuals.

    Despite the court order, reports of continued movement of medical equipment and personnel linked to preparedness planning have continued to fuel public scrutiny and political debate.

  • Chilling CCTV Footage Shows Moments Suspects Setting Fire In Dormitory Killing 16 Fellow Students

    Chilling CCTV Footage Shows Moments Suspects Setting Fire In Dormitory Killing 16 Fellow Students

    Fresh details have emerged from CCTV footage captured before the devastating fire that tore through a dormitory at Utumishi Girls Academy in Gilgil, Nakuru County, killing 16 students and injuring dozens more.

    The footage is now at the centre of investigations into one of Kenya’s worst school tragedies in recent years, with detectives piecing together events leading up to the inferno that struck in the early hours of Thursday morning.

    According to investigators, the events unfolded at around 12:10 a.m. when five students quietly walked into the dormitory while most occupants were asleep and unaware of the danger that was about to unfold.

    The footage shows the group making its way to Cube 11, where they briefly stopped before proceeding further into the dormitory. Detectives noted that throughout the movement, the students did not appear to exchange any words.

    One of the students is seen attempting to conceal her face from the surveillance cameras while carrying a slipper, which investigators believe may have been intended to help muffle footsteps as they moved through the dormitory.

    Moments later, three of the students are seen quickly moving toward the dormitory entrance, leaving two others behind.

    It is these two students, investigators say, who allegedly ignited the first fire.

    The CCTV footage reportedly captures the pair striking a matchbox before calmly walking away toward the exit.

    But the first blaze was only the beginning.

    Investigators say the students then moved toward another section of the dormitory where mattresses were stored and started a second fire. This time, the flames spread more rapidly.

    After confirming that the fires had taken hold, the suspects are seen leaving the dormitory without raising an alarm, according to investigators.

    Within minutes, smoke and flames began spreading through the building.

    By 12:13 a.m., panic had erupted inside the dormitory as students woke up to thick smoke and growing flames. Some are seen attempting to understand what was happening while others scrambled to find a way out.

    The situation deteriorated rapidly.

    Investigators say that within five minutes, the fire had engulfed large sections of the dormitory, turning the sleeping quarters into a death trap as terrified students desperately searched for an escape route.

    Preliminary findings indicate the blaze was deliberately started near the dormitory’s main entrance, the primary evacuation point for students.

    Detectives further allege that kerosene had been smeared around the entrance area, causing the flames to spread quickly and effectively cutting off the main escape route.

    As the inferno intensified, many students found themselves trapped inside.

    The fire claimed the lives of 16 students, while 79 others sustained injuries as they attempted to escape the burning building.

    Investigators say 10 of the victims were found near the entrance, where the fire is believed to have started, while six others died deeper inside the dormitory.

    The tragedy triggered swift police action, with eight students arrested in connection with the fire.

    The DCI said a major breakthrough was achieved following the detailed forensic analysis of the CCTV footage.

    According to the agency, investigators conducted an enhanced review of the footage at the Forensic Imaging and Acoustic Laboratory within the National Police Service Forensics Laboratory, leading to the identification of the students involved in the arson incident.

    “After conducting a thorough, detailed forensic analysis of the CCTV footage recovered from the school, coupled with enhanced review at the Forensic Imaging and Acoustic Laboratory at DCI National Police Service Forensics Laboratory, a positive identification of the students who lit the fire has been realised,” the statement said.

    The DCI revealed that analysis conducted in collaboration with teachers enabled investigators to confirm the identities of  students who participated in the arson before fleeing the scene.

    The incident has shocked the nation and reignited concerns over safety in boarding schools.

    In response, Interior Cabinet Secretary Kipchumba Murkomen has directed all schools across the country to install CCTV cameras to monitor student movement and strengthen security measures.

    Speaking during a thanksgiving ceremony at Kipsigis Girls High School on May 31, Murkomen said surveillance footage had played a crucial role in unravelling what happened at Utumishi Girls and suggested that earlier access to the footage could potentially have aided rescue efforts.

    Murkomen said he was shaken by what he saw, adding that the actions of the students involved were difficult to comprehend.

    “I was reviewing the CCTV footage of Utumishi Academy, and I felt very sad. I even struggled to sleep because we could see the kids who were coming to light the fire,” he said.

    The Interior CS noted that the students involved appeared to be bright and promising but lamented that they had allegedly engaged in an act that destroyed the dormitory while their colleagues were inside.

    “Very brilliant kids. Some who have got the best because that’s a national school. But for them to just get paraffin and a matchbox and burn a dormitory, really consciously seeing their colleagues sleeping there and walk out and leave them to die, that is something,” Murkomen said.

    He described the incident as deeply disturbing and urged students to reflect on the broader implications of their actions, warning against overemphasis on academic performance at the expense of discipline and moral grounding.

    Murkomen called on learners across the country to prioritise character development alongside academic excellence, saying education must go beyond examinations.

    “That is the most demonic thing I saw myself and I have seenAs children and as students, as teenagers, you need to know that it is not enough to be brilliant. It is important to have the right character, the right attitude of learning, and the necessary skills that you need to navigate life,” he said.

  • How Uhuru’s Deal With Obama In 2015 Paved Way For America’s Ebola Plan In Kenya

    How Uhuru’s Deal With Obama In 2015 Paved Way For America’s Ebola Plan In Kenya

    On the afternoon of July 24, 2015, Air Force One touched down at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport bearing a president whose father had been born on the shores of Lake Victoria. Barack Obama’s visit to Nairobi was billed as a homecoming, a celebration of ties between the world’s most powerful democracy and one of East Africa’s most strategically vital nations. While the cameras followed the motorcade through the freshly painted streets of the capital and the state house garden glittered for a presidential state dinner, something of considerably less fanfare was happening across town at the level of technocrats and diplomats.

    On that same day, Health Cabinet Secretary James Macharia and United States Ambassador to Kenya Robert Godec quietly put pen to paper on a bilateral biosecurity agreement formally titled the Cooperation in Threat Reduction Biological Engagement Programs. The cameras were not there. There was no press conference. Kenyans were not told what had been agreed in their name. More than a decade later, that document sits at the heart of the most explosive public health controversy Kenya has witnessed in recent memory: the attempt by the Trump administration to establish an Ebola quarantine facility for American citizens at Laikipia Air Base in Nanyuki, Laikipia County.

    The deal signed in 2015 was not, legally speaking, Barack Obama’s deal with Uhuru Kenyatta. It did not bear either president’s name. But it was conceived, negotiated, and executed during Obama’s tenure as American president and Kenyatta’s first term as Kenya’s fourth president. It emerged from the same diplomatic warmth that characterised the July 2015 summit, in which Kenyatta and Obama signed a raft of agreements covering security, visa reciprocity, and development cooperation. The biosecurity agreement was part of that wave, and like much of what governments agree to in the margins of high-profile summits, it received almost no public scrutiny at the time of its signing.

    THE TERMS OF THE 2015 DEAL

    What Macharia and Godec signed that day was sweeping in its implications. The agreement gave the United States effective control over any projects that would be generated under it, including the selection of contractors. It exempted imported goods and American workers deployed under the agreement from taxation in Kenya. It contained a mutual liability waiver, meaning that neither Kenya nor the United States could sue the other in the event of death, injury, or property damage arising from any project executed under the framework. In short, Kenya had agreed to absorb both the operational and legal consequences of whatever biological engagement programmes the two countries might undertake together.

    The National Assembly ratified the agreement on November 22, 2016, well over a year after it was signed. Kenya was already bound by it before parliamentarians had a chance to scrutinise it. The ratification was, in effect, post-hoc legislative blessing for a deal the executive had already locked in. At the time, there was no particular controversy. The public health context in 2015 was shaped by the tail end of the catastrophic West African Ebola outbreak that had killed more than eleven thousand people and briefly terrified the world. Biosecurity cooperation between governments seemed not only reasonable but urgent. Nobody in the National Assembly chamber that November appears to have anticipated that the agreement’s most consequential clause might one day be invoked not to protect Kenyans from a disease but to bring that disease to their soil.

    James Macharia

    James Macharia himself would not remain at the Ministry of Health long enough to witness that consequence. He was transferred to the Transport docket in November 2015, just months after signing the agreement, when Kenyatta reshuffled his cabinet. Macharia was an accountant by training, a CPA who had served as a steward of the health ministry rather than as a medical or public health expert. That a document with such profound biosafety implications was signed by a finance professional rather than an epidemiologist or public health authority is, in retrospect, a detail worth noting.

    THE DEAL EXTENDED UNDER COVID

    Uhuru Kenyatta’s second term produced the COVID-19 pandemic, which transformed the political salience of biosecurity cooperation globally. By 2022, with Kenya still navigating pandemic recovery and seeking external health support, the Kenyatta administration’s then Health Cabinet Secretary Mutahi Kagwe signed a seven-year extension of the 2015 agreement with the United States. His counterpart on the American side was Eric Kneedler, then the US Charge d’Affaires in Nairobi. The extension was signed on April 5, 2022, and it carries the agreement through to April 5, 2029. That date is significant because it means the framework remains operative well into President William Ruto’s second potential term, giving Washington a contractual basis for health cooperation on Kenyan soil that no future Kenyan administration will be able to unilaterally withdraw from without diplomatic consequence until the agreement lapses.

    Kagwe was no stranger to high-profile dealings with American officials. In 2021, Kneedler had written a letter to Kagwe informing him that the United States was terminating its medical supply chain relationship with the Kenya Medical Supplies Authority over credible allegations of fraud and corruption identified by USAID’s Office of the Inspector General. The two men navigated that confrontation. A year later, they were extending a biosecurity treaty. The renewal of the agreement received even less public attention than the original signing had. The COVID-19 pandemic had normalised the expansion of emergency health cooperation frameworks, and few questioned the extension at the time.

    RUTO SEALS THE ARCHITECTURE

    When William Ruto succeeded Uhuru Kenyatta in September 2022, he inherited both the extended biosecurity agreement and the institutional logic embedded within it. His administration then added another layer. In December 2024, Kenya launched a revised national Foreign Policy, the first update to the 2014 document. The policy, presented by Prime Cabinet Secretary and Foreign Affairs Cabinet Secretary Musalia Mudavadi at a ceremony at the Kenyatta International Convention Centre on December 2, 2024, was long on ambition and diplomatic confidence. It added global health diplomacy as a formal pillar of Kenya’s foreign policy for the first time.

    Section 4.9.4 of that document, titled Global Health Diplomacy, defined the discipline as an emerging field intersecting public health, international relations, and development. More importantly, it positioned Kenya explicitly as a wellness, humanitarian, and health emergencies medical hub, a declaration that, in the language of international diplomacy, carries specific and consequential meaning. A health emergencies hub is not merely a country with clean hospitals. It is a nation whose territory is available to other countries during health crises, for laboratory testing, for deployment of health workers, and, critically, for the management of health emergencies originating beyond its own borders.

    By the time that Foreign Policy document was published, Kenya had already said yes to becoming a quarantine destination before the specific request was formally made. The government had essentially pre-authorised in policy what would later be demanded in practice. The Foreign Policy 2024 also adopted a whole-of-government approach to its implementation, meaning any ministry could operationalise its health diplomacy commitments without requiring fresh parliamentary approval for every individual action taken under the existing framework. It was a legal shortcut whose consequences are now being litigated.

