Category: News

  • Nigerians Arrested in Thailand Over AI Dating Scam

    Nigerians Arrested in Thailand Over AI Dating Scam

    Thai police have arrested six Nigerian men accused of running a sophisticated romance scam network that used AI-generated faces and fake video calls to deceive victims, officials said Saturday.

    The suspects were apprehended during a raid codenamed “Dark Room Crackdown” on Thursday at a luxury riverside condominium in Nonthaburi province, near Bangkok.

    According to The Nation Thailand, police seized 18 mobile phones, three laptop computers and three bank books from the condominium.

    One of the suspects. Credit: Bangkok Lad/X

    Investigators said the devices contained alleged romance-scam chats, scam scripts and AI-generated profile images.

    “Police seized 18 mobile phones, three laptop computers and three bank books. Investigators said the devices contained alleged romance-scam chats, scam scripts and AI-generated profile images,” The Nation Thailand reported.

    Unlike traditional romance scams that use stolen photos, investigators said the group employed artificial intelligence to create convincing fake identities.

    The suspects used AI-generated faces for their online profiles and employed deepfake technology during video calls to make victims believe they were speaking to real people.

    The suspects posed as foreign professionals, including pilots, soldiers, lawyers, engineers and doctors, using fake profiles on platforms such as Facebook Messenger, WeChat, TikTok, Line and Zalo, The Nation Thailand reported.

    The alleged scheme involved cultivating romantic trust with victims over time. Once an emotional connection was established, scammers would claim that an overseas parcel sent to the victim had been detained by customs and demand money to release it.

    It was reported that many of the victims were elderly Thai women.

    The six suspects were named as Denis, 23; Ejikeme, 24; Ibekwe, 29; Okorom, 26; Nwosu, 30; and Obielu, 35.

    Five of them had overstayed their visas by periods ranging from 695 to 1,560 days, according to The Nation Thailand.

    Thai PBS World reported that the men entered Thailand on student visas but never attended any classes or held regular jobs, yet their bank accounts showed substantial deposits.

  • Court Sets Date For Ruling In Gachagua Impeachment Petitions

    Court Sets Date For Ruling In Gachagua Impeachment Petitions

    NAIROBI, Kenya May 22 – A three-judge bench is set to deliver its judgment on June 8, 2026, in a series of petitions challenging the constitutionality and legality of the impeachment and removal from office of Rigathi Gachagua.

    The ruling will determine the outcome of legal disputes arising from the impeachment process carried out by the National Assembly of Kenya and the Senate of Kenya, which has since been contested in court.

    The decision date was confirmed after all parties concluded their submissions before the court.

    During the hearings, lawyers representing Gachagua raised 18 grounds of challenge, arguing that the impeachment process was unconstitutional, unfair, and violated his right to a fair hearing.

    The legal team further claimed that there was insufficient public participation and procedural irregularities during the impeachment proceedings.

    On the other hand, the National Assembly and the Senate urged the court to dismiss the petitions, maintaining that the process was conducted in full compliance with the Constitution and parliamentary procedures.

    They argued that Gachagua was given adequate opportunity to defend himself before both Houses and that public participation requirements were properly fulfilled.

    Presiding Judge Eric Ogolla announced that the bench will retire to prepare its judgment before delivering the ruling.

    “We will retire and prepare a judgment bringing these proceedings to a close. We hope to do that on June 8 in the ceremonial hall at 11 am,” he stated.

    The ruling is expected to have significant political and constitutional implications, as it will determine the legality of one of the most closely watched impeachment cases in recent Kenyan political history.

  • City Tycoon Chris Obure in Sh7.6 Billion Court Compensation Battle Over Alleged Illegal Eviction and Missing Family Gold Investment

    City Tycoon Chris Obure in Sh7.6 Billion Court Compensation Battle Over Alleged Illegal Eviction and Missing Family Gold Investment

    A Nairobi-based Aviation and Real Estates company owned by city tycoon Chris Obure has moved to the High Court seeking billions of shillings in compensation after alleging it was illegally evicted from prime office space along Lenana Road and suffered massive financial losses, including the disappearance of hundreds of kilograms of gold bars, his family investment.

    SBS Dunhill Group (EA) Limited has filed a case at the Commercial and Tax Division of the High Court against Ajeetkumar C. Shah & Others and Siuma Auctioneers, accusing them of orchestrating an unlawful eviction and causing devastating losses to its business operations.

    According to court documents, the company says it entered into a commercial lease agreement in 2017 for office premises at Senteu Plaza along Lenana Road in Nairobi’s Kilimani area. The firm claims it occupied approximately 8,900 square feet of office space and later invested heavily in renovations and custom installations after allegedly being assured it would eventually acquire the property.

    The company avers it paid over KSh 981 million to the landlords, including rent and partial payment toward the anticipated purchase of the property. It further claims to have spent more than KSh 850 million on interior renovations, architectural upgrades, and executive wellness facilities.

    However, SBS Dunhill alleges the agreement later collapsed, triggering a prolonged legal dispute before the Business Premises Rent Tribunal.