    Mudavadi’s ministry had promised to translate the document into Kiswahili and conduct a nationwide sensitisation campaign called Foreign Affairs Mashinani to ensure that ordinary Kenyans understood what the document committed their country to. That process was not complete when the controversy over the Ebola facility erupted. Kenyans are discovering on page 49 of a technical diplomatic document what their country’s position on hosting foreign health emergencies was, and they are discovering it at the same time that American military aircraft are landing at Laikipia Air Base.

    THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION MOVES

    American Air force plane lands in Laikipia where the Ebola facility is being built.

    Two weeks after Kenya and the world’s governments formally declared the Bundibugyo Ebola outbreak in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda a Public Health Emergency of International Concern, the Trump administration did something unprecedented. On May 15, 2026, both the DRC and Uganda declared outbreaks of the Bundibugyo strain of the Ebola virus, a particularly dangerous variant for which there is currently no licensed vaccine or approved treatment. The World Health Organization elevated the outbreak to its highest global alert level on May 17. By May 28, the outbreak had produced more than 1,200 suspected and confirmed cases and at least 241 deaths, spread across Ituri, North Kivu, and South Kivu provinces in DRC, with confirmed imported cases in Uganda’s capital Kampala.

    The Trump administration’s position was stated with uncommon bluntness by Secretary of State Marco Rubio during a Cabinet meeting on May 27: the United States could not and would not allow any cases of Ebola to enter American territory. This was a marked departure from the American approach during the 2014 to 2016 West African outbreak, when several infected American health workers and aid workers were evacuated to US soil for treatment at specialist biocontainment facilities, including the Emory University Hospital in Atlanta. The Trump administration was applying its America First framework with equal force to disease containment, refusing to accept for American soil the biological risk it was prepared to transfer to a partner country.

    The partner country chosen was Kenya. On May 27, American officials anonymously confirmed to media that the Trump administration was establishing a quarantine and treatment centre in Kenya, to be built, staffed, and operated entirely by American personnel, for the purpose of receiving Americans exposed to Ebola while working or travelling in the DRC. Senior administration officials subsequently confirmed the facility would be a fifty-bed field hospital at Laikipia Air Base, roughly 125 miles north of Nairobi, capable of expansion to 250 beds if the outbreak’s trajectory demanded it. The unit would be staffed by the United States Public Health Service Commissioned Corps, a uniformed medical service under the Department of Health and Human Services. No Kenyan health worker would be involved in treating American patients.

    On May 28, Secretary Rubio held a telephone call with President Ruto, in which the two leaders discussed coordinated efforts to secure vital medical supplies for Kenya and strengthen the country’s health preparedness systems. During that call, Rubio announced a US commitment of approximately Ksh1.74 billion to support Kenya’s Ebola preparedness. The same day, Kenya provided written approval for the American plan, granting the US access to land at Laikipia Air Base. Two US Air Force C-17A Globemaster III transport aircraft had already landed at the base by then. One, registration 98-0051, touched down at 11:12 UTC on May 28, tracked via Flightradar24 on a Ramstein-linked mission route consistent with US Air Mobility Command logistics operations. A second aircraft, 03-3115, followed the next day on an RCH152 mission. The quarantine unit was announced to be operational by Friday, May 29.

    THE COURT INTERVENES

    It was not to open. On May 28, the Katiba Institute, a Nairobi-based constitutional advocacy organisation led by executive director Nora Mbagathi, filed an urgent petition at the High Court challenging the planned facility on constitutional grounds. The petition argued that the proposed arrangement raised grave constitutional concerns regarding the rights to life, health, fair administrative action, public participation, and parliamentary oversight. It warned of grave and imminent risks to public health, contended that the facility was being established in secrecy and unilaterally, and complained that no environmental impact assessments, biosafety evaluations, or parliamentary approvals had been undertaken or disclosed.

    High Court Judge Patricia Nyaundi certified the application as urgent and issued sweeping conservatory orders on May 29. The orders restrained the State Law Office and all respondents from establishing, operationalising, facilitating, approving, or permitting any Ebola exposure, quarantine, isolation, or treatment facility in Kenya arising from arrangements with the United States or any foreign government or agency. The court also barred Kenya from admitting, transferring, receiving, or facilitating the entry into Kenya of any person exposed to or infected with the Ebola virus under the disputed framework. The conservatory orders remain in force pending an inter-partes hearing scheduled for June 2, 2026. Katiba Institute promptly wrote to both the US State Department and the US Department of Health and Human Services notifying them of the ruling, stating that the court order constituted a binding judicial directive and that the United States was expected to respect Kenya’s legal and constitutional processes.

    The US response came swiftly. The State Department issued a statement saying it was aware of the court action and was in touch with Kenyan authorities, adding that it was optimistic it could resolve the objections. The phrasing was diplomatic and restrained, but it signalled an expectation that the court-ordered halt was a temporary inconvenience rather than a permanent impediment. The facility, the US position implied, was lawful, the agreement was real, and resolution was a matter of process.

    THE GOVERNMENT’S SILENCE

    The Kenyan government’s handling of the controversy has been notable for its evasion. Health Cabinet Secretary Aden Duale, who assumed the health docket in March 2025 after a series of cabinet reshuffles, issued a statement that was carefully calibrated to say almost nothing. Any arrangements regarding international health cooperation, the statement read, would be guided by Kenya’s national laws, public health regulations, biosafety and biosecurity standards, and the government’s responsibility to safeguard the health and welfare of Kenyans. It did not confirm the facility existed. It did not deny it. It did not explain when the Americans were expected to begin arriving, why Kenya had been chosen, or by what authority the executive had approved a biosecurity installation on a military base without parliamentary consultation. The Parliamentary Health Committee has since summoned Duale to appear and account for himself.

    President Ruto himself has not addressed the matter in a public forum. The State House has issued no statement beyond acknowledging his telephone call with Secretary Rubio. Prime Cabinet Secretary Mudavadi, whose Foreign Policy 2024 document created the legal and rhetorical foundation for Kenya’s role as a health emergencies hub, has similarly stayed silent. The government that designed the architecture for this arrangement has been content to let the architecture speak for itself while declining to defend it publicly.

    WHAT THE CRITICS SAY

    The opposition to the facility has been broad and pointed. Dr Davji Atellah, secretary-general of the Kenya Medical Practitioners, Pharmacists and Dentists Union, has been the most publicly forceful voice against the arrangement. His formulation is simple and rhetorically devastasting: if the twelve-hour medical evacuation flight from the DRC back to Washington is considered too dangerous for American citizens, by what logic is it safe to fly Ebola-exposed individuals into Kenyan airspace and deposit them in Laikipia? The United States has said openly that it cannot and will not allow Ebola to enter its borders. If it is too dangerous for America, the argument runs, it is too dangerous for Kenya. The union threatened a nationwide strike unless the full text of the bilateral agreement was made public within 48 hours. That demand has not been met.

    Former Chief Justice David Maraga has called for parliamentary oversight. The Law Society of Kenya has urged the government to decline the American request. Elected representatives from Laikipia County, including Laikipia East MP Mwangi Kiunjuri, his West counterpart Wachira Karani, North’s MP Sarah Korere, and the county Woman Representative Jane Kagiri, issued a joint statement saying they see no logic in Kenya and Laikipia County hosting such a facility. Laikipia Governor Joshua Irungu went further, pledging that the county’s residents and leadership would do everything in their power to ensure no Ebola quarantine facility was established in the area.

    From within the American public health establishment, there is parallel scepticism about the medical logic of the arrangement. For decades, the clinical consensus on haemorrhagic fever management has been that patients should be moved as little as possible, because transit in a deteriorating condition increases both the risk of death and the risk of transmission. Dr Ali Khan, the public health college dean at the University of Nebraska Medical Center and a veteran of American international Ebola responses, has noted that any such facility must provide care equivalent to specialist American biocontainment centres. That standard, maintained at great cost in facilities like the Nebraska Biocontainment Unit and Emory’s serious communicable diseases unit, would be exceptionally difficult to replicate at a temporary field hospital at an Air Force base in the Kenyan highlands.

    THE LEGAL ARCHITECTURE AND ITS GAPS

    The chain of agreements that produced the current confrontation represents a decade of incremental legal commitments, each building on the last, none of which was individually subjected to meaningful public debate. The 2015 agreement between Macharia and Godec was the foundation. The 2022 extension between Kagwe and Kneedler deepened it. The 2024 Foreign Policy created the ideological framework. The December 4, 2025 Health Cooperation Framework, signed by Mudavadi and Rubio at the State Department in Washington with President Ruto present as a witness, was the capstone. Under that agreement, Kenya became the first country in the world to enter a government-to-government health partnership under the Trump administration’s America First Global Health Strategy. The United States committed to providing $1.6 billion to Kenya’s health system over five years, with Kenya pledging to increase its own domestic health spending by $850 million over the same period. The funds would flow directly to government institutions, bypassing NGOs entirely.

    What Katiba Institute’s petition has exposed is that the agreement chain, however legally constructed, may have bypassed constitutional requirements for public participation, parliamentary oversight, and environmental assessment. The court is being asked not to determine whether biosecurity cooperation between Kenya and the United States is inherently unlawful, but whether this specific arrangement, executed in this specific manner, with this specific degree of secrecy, respects the constitutional rights of Kenyan citizens. The distinction matters. A yes from the court would not vindicate the government’s opacity. A no would not necessarily invalidate all existing health cooperation frameworks. But either answer will define how far a Kenyan executive can commit national territory to foreign health operations without democratic accountability.

    The liability waiver embedded in the 2015 agreement is one of the more disturbing provisions now attracting scrutiny. By agreeing that neither country could sue the other in the event of death, injury, or property damage arising from projects under the agreement, Kenya effectively capped its legal recourse in the event of an incident at the Laikipia facility. If an American patient deteriorates, escapes containment, or causes a localised exposure that harms Kenyan civilians or military personnel at the base, the legal remedies available to those Kenyans are severely constrained by a contract their government signed in 2015 and extended in 2022, without ever asking them if they agreed.

    A DECADE IN THE MAKING

    In the end, what is playing out at Laikipia Air Base is not simply a story about Donald Trump’s America First health policy or William Ruto’s transactional relationship with Washington. It is a story about a decision made in 2015 during a summit of maximum diplomatic goodwill, when a Kenyan health minister and an American ambassador signed a document whose full implications neither country chose to explain to its citizens, and which has been quietly extended and expanded in the decade since.

    Obama came to Nairobi in July 2015 to host the Global Entrepreneurship Summit, the first time that summit had been held on African soil. He spoke of Kenya being on the move. He danced the Lipala at the State House dinner. He shook hands with Kenyatta before a guard of honour in the late afternoon sun. And on the day he arrived, a biosecurity agreement was signed that gave the United States of America the right to build laboratories and isolation facilities on Kenyan territory for diseases classified as biological threats, with tax exemptions for American personnel and immunity from Kenyan civil suits. That document, ratified by the National Assembly fourteen months later, is what Marco Rubio’s State Department reached for in May 2026 when it decided that Kenya, not America, would bear the risk of Ebola exposure for American citizens fleeing the DRC.

    Kenya’s High Court has now pressed pause. The next hearing is June 2. Whether the pause becomes a full stop will depend on whether the court finds that the government’s legal architecture, however elaborately constructed, met the constitutional minimum that the people of Kenya be consulted before their country became a quarantine colony for a lethal virus their government had nothing to do with creating. That question, eleven years after the first agreement was quietly signed in the shadow of a historic homecoming visit, is finally being asked in public.

  • Phone Thief’s Fatal Mistake: Online Sale Ad Leads Police to Major Nairobi Bust, 22 Stolen Handsets Recovered

    Phone Thief’s Fatal Mistake: Online Sale Ad Leads Police to Major Nairobi Bust, 22 Stolen Handsets Recovered

    What began as a frustrating search for a stolen phone ended in a dramatic police operation that exposed what detectives now believe could be part of a wider network dealing in stolen mobile devices within Nairobi’s Central Business District.

    The breakthrough came after a woman whose phone had been stolen at a school along Ngong Road stumbled upon a social media advertisement that made her stop scrolling instantly.

    The handset being advertised looked exactly like her missing phone.

    Suspicious and convinced she had found a crucial lead, she reported the matter to police officers, setting off a fast-moving investigation that would eventually lead detectives deep into the bustling heart of Nairobi’s CBD.

    Using mobile tracking technology and intelligence gathered from the online advert, officers traced the device to a commercial building near Khoja Stage.

    What they found inside shocked even seasoned investigators.

    The complainant’s phone was recovered alongside 21 other high-end mobile phones believed to have been stolen from unsuspecting victims across the city. Two suspects found inside the premises were immediately arrested as detectives launched further investigations into what appears to be a thriving underground trade in stolen electronics.

    Police suspect the recovered phones may be linked to a broader criminal network that has increasingly turned Nairobi’s downtown business district into a hub for the resale, alteration and movement of stolen gadgets.

    The latest recovery mirrors several recent crackdowns that have exposed the scale of the problem.

    Earlier this year, detectives recovered more than 900 stolen mobile phones destined for Uganda after intercepting suspicious packages in Nairobi’s CBD. Investigators said the devices were part of an organised cross-border syndicate that stole phones from members of the public and mobile phone shops before smuggling them into neighbouring countries for resale. (DCI (https://www.dci.go.ke/suspects-arrested-over-900-stolen-mobile-phones-recovered-nairobi-cbd?utm_source=chatgpt.com))

    In another operation, police arrested suspects allegedly involved in tampering with phone IMEI numbers to conceal the origin of stolen devices. Officers recovered dozens of smartphones, computers and flashing equipment used to alter handset identities before resale. (National Police Service (https://nationalpolice.go.ke/phone-heist-ring-busted-nairobi-cbd-dozens-stolen-devices-recovered?utm_source=chatgpt.com))

    Security experts say social media marketplaces have increasingly become a preferred channel for criminals seeking quick buyers for stolen gadgets. Many unsuspecting customers are lured by unusually low prices without verifying the source of the devices.

    Investigations into previous cases have revealed that stolen phones are often moved rapidly between handlers, flashed to erase identifying information, or transported across borders within days of being stolen. (The Star (https://www.the-star.co.ke/news/2026-01-26-2-arrested-900-stolen-phones-recovered-in-cbd?utm_source=chatgpt.com))

    For the woman whose stolen phone triggered the latest operation, a chance encounter with an online advert became the breakthrough detectives needed.

    What looked like a routine theft report quickly snowballed into the recovery of 22 mobile phones and the disruption of what police believe may be a larger criminal operation operating behind the busy storefronts and crowded corridors of Nairobi’s CBD.

    The two suspects remain in custody as detectives work to establish the ownership of the recovered devices and trace possible links to other phone theft syndicates.

    Police have urged members of the public to remain vigilant when purchasing second-hand phones online and to report suspicious electronic dealers or unusually cheap devices.

    For now, one careless online advert has done what countless investigations often struggle to achieve.

    It led detectives straight to the door.

  • Popular Luo TikToker MC Adek Tatu Arrested Over Tribal Remarks Following Utumishi Girls Tragedy

    Popular Luo TikToker MC Adek Tatu Arrested Over Tribal Remarks Following Utumishi Girls Tragedy

    A popular Luo TikTok personality known as MC Adek Tatu has been arrested after allegedly posting inflammatory tribal remarks in the wake of the deadly Utumishi Girls Academy dormitory fire that claimed the lives of 16 students and left dozens injured.

    The arrest of David Onyango Elgon, better known online as MC Adek Tatu, comes amid a nationwide crackdown on hate speech and ethnic incitement following one of Kenya’s worst school tragedies in recent years.

    According to the Directorate of Criminal Investigations, detectives tracked the content creator to his residence at Queen’s Court in Utange, Mombasa County, where he was arrested on Saturday after a manhunt. Authorities said he remains in custody pending arraignment.  

    The controversial TikToker sparked outrage after allegedly publishing remarks that appeared to celebrate the deaths of the students while suggesting that members of another ethnic community should have been the victims instead.

    The posts quickly spread across Facebook, TikTok and other social media platforms, triggering widespread condemnation from Kenyans across the political divide.

    His comments emerged as the country was still mourning the victims of the Gilgil school fire, which investigators suspect may have been an act of arson. Authorities have already arrested eight students as persons of interest in connection with the inferno as investigations continue.  

    As criticism intensified online, Onyango deleted the posts and issued an apology. He claimed that his social media account had been hacked and denied authoring the statements.

    The explanation was met with skepticism from many Kenyans who accused him of attempting to evade responsibility after public backlash.

    The arrest comes only a day after the National Cohesion and Integration Commission warned that it was monitoring individuals who were using social media platforms to glorify the deaths of the Utumishi Girls victims on ethnic grounds. The commission described such conduct as reprehensible and vowed to pursue legal action against offenders.  

    In a strongly worded statement, the commission emphasized that no child’s death should ever be celebrated because of ethnicity and urged Kenyans to show solidarity with grieving families instead of spreading division.  

    The DCI also used the arrest to send a warning to social media users, saying freedom of expression does not extend to content that incites hatred or threatens national cohesion.

    “The digital space is not a lawless jungle,” investigators said, cautioning that online users can be held criminally accountable for inflammatory content.

    The controversy has highlighted the darker side of Kenya’s rapidly expanding influencer culture, where content creators increasingly compete for attention in an environment driven by viral outrage and engagement. Analysts warn that tragedies are becoming fertile ground for ethnic baiting, misinformation and provocative content designed to generate views.

    The arrest also reflects growing pressure on authorities to police online hate speech more aggressively, particularly during moments of national grief. In recent years, the NCIC and law enforcement agencies have repeatedly raised concerns about social media being used to inflame ethnic tensions.

    Meanwhile, attention remains focused on the Utumishi Girls disaster itself. Preliminary investigations indicate that the dormitory fire may have been deliberately set, while Education Cabinet Secretary Julius Ogamba has disclosed that two teachers had prior information about planned unrest but allegedly failed to act. The school’s board has since been dissolved over alleged safety failures, including reports of overcrowding and a locked emergency exit.  

    For many Kenyans mourning the loss of the students, the arrest of MC Adek Tatu signals that authorities intend to pursue not only those responsible for the fire but also individuals accused of exploiting the tragedy to spread ethnic hatred.

    As detectives prepare to present the TikToker in court, the case is likely to reignite debate over the limits of free speech, accountability on social media and the consequences of turning national tragedies into platforms for tribal division.

  • Omtatah Seeks Removal of Three Appeal Judges Over Kenya-US Health Deal Ruling

    Omtatah Seeks Removal of Three Appeal Judges Over Kenya-US Health Deal Ruling

    Busia Senator Okiya Omtatah has filed a petition before the Judicial Service Commission seeking the removal of Court of Appeal judges Justice Luka Kimaru, Justice Sila Munyao and Justice J. O. Okello over their handling of a case involving the controversial Kenya-United States Health Cooperation Framework.

    The petition, filed under Article 168 of the Constitution, accuses the judges of violating constitutional principles after they suspended High Court conservatory orders blocking implementation of the agreement while postponing their detailed reasons until October 30, 2026.

    Omtatah argues that the move has effectively denied him a meaningful opportunity to appeal to the Supreme Court because he cannot challenge a ruling whose legal reasoning has not yet been provided.

    The Kenya-US Health Cooperation Framework was signed in Washington, D.C. on December 4, 2025, in the presence of President William Ruto. The agreement was signed by Prime Cabinet Secretary Musalia Mudavadi and US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and commits approximately Sh206 billion in US health funding to Kenya over five years.

    Omtatah challenged the agreement in the High Court through Constitutional Petition No. E816 of 2025, arguing that it was concluded without parliamentary ratification, lacked adequate public participation, and could expose sensitive Kenyan health data to foreign access. He also claimed some provisions would grant US authorities excessive oversight powers over Kenyan health systems and supply chains.

    On December 19, 2025, Justice Bahati Mwamuye issued conservatory orders suspending implementation of the framework pending hearing of the petition, finding that the case raised substantial constitutional issues.

    The matter was later consolidated with a related petition filed by the Consumer Federation of Kenya before Justice Patricia Nyaundi.

    The government subsequently moved to the Court of Appeal seeking to lift the suspension orders. Attorney General Dorcas Oduor argued that delaying the agreement threatened critical healthcare programmes and funding.

    On May 12, 2026, the appellate bench granted an interim stay allowing implementation of the framework to resume. However, the judges stated that their detailed reasons would only be delivered on October 30, 2026.

    In his petition to the JSC, Omtatah argues that the delayed reasoning undermines Article 163(4)(a) of the Constitution, which guarantees appeals to the Supreme Court in constitutional matters. He contends that without a reasoned judgment, it is impossible to properly challenge the ruling or for the Supreme Court to determine whether constitutional errors occurred.

    The dispute has gained further significance following reports that the United States is seeking to establish a 50-bed Ebola quarantine facility at Laikipia Airbase as part of regional outbreak preparedness efforts.

    The proposed facility emerged amid an Ebola outbreak in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo involving the Bundibugyo strain, which has spread into Uganda. Kenya has not reported any confirmed Ebola cases.

    Health Cabinet Secretary Aden Duale confirmed that Kenya was engaging the United States on preparedness measures linked to emerging public health threats.

    The proposal triggered sharp criticism from the Kenya Medical Practitioners, Pharmacists and Dentists Union. Secretary-General Davji Atellah accused the government of turning Kenya into a “containment colony” for foreign health emergencies and threatened industrial action unless details of the arrangement were disclosed.

    The Law Society of Kenya also questioned why Kenya had been selected despite having no active Ebola cases, while former Chief Justice David Maraga called for parliamentary scrutiny of the arrangement.

    On Friday, Justice Nyaundi issued conservatory orders blocking the establishment or operation of the proposed facility after the Katiba Institute filed an urgent petition challenging the plan.

    The petition argues that the arrangement could transform Kenya into an offshore quarantine centre for foreign states without parliamentary approval or public participation.