    The firm claims that on May 16, 2025, auctioneers accompanied by police officers and hired individuals forcefully evicted it from the premises.

    “The Plaintiff was ambushed… by the 4th Defendant in the company of over 15 police officers and about 150 hired goons tasked with overseeing the forceful and illegal eviction,” the court filing states.

    The company further alleges that during the eviction exercise, valuables including 330 Kilograms of gold bars and cash kept in a diplomatic safe disappeared after property was allegedly removed and dumped outside the premises.

    SBS Dunhill is now seeking compensation, including KSh 5.9 billion for the alleged value of the missing gold, KSh 821 million in alleged excess payments, compensation for renovation costs, business losses, damages, and legal costs.

    The allegations are contained in court pleadings and remain subject to judicial determination. The defendants are yet to respond in court to the claims.

  • Questions Over Missing Sh1.3 Billion in Mombasa Water Company

    Questions Over Missing Sh1.3 Billion in Mombasa Water Company

    The County Public Investments and Accounts Committee (CPIAC) has raised concerns over the management and financial operations of the Mombasa Water Supply and Sanitation Company (MOWASSCO) following a review of the Auditor General’s report for the 2024/2025 financial year.

    The committee, chaired by MCA Sylvester Kai, held a joint sitting with officers from the Office of the Auditor General at the County Assembly of Mombasa to examine issues flagged in the audit findings.

    Acting Managing Director Habiba Ali led the MOWASSCO delegation and responded to queries regarding the utility’s financial statements for the year ending June 30, 2025.

    During the session, committee members sought clarification on the decision by the Water Services Regulatory Board (WASREB) to place MOWASSCO under a six-month special regulatory regime.

    Habiba told the committee that the company had not been consulted or given prior notice before the directive was issued, but said management would comply with the requirements.

    She confirmed that the regulator had instructed the company to submit weekly income and expenditure reports, monthly bank reconciliations, and detailed management reports, while WASREB representatives would also oversee board meetings.

    The Auditor General’s report flagged several financial concerns, including a discrepancy of more than Sh1.3 billion linked to the Water Services Development Project loan account, raising questions about the accuracy of the financial statements.

    The committee also reviewed trade and other receivables amounting to Sh501.9 million, with concerns raised over weak documentation on debt recovery measures despite rising doubtful debts.

    Legislators further questioned an unexplained variance of Sh96 million and sought clarification on how treasury allocations were classified between grants and loans.

    Trade and other payables stood at Sh2.37 billion, including Sh1.08 billion that had remained unpaid for more than 120 days without supporting schedules. The report also showed that the company recorded a negative working capital of Sh1.9 billion and accumulated losses of Sh3.5 billion.

    Committee members additionally raised concerns over 13 grounded vehicles valued at Sh9.9 million that had not been disposed of in line with procurement regulations.

    Other issues highlighted included persistent non-revenue water losses due to leaks, illegal connections and pipe bursts, as well as unresolved wastewater project challenges and the discharge of raw sewer into the Indian Ocean.

    The committee also noted that the company had been operating without a valid WASREB licence since November 2024.

    In response, MOWASSCO management said measures had been introduced to improve revenue collection and strengthen operations.

    These include deployment of revenue officers, debt recovery arrangements, installation of smart meters, and implementation of monitoring systems.

    CPIAC directed the company to submit a recovery plan, an ageing analysis, and supporting financial documents as it prepares its report on the matter.

  • ‪Jackson Kihara Accuses His Uncle Rigathi Gachagua of Framing Him in Robbery with Violence Case To Surrender Father’s Property

    ‪Jackson Kihara Accuses His Uncle Rigathi Gachagua of Framing Him in Robbery with Violence Case To Surrender Father’s Property

    NAIROBI, May 21, 2026 — The figure who appeared at Milimani Law Courts on Wednesday looked weathered and confined, escorted in by prison officers from Manyani Maximum Security Prison four hundred and fifty kilometres to the south. Jackson Kihara Gachagua, son of the late Nyeri Governor Nderitu Gachagua and nephew to former Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua, has been in custody for the better part of a decade, serving a twenty-year sentence for robbery with violence. But if the walls of Manyani have pressed upon him, they have apparently failed to suppress what he now says is the truth about how he came to be there.

    Standing before Justice Alexander Muteti, Kihara levelled an accusation that cuts through the family feud that has consumed the Gachagua name into a criminal justice allegation of the gravest kind. He told the court that his uncle, the man who served as Kenya’s second in command until his dramatic parliamentary impeachment in October 2024, orchestrated the robbery with violence case against him as a mechanism of coercion, a means of forcing him to reveal the whereabouts of sensitive documents belonging to his late father’s estate.

    “Had I disclosed to my uncle where the documents are, I could not be here today,” Kihara told Justice Muteti, the words carrying the weight of years spent in one of Kenya’s harshest correctional facilities.