    Omtatah now argues that the unfolding Ebola facility dispute demonstrates the urgency of the constitutional questions raised in the health framework case. He says the delayed Court of Appeal ruling could allow irreversible actions, including infrastructure development, financial commitments, and data-sharing arrangements, before the judiciary fully determines the legality of the agreement.

    The Judicial Service Commission is expected to determine whether the judges’ conduct amounts to a constitutional violation or falls within acceptable judicial discretion. The judges have not publicly responded to the allegations.

    The consolidated High Court petitions challenging the Kenya-US Health Cooperation Framework are scheduled for mention on June 24, 2026.

  • Two Teachers Knew Of Planned Utumishi Girls Dormitory Fire But Failed To Act

    Two Teachers Knew Of Planned Utumishi Girls Dormitory Fire But Failed To Act

    Fresh details have emerged in the tragic Utumishi Girls Senior Secondary School fire in Gilgil after Education Cabinet Secretary Julius Ogamba revealed that two teachers had been warned in advance about a planned unrest by a section of students but allegedly failed to take action.

    The revelations came as investigations into the deadly inferno intensified, with detectives now treating the incident as a suspected arson attack that left 16 students dead and dozens injured.

    In a statement issued Friday, Ogamba said preliminary findings indicate that some Form Three learners had discussed plans for unrest before the fire broke out at the Meline Waithera Dormitory.

    According to the CS, two teachers were informed of the brewing situation but did not take appropriate preventive measures.

    “Preliminary investigations have established that the tragic fire was an act of arson,” Ogamba said, adding that the government would pursue both disciplinary and criminal accountability if negligence is established.

    The Directorate of Criminal Investigations has already arrested eight students identified as persons of interest in the case. The learners are currently being questioned as investigators seek to determine their individual roles in the planning and execution of the fire.

    Authorities say those found culpable will face charges under the Penal Code and other applicable laws.

    The fire, one of the deadliest school tragedies in recent years, tore through the upper floor of the two-storey dormitory, trapping students inside during the night.

    Investigators from the DCI’s multi-agency team said the ground floor remained largely intact while the upper section suffered extensive damage. The dormitory reportedly contained twelve cubicles fitted with 135 double-decker beds, raising fresh concerns about overcrowding and compliance with school safety regulations.

    Officials now believe the dormitory’s congested layout may have worsened the disaster and slowed evacuation efforts.

    Ogamba further disclosed that preliminary findings had uncovered serious safety breaches at the school, including a locked exit door, a violation of the Ministry of Education’s School Safety Manual and Basic Education Regulations.

    “In particular, there was congestion in the dormitory, and one exit door was locked, contrary to the prescribed safety requirements,” the CS said.

    The revelation has intensified scrutiny on school administrators and education officials over possible lapses in duty of care.

    The government says investigations are now extending beyond the students suspected of arson to include teachers, school administrators, Ministry of Education officers and officials from the Teachers Service Commission.

    Ogamba warned that disciplinary and legal action would be taken against any public officers found to have ignored warning signs or failed to enforce safety standards.

    The tragedy left 79 learners injured, with seven currently receiving specialised treatment at Kenyatta National Hospital after being transferred from Nakuru on Thursday. The remaining students were treated and discharged.

    Meanwhile, the bodies of the 16 deceased learners were moved to the Naivasha Sub-County Hospital mortuary, where DNA identification is ongoing due to the condition of some of the remains.

    Parents and guardians have been asked to report to the facility to assist with identification procedures.

    Detectives processing the scene say forensic experts are examining burn patterns, electrical systems and structural damage to determine how the fire spread so rapidly across the upper floor.

    Crime Scene Investigators, forensic imaging experts, DNA analysts and intelligence officers are all involved in the inquiry.

    Investigators are also reviewing CCTV footage from within the school and interviewing students, teachers and other witnesses in an effort to reconstruct the final hours before the blaze erupted.

    The National Police Service said the investigation would be conducted professionally and independently to ensure justice for the victims and their families.

    The Utumishi Girls tragedy has once again reignited national debate over safety standards in Kenyan boarding schools, particularly following repeated incidents of dormitory fires linked to student unrest.

    Education stakeholders are now demanding tougher enforcement of school safety regulations, improved mental health support for learners and stronger oversight of boarding facilities across the country.

    As grieving families await answers, pressure is mounting on authorities to establish whether the deaths could have been prevented had the warnings been acted upon in time.

  • Eight Students Arrested In Kenya After Suspected Deadly School Arson Attack

    Eight Students Arrested In Kenya After Suspected Deadly School Arson Attack

    Eight students alleged to have been involved in a suspected arson attack at a Kenyan girls’ school that killed 16 pupils have been arrested, police say.

    The fire in the early hours of Thursday morning at the Utumishi Girls Academy in Gilgil, about 120km (77 miles) north-west of capital city Nairobi, tore through the upper floor of a dormitory which had 135 bunk beds.

    After interviews with students and staff and a forensic review of CCTV footage, eight pupils at the school were identified as “persons of interest in connection with the planning and execution” of the fire, the National Police Service said in a statement.

    Investigations are continuing into the exact cause of the blaze.

    Police said the students were detained for questioning after being traced to their homes and brought back to the school, while others who had remained in the area were also tracked down and detained.

    The eight were among 30 students who were initially traced and recalled back to the school by detectives investigating the deadly fire.

    The fire started on the first floor of the dormitory

    Kenya has had a long history of school fires – just two years ago at least 21 people died in a dormitory fire in central Kenya.

    Many fires reported in boarding schools have been the result of arson, with disgruntled pupils – angry about the discipline and living conditions – accused of being responsible, while others were caused by accident.

    Overcrowding in dormitories and the failure to follow safety guidelines, such as keeping exits clear and windows unlocked, have frequently been blamed for the high number of casualties.

  • Kenyan Court Orders Suspension Of US Plan For Ebola Quarantine Facility

    Kenyan Court Orders Suspension Of US Plan For Ebola Quarantine Facility

    NAIROBI, May 29 (Reuters) – A Kenyan court has ordered the temporary suspension of ​a plan for the United States to set up an Ebola quarantine facility in the country after a lawsuit argued the ‌site could endanger public health.

    Senior U.S. officials said the 50-bed unit at an air force base in central Kenya would serve Americans who have been exposed to the virus but are still asymptomatic and would become operational on Friday.

    Patients who develop symptoms would be sent for care in other countries outside the U.S., the officials said.

    The ​plan to bring in Americans exposed to the outbreak in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo and Ugandahas drawn sharp opposition among ​many Kenyans since it came to light earlier this week. Kenya’s government provided written approval for the plan ⁠on Thursday but has not directly addressed it in public comments.

    In an order late on Thursday, Kenyan High Court Judge Patricia Nyaundi barred the ​government from admitting anyone exposed to or infected by Ebola under the planned agreement until a challenge brought by the Katiba Institute legal advocacy ​group was resolved.

    The next hearing will take place on June 2, Nyaundi said.

    TRUMP ADMINISTRATION ‘WILL NOT ALLOW’ EBOLA PATIENTS ON US SOIL

    U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration has said it “cannot and will not allow” any cases of Ebola to enter the country, unlike during the 2014 to 2016 Ebola outbreak in West Africa when several infected U.S. ​nationals were treated on U.S. soil.

    The planned facility in Kenya is due to be staffed by members of the U.S. Public Health Service, a ​uniformed branch of the Department of Health and Human Services. More than 30 trained in Washington for three days and left for Kenya on Wednesday night, U.S. ‌officials said.

    Kenya ⁠has pushed for the facility to be open to all nationalities, not just U.S. citizens, but it is not clear if that will be the case. The U.S. State Department said on Thursday it would commit $13.5 million toward Kenya’s Ebola preparedness efforts.

    Since the outbreak was confirmed in mid-May, there have been more than 1,000 suspected and confirmed cases, including 246 deaths, according to the World Health Organization.

    Health experts have warned that the real number ​of cases and deaths is likely ​to be much higher because ⁠of the late detection of the outbreak and difficulties tracing the contacts of suspected cases in eastern DRC, where there is widespread armed conflict.

    QUARANTINE PLAN CRITICISED IN KENYA

    The Katiba Institute said in its lawsuit that the ​quarantine plan “raises grave constitutional concerns regarding the rights to life, health, fair administrative action, public participation, and parliamentary ​oversight”.

    Kenya’s main medical ⁠union also threatened on Thursday to initiate industrial action unless the terms of the agreement with the U.S. government were released within 48 hours.

    Some U.S. health experts, meanwhile, have criticised the plan, saying it could discourage Americans from joining the Ebola response.

    The Trump administration has said the plan will allow patients ⁠to more ​quickly access care and will protect Americans at home.

    Last week, a U.S. citizen who ​was treating patients in the DRC as a medical missionary was confirmed to have contracted Ebola and moved to Germany for treatment along with five others who were exposed. A ​seventh person was taken to the Czech Republic.

  • From Hunger Cartel To Oil Docket: The Troubling Rehabilitation Of Kello Harsama

    From Hunger Cartel To Oil Docket: The Troubling Rehabilitation Of Kello Harsama

    When President William Ruto reshuffled his principal secretaries on Thursday, the move was dressed in the clinical language of continuity and administration. A vacancy had arisen in the State Department for Petroleum. Someone had to fill it. The man chosen was Kello Harsama. To the casual observer, the appointment may have read like unremarkable bureaucratic rotation. To those who have been tracking the man’s career, it was anything but.

    Harsama arrives at the Petroleum docket carrying baggage that, in a functioning accountability ecosystem, would have disqualified him from consideration. Over the course of his tenure as Principal Secretary for Arid and Semi-Arid Lands, he became the subject of extensive and detailed allegations of procurement fraud, regional favouritism, supplier coercion, and the politically motivated misuse of humanitarian resources. None of those allegations have been resolved. No investigation has been announced. No charges have been preferred. No parliamentary committee has tabled findings. And now, instead of a summons from the EACC or the DCI, Harsama has received a promotion.

    None of the allegations against Harsama have been resolved. No investigation announced. No charges preferred. And now, instead of a summons from the EACC or the DCI, he has received a promotion.

    THE MAN AND HIS RECORD

    Harsama’s biography is that of a career administrator who rose steadily through Kenya’s provincial administration ranks. He served as District Officer across Meru, Makueni, Narok, Laikipia, Uasin Gishu, West Pokot, and Baringo. He served as District Commissioner in Kajiado and Loitoktok, later rising to County Commissioner in Kajiado. He holds a Bachelor of Education from Moi University and a Master’s degree in Public Administration and Policy from Tsinghua University in Beijing. On paper, it is a solid CV.

    But the architecture of Harsama’s public career reveals something more complicated: a pattern of appointments in sensitive, resource-heavy dockets followed by controversy. President Ruto first appointed him as Principal Secretary for Crops Development under the Ministry of Agriculture before reassigning him to the ASAL department. It was in the ASAL docket that the most serious questions about him emerged and festered.

    THE ASAL FOOD CARTEL: ALLEGATIONS THAT WERE NEVER INVESTIGATED

    In April 2025, Kenya Insights first published allegations from sources within the Ministry of East African Community, ASAL, and Regional Development pointing to systematic corruption in the distribution of government relief food. The allegations were specific, granular, and damning. Suppliers seeking contracts to provide basic food commodities to drought-affected communities across Kenya’s 23 ASAL counties were being forced to quote inflated prices for staples including beans and rice. The excess over the market rate was, according to ministry insiders, being extracted as kickbacks flowing upward to senior officials.

    The central figure named in those accounts was Harsama himself. Sources alleged that over 80 percent of relief food contracts under his watch had been awarded to suppliers from his home county of Marsabit, in a pattern that investigators would recognise as procurement gerrymandering designed to consolidate political capital ahead of his anticipated 2027 gubernatorial bid. Harsama lost to incumbent Governor Mohamud Ali in 2022, coming a distant third. He has since made little secret of his intention to try again, with the Warsiitu clan of the Borana community formally endorsing him in July 2025.

    The political calculus behind the alleged contract allocation was therefore not subtle: use the levers of a humanitarian procurement function to build a supplier constituency in Marsabit, and use government resources to fund the political groundwork. Relief food, in this construction, was not aid. It was currency. Contractors who refused to participate in the alleged kickback scheme were simply frozen out of government tenders. The procurement process, meant to be competitive and transparent, was allegedly weaponised into an extortion mechanism. Pay up or lose the contract. The drought-stricken communities waiting for the food were incidental to the arrangement.

    Relief food was not aid. It was currency. Pay up or lose the contract. The drought-stricken communities waiting for the food were incidental to the arrangement.

    The ASAL department manages an annual Treasury allocation estimated at Sh7.4 billion for relief food and non-food items, supplemented by donations from countries, embassies, and institutions including USAID through the World Food Programme. Even a modest directional bias in procurement at that scale represents hundreds of millions of shillings over a year. The 23 ASAL counties, including Turkana, Mandera, Wajir, Marsabit, and West Pokot, depend on this distribution during recurring drought periods. Any manipulation of the supply chain is not administrative misconduct. It is a crime against already desperate populations.

    The Standard gave Harsama the opportunity to respond when these allegations first surfaced. His response was remarkable for what it lacked. He dismissed the claims as political, telling the newspaper that everything he had been told was a lie, that it was politics used by opponents to soil his good reputation. He offered no procurement figures. No audits. No alternative explanation for the alleged regional concentration of contracts. His only substantive defence on the Marsabit allegation was demographic: Marsabit is categorised as one of the 23 ASAL counties and qualifies for relief food. This is technically accurate. It does not explain why, if the allegations are true, Marsabit suppliers were receiving a disproportionate share of contracts bearing no relationship to any formula based on population, drought severity, or humanitarian need.

    THE CS-PS RIFT AND THE PRESIDENTIAL RESTRUCTURING

    The corruption allegations did not come only from anonymous sources. According to reporting published by Kenya Insights in June 2025, Cabinet Secretary Beatrice Askul had herself uncovered evidence of irregularities in the relief food distribution system and began pushing internally for accountability measures. This produced an open conflict between the CS and her own PS, a deeply unusual breakdown that could only have been visible to the Office of the President. The ministry’s leadership was at war over the question of whether to tolerate or confront apparent corruption in its own procurement chain.

    Around the same time, President Ruto issued Executive Order No. 1 of 2025, which restructured government ministries and transferred the Special Programmes function away from the EAC and ASAL ministry to the Ministry of Public Service. The timing attracted immediate analysis from governance observers who read it as a deliberate, if quiet, way of stripping Harsama of the procurement function at the centre of the allegations, without publicly acknowledging the scandal that made the stripping necessary. One source close to the presidency described it to Kenya Insights as a corruption probe conducted through the back door of bureaucratic reorganisation.

    Harsama reportedly lobbied furiously against the executive order. Sources told People Daily and Kenya Insights that he visited political leaders, including ODM leader Raila Odinga, using financial resources to influence the reversal of the decision. If accurate, this was an extraordinary act: a sitting principal secretary deploying what may have been public resources to reverse a presidential directive that had stripped him of the very function he was accused of looting. The Presidency did not investigate the lobbying. It moved Harsama sideways, left the allegations hanging, and called the matter closed.

    INTO THE PETROLEUM SCANDAL’S WAKE

    The docket that Harsama now inherits is itself still smouldering from the most damaging procurement scandal in the energy sector in years. His predecessor, Mohamed Liban, resigned in April 2026 alongside KPC Managing Director Joe Sang and EPRA Director-General Daniel Kiptoo, all three implicated in a Sh12 billion fuel importation scandal that left investigators pursuing at least 20 individuals at DCI headquarters.

    The scandal centred on the importation of approximately 128,000 metric tonnes of fuel outside the established government-to-government framework, including a consignment aboard the MV Paloma that docked at Mombasa between March 27 and 29, 2026. Preliminary DCI findings indicated that fuel stock levels had been falsified by officials to manufacture a sense of impending shortage, creating the justification for an emergency procurement that bypassed normal controls. The fuel was traced to Saudi Aramco before being redirected through a local Kenyan importer, raising questions about who authorised the emergency and who benefited.

    Energy CS Opiyo Wandayi told a parliamentary committee on April 13 that he neither knew about the deal nor approved it. DCI investigators signalled they intended to move beyond the officials who had resigned, toward decisions made at the highest policy levels. That investigation is still ongoing. The department Harsama is now walking into is not a clean slate. It is a crime scene with unresolved forensic questions, an active DCI probe, and a procurement culture that has only recently been stripped of the officials most visibly implicated in its worst instincts.

    The department Harsama is walking into is not a clean slate. It is a crime scene with unresolved forensic questions and an active DCI probe.

    THE RUTO APPOINTMENT PROBLEM

    President Ruto’s decision to move Harsama into the Petroleum docket raises questions that go beyond the individual. It speaks to a pattern of appointments in this administration that reward loyalty and regional political geometry over integrity or institutional fitness. Harsama was a UDA stalwart who ran on the President’s ticket in Marsabit in 2022. His appointment to the PS for Crops Development after the election was widely understood as reward for that loyalty. His posting to ASAL gave him proximity to a Sh7.4 billion annual budget. And now the Petroleum docket, which manages Kenya’s oil, gas, and fuel sector, oversees KPC and the National Oil Corporation, and sits at the intersection of billions in annual procurement.

    The Office of the President has never publicly acknowledged the allegations made against Harsama during his ASAL tenure. It has not indicated whether any internal accountability review was conducted. It has not required him to clear his name before being handed a new, more consequential responsibility. What it has done is quietly transfer him, strip his old docket of its contested function through executive restructuring, and now hand him a sector that has just demonstrated, in vivid and costly detail, what happens when senior officials treat procurement as a personal enrichment opportunity.

    Placing at the helm of Kenya’s petroleum apparatus a man who has not answered credible allegations of doing precisely that in a different sector is not a continuity appointment. It is a risk appointment. And it is a signal, not to Kenya’s investors or regional partners, but to every procurement officer, every supplier, and every official in the energy chain about what kind of conduct the Ruto administration is prepared to tolerate at senior levels.

    THE ACCOUNTABILITY GAP

    What is most troubling about the Harsama appointment is not the man himself but what his trajectory reveals about the architecture of accountability in Kenya’s executive. Allegations against him were raised in multiple credible outlets over more than a year. They were specific, sourced, and detailed. They were reported by The Standard, People Daily, and Kenya Insights across 2025. They named a figure, a mechanism, and the communities that bore the cost.

    The EACC did not open a public inquiry. The DCI did not announce an investigation. Parliament’s Public Accounts Committee, called upon by civil society to act, did not table findings. The Office of the PS for ASAL did not respond to requests for comment at the time the allegations were published. And now the man at the centre of those allegations is publicly pledging, with evident sincerity, to serve the petroleum sector with dedication, professionalism, and integrity.

    Integrity, in Harsama’s case, remains an aspiration. Not a demonstrated standard. The communities of Kenya’s ASAL counties, who depended on relief food that was allegedly being auctioned off by a cartel from above, never received an explanation. They never received a refund. They never received justice. And the man they say presided over that system has now been handed a desk with a new view of one of Kenya’s most critical and lucrative sectors.

    He says he is grateful. The question Kenyans should be asking is why the President believes they should be.

  • South Sudan National Held in Nairobi Over Sh2.1 Million Fraud

    South Sudan National Held in Nairobi Over Sh2.1 Million Fraud

    A South Sudanese national is facing criminal charges in Nairobi after prosecutors accused him of defrauding a Kenyan businessman of more than Sh2 million through a scheme involving the registration of a company branch in South Sudan.

    John Tong Boul Majuach was presented before the Milimani Law Courts on Monday, where the prosecution sought to have him answer to allegations of obtaining money by false pretences and handling proceeds of crime.

    The case was mentioned before Principal Magistrate Daisy Mutai, but plea taking was postponed after Majuach’s lawyer requested additional time to explore an out-of-court settlement with the complainant.

    In line with Kenya’s growing emphasis on alternative dispute resolution in suitable criminal matters involving financial disputes, the court allowed the request and deferred plea taking until June 6, 2026.

    Pending the next appearance, the accused will remain in custody at Kilimani Police Station.

    According to court documents, Majuach allegedly obtained Sh2.1 million from businessman John Stephen Njoroge Macharia after claiming he could facilitate the registration of a branch of Nairobi Projectors Limited in South Sudan.

    Investigators allege the representation was false and that the accused knew he lacked the ability or authority to deliver the promised services. The alleged fraud is said to have occurred on various dates between May 30 and June 3, 2023.

    The prosecution has also slapped the suspect with 13 additional counts related to the acquisition and use of proceeds of crime, significantly escalating the legal jeopardy he faces if the charges proceed to trial.

    The case adds to a growing number of cross-border business fraud investigations involving promises of investment opportunities, company registrations and government-linked facilitation services in East Africa. Law enforcement agencies have in recent years warned Kenyan entrepreneurs to exercise caution when engaging intermediaries claiming to possess special access to government offices or business registration systems in neighbouring countries.

    Authorities have increasingly pursued financial crime suspects under both traditional fraud provisions and anti-money laundering laws, allowing prosecutors to target not only the alleged deception itself but also the movement and use of funds believed to have been obtained unlawfully.

    When the matter returns to court on June 6, the magistrate is expected to determine whether a settlement effort has been successful or whether Majuach will formally take plea and the case proceed to full hearing.

    The outcome could determine whether the dispute is resolved through compensation and negotiation or advances into a lengthy criminal trial involving multiple financial crime counts.

  • Inside The American Ebola Makeshift Hospital Being Built On Kenyan Soil: Tents, Biocontainment Pods, And A Deal Ruto Cannot Afford To Refuse

    Inside The American Ebola Makeshift Hospital Being Built On Kenyan Soil: Tents, Biocontainment Pods, And A Deal Ruto Cannot Afford To Refuse

    Picture this. You are driving north out of Nairobi on the A2, past Thika, past Karatina, the road climbing steadily through coffee farms and forest until the land opens into the wide, dry plateau of Laikipia. You are 200 kilometres from the capital, 1,865 metres above sea level, in terrain the British Army has been training on since the colonial era. And somewhere on that plateau, behind the perimeter wire of the Kenya Air Force’s Laikipia Air Base, American military contractors are right now finishing the construction of what the White House describes as a state-of-the-art facility to receive Americans who have been exposed to Ebola.

    It will open on Friday. Kenya was told about it in a press release.

    That is not an exaggeration. Health Cabinet Secretary Aden Duale, when confronted by the Daily Nation with ten specific questions about the facility, responded with two pages that confirmed discussions were ongoing, declared Kenya ready and capable, and said nothing whatsoever about where the facility would be, who had approved it, on what legal basis, or when the first patients might arrive. The Kenyan public learned the location from the Kenyan Medical Practitioners, Pharmacists and Dentists Union, not from the government. Even that disclosure came only after the union issued a 48-hour strike ultimatum demanding answers.

    The answers, assembled from American officials, sources within the Kenyan negotiating team, court documents, and reporting from Washington, paint a picture that the Ruto administration has every political reason not to paint. Kenya did not stumble into this arrangement. It walked in deliberately, six months ago, in a Washington hotel ballroom, when President William Ruto watched Prime Cabinet Secretary Musalia Mudavadi and US Secretary of State Marco Rubio sign the Kenya-United States Health Cooperation Framework. That agreement, worth $2.5 billion over five years, contained within it the seed of everything now unfolding at Laikipia.

    THE $2.5 BILLION DEAL THAT MADE THIS POSSIBLE

    On December 4, 2025, Kenya became the first African country to sign a bilateral agreement with the United States under Washington’s new America First Global Health Strategy. The signing took place in Washington on the margins of a broader diplomatic visit, and the ceremony was attended by President Ruto himself, a signal of the importance Nairobi attached to the deal. The framework, negotiated over a period of months following initial contacts in August 2025, replaced the patchwork of previous health support arrangements that had been run through the United States Agency for International Development before the Trump administration dismantled USAID earlier in the year.

    Under the terms of the framework, the United States committed to providing up to $1.6 billion over five years to support priority health programmes in Kenya, covering HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria, maternal and child health, polio eradication, disease surveillance, and — critically — infectious disease outbreak response and preparedness. Kenya, for its part, committed to increasing domestic health expenditure by $850 million over the same period, gradually assuming greater financial responsibility as American funding tapers. The combined figure of $2.5 billion was the headline number both governments promoted.

    What the headline obscured was that the American contribution represented a reduction of approximately $423 million compared to the previous levels of US health funding flowing into Kenya under USAID. Before USAID was abolished, the United States was spending around $250 million annually on Kenya’s health sector. The new deal, front-loaded with promises but structured to decline over time, delivered less total money to Kenya than the old arrangement while requiring Kenya to commit public funds that constitutional scholars have since argued were pledged without the mandatory parliamentary appropriation.

    Kenya did not stumble into this arrangement. It walked in deliberately, six months ago, in a Washington hotel ballroom.

    The High Court saw enough to suspend the framework’s implementation within days of the signing. On December 11 and 19, 2025, two separate conservatory orders were issued blocking the agreement, with Justice Chacha Mwita pointing to concerns over data privacy, constitutional compliance, and the commitment of expenditure outside the Public Finance Management Act. The primary petition, filed by activist and senator Okiya Omtatah Okoiti and the Katiba Institute, argued that the framework interfered with devolved functions and imposed obligations on county governments without their consent.

    The Court of Appeal temporarily lifted those orders on May 12, 2026, just weeks before the Ebola facility discussions became public. The timing was not coincidental. With the legal blockage lifted, the machinery of the health cooperation framework became operational again — and with it, the infectious disease outbreak response provisions that appear to provide at least part of the diplomatic scaffolding under which the Laikipia facility has been constructed. The government has declined to state explicitly whether the Ebola arrangement falls under the health cooperation framework. It has also declined to say it does not.

    THE FACILITY: WHAT IS BEING BUILT AND WHERE

    Laikipia Air Base sits approximately eight kilometres west-northwest of the town of Nanyuki. It was established in 1974 as Nanyuki Air Base, the Kenya Air Force’s primary fighter aircraft facility, and has hosted foreign military training exercises for decades. The British Army Training Unit Kenya, one of the United Kingdom’s largest military installations anywhere on the African continent, operates from the eastern section of the same base, known as Laikipia Air Base East. American forces have used the broader Laikipia region for training activities tied to US Africa Command operations. In short, this is a location already familiar with the presence of foreign military and quasi-military personnel. That familiarity, sources suggest, was a key factor in its selection.

    What is being built inside the base perimeter is a phased American military field hospital. Phase one, which becomes operational on Friday, consists of a 50-bed quarantine unit capable of receiving Americans who have been potentially exposed to Ebola but have not yet tested positive or developed symptoms. This is a monitoring and observation facility for asymptomatic individuals during the Ebola virus’s incubation window, which can run to 21 days.

    Phase two, expected to be operational within the following week, will add specialised isolation units and biocontainment units transported directly from the United States. According to senior Trump administration officials who briefed reporters in Washington on Thursday, the fully built-out facility will eventually include three isolation units, each capable of holding four patients, and two biocontainment units, each capable of holding two patients. That gives the site a maximum symptomatic patient capacity of sixteen in high-containment conditions, with the 50-bed quarantine block handling the larger pool of exposed but unconfirmed cases. A source familiar with the broader Ebola response said the facility has the potential to eventually expand to 250 beds if the outbreak demands it.

    The physical structure is not a conventional hospital building. It is a modular, tent-based military field hospital of the type the US military deploys in conflict zones and disaster response operations, supplemented by purpose-built biocontainment pods that are bolted together rather than constructed. Think pressurised, hermetically sealable rooms within a larger controlled-access compound, with negative air pressure systems to prevent contaminated air from escaping, and full decontamination corridors between zones. The biocontainment units in particular are the same technology used at facilities like Emory University Hospital in Atlanta, where American Ebola patients were treated during the 2014 West Africa outbreak. They are being flown to Kenya from American military stockpiles.

    No Kenyan public health officer will be permitted inside the American unit. The infected will be treated by American infectious disease experts only.

    The surrounding Laikipia terrain provides the buffer the Americans wanted. There are no dense civilian populations immediately adjacent to the base. The air base itself has the airstrip infrastructure necessary for medevac aircraft operations, which is central to the facility’s function as a staging and stabilisation point rather than a definitive treatment destination. A patient who deteriorates at Laikipia will not be flown to Nairobi. According to officials, they will be evacuated to specialised tertiary-care facilities in Europe, with the United States Centers for Disease Control working with European counterparts to identify receiving hospitals. Officials cited airports in Congo and Kenya as having limited capabilities that complicate direct long-haul transport to the United States.

    HOW THE FACILITY WILL BE OPERATED

    The operational structure of the Laikipia facility is built around a principle of total American control and total Kenyan exclusion from the patient-care environment. More than thirty officers from the United States Public Health Service Commissioned Corps are already on the ground, having departed Joint Base Andrews in Maryland on Wednesday night after a three-day training course covering Ebola patient care, quarantine procedures, and the use of personal protective equipment. A second cohort of officers is undergoing the same training this weekend and will deploy to Kenya next week.

    Some of the officers currently in Kenya treated Ebola patients during the 2014 to 2015 Liberia outbreak, giving the team real-world Ebola experience at a facility that is treating the Bundibugyo strain, a rare variant for which there is no approved vaccine and no approved therapeutic. That clinical reality shapes the treatment protocols. If a quarantined patient develops symptoms or tests positive, the facility will be able to administer monoclonal antibody treatments and remdesivir, the broad-spectrum antiviral developed by Gilead Sciences. Remdesivir is not approved to treat Ebola specifically, but it is commonly used off-label in viral haemorrhagic fever management because of its demonstrated antiviral activity. Hydration support and respiratory assistance will also be available on-site.

    Kenyan health workers are conducting parallel training at separate locations, with no integration planned between the American clinical team and Kenyan medical personnel. This segregation is not incidental. A source with direct knowledge of the arrangements was blunt about it: no Kenyan will be allowed inside the American treatment unit. Kenya’s own isolation infrastructure, which amounts to a single purpose-built viral haemorrhagic fever isolation unit at Kenyatta National Hospital in Nairobi, will handle any Kenyan Ebola cases independently, without cross-pollination with the American facility or its staff.

    What this means in operational terms is that a patient arrives at Laikipia by medical evacuation aircraft, enters the quarantine block for monitoring, is assessed by American doctors, receives American-administered treatments if symptoms develop, and is either cleared for onward travel or evacuated to Europe. At no point in that pathway does a Kenyan clinician, a Kenyan public health officer, or a Kenyan biosafety inspector interact with the patient or the patient’s care team. The facility is, in every meaningful sense, an American installation on Kenyan sovereign territory.

    WHY KENYA? THE QUESTION THE GOVERNMENT WON’T ANSWER

    The Nation has established that Uganda was approached by the United States before Kenya. Whether Uganda declined or simply did not move fast enough for Washington’s timetable is not confirmed, but the sequence matters enormously. It means Kenya was not selected because it is the most clinically capable country in the region or the most geographically logical. It was selected because it was available, because it had a bilateral health cooperation framework already in place providing diplomatic cover, and because the Ruto government — economically dependent on American support for a health sector that had been built on USAID funding for decades — was in no position to refuse.

    Africa CDC has placed Kenya among the ten highest-risk countries on the continent due to the volume of cross-border movement with both the Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda. Kenya shares a border with Uganda and has extensive air and trade connections to the DRC. There have already been more than 55,000 travellers screened at Kenya’s ports of entry since the Bundibugyo outbreak intensified, and ten individuals have been tested for the virus, all returning negative results. Kenya has not recorded a single confirmed Ebola case.

    The United States government’s own stated position is unambiguous. Secretary of State Rubio said it plainly during a White House Cabinet meeting: the United States cannot and will not allow any Ebola cases to enter American territory. That is the geopolitical logic underlying the Kenya facility. America will keep Ebola out of America by keeping Americans who may have been exposed out of America. Those Americans will instead be placed in a tent compound in the Kenyan highlands and treated by American staff, with European hospitals as the fallback if things go badly wrong.

    If the United States believes the 12-hour medevac flight back to Washington is too dangerous for its citizens, by what logic is it safe to fly infected individuals into Kenyan airspace?

    The KMPDU Secretary-General Dr Davji Bhimji Atellah put the central contradiction with surgical precision. If it is too dangerous for America, it is too dangerous for Kenya. The union has demanded that the government explain why Kenya was selected as the designated containment location while nations directly bordering the Bundibugyo epicentre are bypassed. That demand has not been answered.

    Professor Lawrence Gostin, Director of the World Health Organization Centre on Global Health Law, went further. He called the plan reckless, unethical and possibly unlawful. He pointed out that the odds of surviving Ebola are vastly higher in specialised American hospitals than in a field facility with no approved therapeutics, and he laid responsibility for the delayed outbreak detection directly at the feet of the Trump administration, which had gutted the CDC and USAID field presence in the DRC before the Bundibugyo strain began spreading. If USAID and CDC had been active in the DRC, Gostin said, detection could have been earlier.

    The Law Society of Kenya, through its president Charles Kanjama, called on the government to decline the request outright and argued that treatment facilities should be established near the outbreak epicentre in eastern DRC or western Uganda rather than in a country with no active cases. Former Chief Justice David Maraga called for immediate parliamentary scrutiny. Even within the Ministry of Health, the official line has fractured publicly: Medical Services PS Ouma Oluga made claims about Kenya’s isolation capacity and laboratory preparedness that Public Health PS Mary Muthoni directly contradicted, with Muthoni confirming to this newspaper that Kenya has exactly one purpose-built viral haemorrhagic fever isolation unit, located at KNH.

    THE OUTBREAK BEHIND THE ARRANGEMENT

    The epidemiological context in which all of this is unfolding is grave. The Bundibugyo strain of Ebola, the current outbreak’s causative agent, is the third largest Ebola outbreak on record. The World Health Organization declared it a Public Health Emergency of International Concern this month. In the Democratic Republic of Congo, there have been more than 906 suspected cases, 105 confirmed, and 223 suspected deaths. Uganda has reported seven confirmed cases and one fatality. The case fatality rate of the Bundibugyo strain sits between 25 and 40 percent.

    There is no approved vaccine for Bundibugyo. The approved Ebola vaccines — including the rVSV-ZEBOV vaccine that proved effective in the 2018 to 2020 DRC outbreak — target the Zaire strain, not Bundibugyo. The standard vaccine stockpile is clinically irrelevant to the current emergency. Experimental immunological approaches are being researched, but nothing has received regulatory authorisation. This is the critical medical reality that makes the American decision to establish a field facility rather than return patients to Emory, the National Institutes of Health Clinical Centre, or other high-capability American biocontainment hospitals so politically charged. Those American facilities have the infrastructure, the trained staff, and the biocontainment capacity built specifically for this scenario. The Trump administration has chosen not to use them.

    Samaritan’s Purse, the American evangelical humanitarian organisation that has operated multiple Ebola treatment units in previous outbreaks, has already established isolation facilities in the DRC. Washington has separately disbursed funds directly to the DRC as part of a broader multilateral response involving the United Kingdom and other bilateral partners. The Kenya facility is presented by American officials as one component of a multi-country, multi-partner response architecture, a staging and monitoring hub rather than a standalone treatment centre.

    WHAT KENYA GETS FROM THIS

    The government’s silence is not without a calculation behind it. Two KEMRI scientists contacted by the Daily Nation before the facility’s location became publicly known offered a perspective that the Ruto administration cannot say out loud but almost certainly believes. Professor Matilu Mwau, a Senior Principal Clinical Research Scientist at the Kenya Medical Research Institute, noted the obvious: the Americans are not going to demolish it when they leave. A biocontainment-capable isolation facility constructed to American military specifications, abandoned in place at a Kenyan air force base when the Ebola crisis passes, becomes a permanent asset for Kenya’s infectious disease response infrastructure. A country that currently has one isolation unit gets a second one, free of charge and built to a higher technical standard than anything Kenya could procure independently.

    Brown Ashira, the Secretary General of the Public Health Union, was willing to describe the potential upside while insisting it came with non-negotiable conditions. If the arrangement proceeds with heavy ring-fenced international financing, he said, it could catalyse permanent employment for unemployed Kenyan doctors and nurses, strengthen border screening capacity, and give Kenyan frontline clinicians access to American infectious disease expertise and training that they would not otherwise encounter. The facility, properly leveraged, could serve as a catalyst for domestic investment in Kenya’s chronically underfunded public health defence.

    None of those benefits are guaranteed. None of them are written into a public agreement because there is no public agreement. There are discussions. There are ongoing negotiations. There are equipment shipments crossing Africa and staff flying into Nairobi and a compound taking shape at Laikipia. But as of Friday morning, when the 50-bed quarantine unit becomes operational, Kenya’s government will not have told its citizens what it agreed to, on what terms, with what legal basis, or with what protections for the Kenyan public who live, farm and breathe the same air as the facility being built in their name.

    The Americans are not going to demolish it when they leave. A facility built to American military specifications, abandoned in place at a Kenyan air base, becomes a permanent asset.

    The KMPDU’s ultimatum expires within hours. If the government does not publish the bilateral text of the agreement, explain the selection of Kenya over frontline states, and commit to using the facility as leverage to employ the thousands of Kenyan doctors currently locked out of the public health system, the union has promised a nationwide strike. That is the political clock ticking alongside the epidemiological one.

    AN AGREEMENT NO ONE IS DEFENDING PUBLICLY

    There is a phrase in diplomacy for what Kenya’s government is doing: strategic ambiguity. It is the art of not saying yes and not saying no and letting events proceed without the accountability that either answer would demand. CS Duale’s two-page statement confirmed discussions. It confirmed Kenya’s partnership with the United States. It confirmed that any arrangements would be guided by Kenya’s national laws. It confirmed nothing that could be held against the government in court, in parliament, or in the press.

    The problem with strategic ambiguity is that facilities are not ambiguous. Fifty beds are fifty beds. Biocontainment pods shipped from American military stockpiles are not hypothetical. Thirty-plus US Public Health Service officers sleeping in Laikipia barracks right now are not a discussion document. The train, as one senior Kenyan health official told the Nation, left the station before the Cabinet meeting even convened.

    What Kenya is left with is this: a facility it cannot publicly endorse, built under an agreement it will not release, to house patients from a country that will not bring them home, in the name of a health partnership that was suspended by its own courts and only lifted six months after it was signed. The Americans have described it as a natural extension of longstanding cooperation. Kenyan doctors are calling it a containment colony. The courts are being petitioned. Parliament has not been consulted. And on Friday morning, the gate at Laikipia opens.

  • Lobby Group Moves To Court To Block Proposed US Ebola Quarantine Facility In Kenya

    Lobby Group Moves To Court To Block Proposed US Ebola Quarantine Facility In Kenya

    Katiba Institute has moved to the High Court seeking to stop the Kenyan government from establishing any Ebola quarantine or treatment facility linked to the United States, escalating a growing national debate over reports that Kenya could host a regional infectious disease containment centre for foreign nationals.

    In a petition filed under certificate of urgency at the Milimani High Court, the rights lobby has sued the Attorney-General and the Ministry of Health, arguing that the alleged plans raise serious constitutional, public health and sovereignty concerns. Health rights organisation KELIN Kenya has been listed as an interested party in the case.

    The petition seeks conservatory orders to immediately halt any negotiations, approvals or operationalisation of an Ebola-related quarantine, isolation or treatment facility in Kenya pending the determination of the case.

    Katiba Institute is also asking the court to compel the Ministry of Health to publicly disclose within 24 hours all agreements, memoranda and negotiations allegedly entered into with the United States or other foreign governments regarding the proposed facility. The institute further wants the government ordered to produce environmental impact assessments, biosafety evaluations, parliamentary approvals and emergency response protocols connected to the plan.

    The case comes amid heightened public scrutiny following reports that Kenya and the United States have been engaged in discussions over establishing a specialised quarantine facility for American citizens and other persons exposed to highly infectious diseases such as Ebola.

    In court papers, Katiba Institute argues that Kenya risks being turned into what it describes as an “offshore quarantine hub” for foreign countries without adequate public participation or parliamentary oversight.

    Through lawyer Malidzo Nyawa, the lobby group claims the alleged arrangement has been pursued secretly and without transparency, despite the potential implications for public safety and national sovereignty.

    An affidavit sworn by Nora Mbagathi states that the government has not sufficiently explained the scope of the proposed arrangement or demonstrated that Kenya possesses the infrastructure required to safely manage Ebola cases.

    The institute argues that Kenya lacks a Biosafety Level 4 laboratory, considered the global standard for handling highly dangerous pathogens such as the Ebola virus. According to the petition, the country currently operates Biosafety Level 1 to 3 laboratories, with only a handful meeting Level 3 standards.

    Katiba Institute says this limitation exposes healthcare workers and the wider public to heightened risks should containment measures fail or an outbreak occur.

    The petition further cites lessons from the Covid-19 pandemic, referencing previous court interventions in public health decisions, including the case filed by the Law Society of Kenya and other petitioners challenging government pandemic measures.

    The lobby group argues that the court has a constitutional duty to intervene before any irreversible harm occurs, warning that delayed action could undermine the rights to life, health and access to information guaranteed under the Constitution.

    The legal challenge comes just days after Health Cabinet Secretary Aden Duale insisted that Kenya remains prepared to respond to Ebola threats and dismissed fears that the country was being converted into a foreign disease containment zone.

    The Ministry of Health has not yet formally responded to the petition, but government officials have maintained that Kenya continues to strengthen its disease surveillance and emergency preparedness systems in collaboration with international partners.

    The case is expected to intensify public debate over Kenya’s role in global health security programmes and the extent to which foreign-backed health initiatives should be subjected to parliamentary scrutiny and public participation before implementation.

  • Motorists To Start Getting Instant Fines For Minor Traffic Offenses Via Text, Emails From June 1, NTSA Announces

    Motorists To Start Getting Instant Fines For Minor Traffic Offenses Via Text, Emails From June 1, NTSA Announces

    The National Transport and Safety Authority (NTSA) has announced the rollout of instant fines effective June 1.

    In a briefing on Thursday, the authority said it has reviewed minor traffic offences and developed internal procedures to guide the implementation framework following the withdrawal of the earlier notice on the rollout of the Minor Traffic Offences System.

    The review, it said, was done in collaboration with the National Police Service (NPS), the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions (ODPP), the Judiciary, and other relevant enforcement agencies.

    “NTSA wishes to notify members of the public that the Government will operationalise a modernised enforcement framework for minor traffic offences under Sections 117 and 117A of the Traffic Act (Cap. 403), effective June 1, 2026,” the authority said on Thursday.

    The move seeks to enhance road safety for all users, increase compliance with traffic laws and reduce congestion in traffic courts.

    It also aims at promoting transparency, accountability, and efficiency in traffic enforcement.

    Under the new framework, motorists who commit certain minor traffic offences will no longer need to appear in court immediately.

    Instead, NTSA said they will receive a Police Notification of traffic offence upon their detection, either by police officers during routine enforcement or electronically via traffic cameras and other digital monitoring systems.

    “These notifications may be served in several ways, including personal delivery by police officers, affixing the notice to the vehicle, or electronically via SMS, email, or an approved digital traffic enforcement platform. Motorists are therefore encouraged to ensure their contact details in the NTSA registration system are accurate and up to date,” the statement adds.

    The authority said the notification will only be sent to the driver or registered vehicle owner once sufficient evidence has been gathered.

    It shall contain key details such as the nature of the offence, the date, time and location it occurred, the prescribed penalty, payment instructions, and response deadlines.

    Upon receiving a notice, motorists have the option of admitting liability and paying the prescribed fine within the stipulated period or disputing the allegation in court.

    “If the motorist chooses to pay the fine, the matter can be settled without the need for a court appearance. However, the court retains the power to reduce or refund the penalty based on mitigating circumstances (if any) and administer demerit points against the driver’s licence where appropriate.”

    “Failure to respond, pay fines, or appear in court when required may result in harsher penalties imposed by the courts. Motorists have the right to access evidence, such as photographs or video recordings, supporting the alleged offence,” the authority warned.

    It also assured that all personal data collected will be handled in accordance with the Constitution and the Data Protection Act.

    Meanwhile, all motorists are advised to obey traffic laws to avoid being subject to fines.

  • Kenya In Talks With US, Duale Breaks Silence On Alleged Ebola Quarantine Plan

    Kenya In Talks With US, Duale Breaks Silence On Alleged Ebola Quarantine Plan

    Kenya has moved to calm growing public anxiety after reports emerged that the United States could establish an Ebola quarantine and monitoring arrangement in the country for Americans exposed to the deadly virus.

    In a strongly worded statement issued on Wednesday, Health Cabinet Secretary Aden Duale insisted that Kenya remains fully prepared to handle any Ebola-related threat and said the country would only engage in international health cooperation within the limits of Kenyan law and strict biosafety protocols.

    The government response followed a report by The New York Times claiming that the administration of US President Donald Trump was exploring plans to send American citizens exposed to Ebola to Kenya for monitoring and treatment.

    The report immediately triggered sharp debate online, with many Kenyans questioning why the country was being considered as a possible destination for handling potentially exposed foreign nationals. Others raised fears over whether Kenya risks becoming a regional containment hub for dangerous infectious diseases.

    But the Ministry of Health attempted to reassure the public, saying no decision would compromise the safety of Kenyans.

    “Kenya is ready. Kenya is capable. Kenya will continue to act responsibly in safeguarding both national and global health security,” Duale said in the statement.

    The ministry did not directly confirm whether a quarantine facility for US citizens was under active discussion, a silence that has only intensified speculation. Foreign Affairs Principal Secretary Korir Sing’oei also appeared to distance himself from the reports, telling Reuters that he had not been fully briefed on the matter and was unaware of any formal request for additional support.

    The developments come at a time when East Africa remains on heightened alert over recurring Ebola outbreaks in the region. Uganda has in recent years battled several Ebola flare-ups, forcing neighbouring countries including Kenya to tighten border surveillance and emergency response systems.

    Kenya’s government says the country has spent years building its epidemic preparedness capacity, lessons largely shaped by regional disease outbreaks including the devastating West African Ebola epidemic between 2014 and 2016, which killed more than 11,000 people.

    According to the Ministry of Health, Kenya has already activated its national Incident Management System and intensified screening at airports and border points.

    More than 55,000 travellers have reportedly been screened so far, while ten suspected Ebola cases tested in the country have all returned negative.

    The ministry said designated laboratories have been equipped for testing while coordination between national and county governments has been strengthened in anticipation of any potential outbreak.

    Duale also defended Kenya’s growing role in global health security operations, saying Kenyan medical experts have previously participated in outbreak response missions across Africa and that the country remains a trusted regional partner in emergency health interventions.

    The United States has for years maintained deep cooperation with Kenya in public health programmes, including disease surveillance, emergency preparedness, HIV response and laboratory infrastructure. Washington has also heavily invested in Kenyan health systems through agencies such as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and USAID.

    Still, the suggestion that Americans potentially exposed to Ebola could be monitored in Kenya has sparked political and public sensitivity, especially at a time when many citizens already feel the country is carrying increasing regional security and humanitarian burdens.

    Health experts note that Ebola is not airborne and can be contained through strict infection prevention measures, but they also acknowledge that public fear surrounding the virus remains high because of its severe symptoms and historically high fatality rates.

    The Ministry of Health maintained that any cooperation with foreign governments would be guided by science and national interest rather than politics.

    “Protection of Kenyan citizens, frontline health workers and communities remains paramount,” the statement said.

    Even as officials project confidence, pressure is likely to mount on the government to provide clearer answers on the exact nature of ongoing discussions with Washington and whether Kenya could soon host a specialised Ebola monitoring programme tied to US operations in Africa.

  • Trump To Set Up Quarantine Facility In Kenya For Americans Exposed to Ebola

    Trump To Set Up Quarantine Facility In Kenya For Americans Exposed to Ebola

    The Trump administration is expected to deploy United States (US) public health officers to Kenya to staff a potential quarantine facility ‌there amid the Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

    The facility, which was pending approval from the Kenyan government ​as of Tuesday, May 26, 2026, is intended for Americans who have been exposed to or at high risk of testing positive for the virus in the region, as well as those who test positive, the report said, citing people familiar with ‌the matter.

    Some members of the ⁠U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps, a uniformed branch under the Department of Health and Human Services, have received notices ⁠to deploy, the report said.

    The White House and HHS did not immediately respond to our requests for comment.

    The move comes as health authorities race to contain a ​fast-growing outbreak ​of a rare Ebola strain in ​the Democratic Republic of Congo and ‌Uganda.

    World Health Organisation offices. Photo/@WHO/X

    The World Health Organisation (WHO) has declared the outbreak of the rare Bundibugyo strain, the third-largest such outbreak on record, a public health emergency of international concern. Ebola is a severe and often fatal disease transmitted through direct contact with infected bodily fluids.

    Earlier on Tuesday, the U.S. Centres for Disease Control and ‌Prevention asked staff to volunteer for urgent ​deployment to support Ebola screening at the country’s ​entry points, according to an ​email seen by Reuters.

    To date, no cases of Ebola disease ‌have been confirmed in the U.S. ​and the risk ​to the general public remains low, CDC said.

    In Congo, there have been 906 suspected cases, including 105 confirmed, with 223 suspected deaths and 10 ​confirmed fatalities, CDC’s latest ‌data showed. Uganda has reported seven confirmed cases and one death, ​with most infections linked to the initial cases.

    If approved, Kenya will then host Ebola patients, something that might raise fears among the public about the potential outbreak of the virus in the country.

    “But the administration now plans to provide treatment in Kenya as well,” insiders were quoted by the New York Times.

    Under the new plan, a few dozen Public Health Service officers are being trained to deploy to Kenya to provide medical care to Americans who are deemed at high risk of the virus.

    As of Wednesday, May 27, 2026, there have been a few recorded cases of Americans contracting the virus, including an American doctor in Germany.  Six other Americans exposed to the Ebola variant have also since been transported to Germany and the Czech Republic for monitoring.

    Under the directive, all travellers who have been present in the three countries within 21 days of arrival in the United States must undergo enhanced public health screening at Washington Dulles International Airport (IAD).

    The New York Times 

  • ODM Abandons Linda Ground Rallies

    ODM Abandons Linda Ground Rallies

    The Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) has formally abandoned the Linda Ground slogan that had defined a series of political rallies across the country in recent months, signalling a major political recalibration as the party seeks to rebuild, rebrand and consolidate its support base ahead of the 2027 General Election.

    The announcement was made during a meeting bringing together ODM aspirants from Kisumu, Siaya, Homa Bay and Migori counties, where party leaders unveiled a fresh mobilisation strategy centred on strengthening the ODM identity, restoring internal discipline and preparing the party for what leaders described as an intense battle for political relevance and bargaining power in the next government.

    The decision effectively brings to an end the countrywide rallies conducted under the Linda Ground banner, which had emerged following internal succession realignments in the wake of the death of former ODM party leader Raila Odinga.

    The move is a deliberate attempt by the Oburu Odinga-led faction to distance itself from the Linda Mwananchi camp associated with Nairobi Senator Edwin Sifuna and a section of leaders perceived to be pushing a parallel political message within ODM.

    Although no leader directly mentioned Sifuna during the meeting, repeated warnings against confusion, splinter messaging and parallel movements underscored simmering tensions inside the party as ODM navigates one of its most delicate transition periods in years.

    ODM Chairperson and Homa Bay Governor Gladys Wanga said the party would henceforth campaign strictly under the ODM banner and official party colours to eliminate mixed political branding.

    “We created a movement called Linda Ground to consolidate our bases, but some people came and instead of thinking about their own movement, they came to this Linda movement and created confusion,” said Wanga.

    She warned aspirants against producing campaign materials that could create the impression of factions within the party.

    “When you do your posters and campaign materials, let them remain ODM. The colour is orange. We do not want confusion,” she said.

    ODM National Chairperson and Homa Bay Governor Gladys Wanga addressing aspirants from Kisumu, Siaya, Homa Bay and Migori counties in Kisumu on Monday, May 25 2026./KNA

    Wanga insisted there were no factions within ODM and maintained that the party remained united under Oburu’s leadership.

    “There are no factions. The party is ODM under Dr. Oburu Oginga as our party leader. Anything else is a splitter. Anybody else, when they are ready, should simply come back to ODM because ODM remains strong,” she said.

    Wanga acknowledged that the transition had not been easy, especially after losing a leader of Raila’s stature, but praised Oburu for stabilising the party during what she termed a difficult political moment.

    “Transitions are never easy, particularly after the loss of a leader of the calibre of Raila Odinga. We did not even ask Oburu for permission before naming him party leader because the party needed stability immediately,” she said.

    “He accepted to steady the ship during a difficult moment, and today we can confidently say the ship is steady,” she added.

    The meeting also laid bare ODM’s broader political strategy ahead of the 2027 general election, with the party openly declaring plans to pursue zoning arrangements in its traditional strongholds under the broader cooperation framework with President William Ruto’s UDA party.

    Speaking candidly to aspirants, ODM party leader Oburu Odinga said the party’s strength in Nyanza would remain protected through negotiated political arrangements aimed at avoiding internal vote splitting between coalition partners.

    ODM Party Leader Oburu Odinga addressing aspirants from Kisumu, Siaya, Homa Bay and Migori counties in Kisumu on Monday, May 25 2026./KNA

    Oburu further revealed that ODM’s political influence in future coalition negotiations would depend entirely on the number of elected leaders and votes the party delivers in 2027.

    “When negotiations happen, people will ask how many MPs you brought, how many MCAs you brought and how many presidential votes you delivered. That is what determines your share in government,” he said.

    He urged leaders from the Nyanza region to unite behind the party and intensify grassroots mobilisation to strengthen ODM’s bargaining position nationally.

    “If you people do not unite and work hard, do not expect anything in return. We do not want to remain in the political wilderness. We want to be in government, and we shall negotiate based on our numbers,” he said.

    The ODM leader also sought to assure aspirants that the party would conduct free, fair and transparent nominations, warning against corruption, intimidation and attempts to influence party officials using money.

    “We are going to ensure there is a free and fair nomination. If you want to join politics to make money, you will regret it. Politics is about serving people,” he said.

    Drawing from his decades-long political experience, Oburu warned aspirants against relying on party officials for political survival, saying nominations would ultimately be decided by ordinary ODM members.

    “Do not waste your time chasing officials. It is the members who will nominate you, not office holders,” he said.

    He further cautioned incumbents against complacency, telling them that all elective seats would become vacant once the election period begins.

    “When that time comes, no seat belongs to anybody. All seats become vacant. Those who are serving now must work and show the people what they have done,” he said.

    ODM Acting Executive Director Joshua K’owino also addressed concerns over recent claims regarding party control and official documents.

    “As trustees, we are custodians of all the party instruments, and they are intact and safely with us. That should not even be an issue for debate,” he said.

     

  • Este Medical Kenya Fights American’s Explosive Complaints

    Este Medical Kenya Fights American’s Explosive Complaints

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is temporarily withheld pending more information from parties involved. It shall in due course be updated to incorporate COFEK’s published clarification of May 30, 2026, the withdrawal letter of the alleged victim after resolving the matter with the clinic, and Kenya Insights’ independent analysis of the factual and institutional questions those documents raise.