    The allegation, explosive in its specificity, connects a criminal conviction handed down in a Nyeri magistrate’s court in 2016 to the broader family inheritance war that has since erupted into public view. Before his death in February 2017 at the Royal Marsden Hospital in London, where he was being treated for pancreatic cancer, Nderitu Gachagua — then Nyeri County’s inaugural governor — entrusted his son with crucial property documents, among them title deeds and a vehicle logbook. According to Kihara, his father gave those documents to him for safekeeping, and when Rigathi Gachagua came demanding them during Nderitu’s final days in hospital, Kihara refused to hand them over. It was that refusal, he now alleges, that marked him for prosecution.

    The original charge arose from an incident on December 30, 2013, at the Wariruta area of Nyeri County, where Kihara was accused of robbing a man named Alphaxad Mahindu Kiringu of a Toyota Sienta station wagon valued at Kshs.760,000, reportedly while armed with knives and in the company of another person. The Senior Resident Magistrate’s Court in Nyeri convicted him in September 2016, and in May 2019 the High Court at Nyeri upheld that conviction, though court records show that during the appeal process questions were raised about whether the prosecution had adequately proved key elements of the offence, including the presence of weapons and the use of actual violence. His sentence was nonetheless confirmed, and a subsequent appeal to the Court of Appeal was dismissed, cementing the twenty-year term.

    It is that series of legal defeats that has brought Kihara before Justice Muteti now, this time not merely attacking the sentence but challenging the entire architecture of the case against him, arguing that what he has in hand is fresh material that would expose the prosecution as having been engineered from outside the courtroom.

    He told the court he had lived for years under a cloud of fear and intimidation, unable to speak openly about the circumstances of his conviction. His silence, he said, only broke after October 11, 2024, the same day Rigathi Gachagua was removed from the Deputy Presidency, when he says he received assurances of protection from the government. Officers from the Directorate of Criminal Investigations and the National Intelligence Service visited him at Manyani, he told the court, and he gave them the full account. A year on, he said, nothing had come of those assurances.

    Kihara’s application also takes on the lawyers who represented him over the course of his failed appeals. He told the court he wished to conduct his own defence going forward, saying that successive advocates had been compromised and abandoned him without explanation. He has also been in communication with the Law Society of Kenya president, he said, providing details of a prominent lawyer he retained who was later neutralised, claiming he held documentary evidence of that interference.

    On the question of sentence, Kihara argued that the twenty years imposed was disproportionate when measured against penalties handed down in cases involving even more serious offences. He pointed to murder convictions that had attracted lighter terms, and submitted that the trial court failed to credit him for the four years he spent in remand before sentencing, an omission he characterised as a constitutional violation. He presented rehabilitation records to the court, noting that he had trained as a teacher during his incarceration and was seeking the court’s consideration of those efforts in any review of his sentence.

    Justice Muteti was measured in his response. He told Kihara that the High Court could not revisit matters of fact already settled by the Court of Appeal unless sufficient grounds for a retrial were established. “I cannot revisit issues of fact that have been dealt with by the Court of Appeal unless the issues relate to a retrial,” the judge stated. He advised Kihara to work closely with his family’s lawyer and consider escalating the outstanding issues to the Supreme Court, indicating that several of the grounds raised fell outside the jurisdictional reach of the High Court.

    The court directed Manyani Maximum Prison authorities to facilitate the retrieval of documents Kihara says are central to his case, granting him a security escort to pass them to his family. A ruling on whether the fresh application will proceed to a full hearing is expected on June 17, 2026.

    The courtroom drama arrives at a moment when the Gachagua name is already steeped in inheritance controversy. In March 2026, five of the late Nderitu Gachagua’s immediate family members — his first wife Margaret Nyokabi, Susan Kirigo, Mercy Wanjira, Jason Kariuki, and Ken Gachagua — wrote to President William Ruto through the Attorney General seeking an independent investigation into what they described as a scheme to disinherit them from the estate through intimidation, manipulation, and fraudulent dealings. The letter alleged that a close relative had interfered with the succession process, causing the irregular transfer of assets and financial loss to the rightful beneficiaries. The family said they had exhausted private options before going public.

    Rigathi Gachagua rejected those claims with characteristic assertiveness, insisting the succession had been handled lawfully and brought to a close in 2018. He questioned the timing of the renewed grievances and told those dissatisfied with the process to take their complaints to court. To settle the matter publicly, the executors of Nderitu’s estate — Rigathi Gachagua, advocate Mwai Mathenge, and Njoroge Regeru — published the full will in local newspapers in April 2026. The document listed twenty-three beneficiaries drawn from across the family, with the immediate family receiving sixty-two percent of the net estate after debts were cleared. Prime properties including Queensgate Serviced Apartments, sold for Kshs.590 million, and Vipingo Estate, which fetched Kshs.250 million, were among the assets liquidated. Rigathi Gachagua himself received shares in Mweiga Homes under the will’s terms.

    Whether Jackson Kihara’s allegations will receive a formal judicial hearing remains to be decided. What is clear is that his claims represent the most direct criminalisation of the inheritance dispute yet, transforming what has been a succession row into an allegation that the apparatus of criminal prosecution was weaponised against a man whose only offence, he says, was loyalty to a dying father’s last instructions.

    Rigathi Gachagua had not responded to the allegations by the time of going to press.

  • Court Finds Shooble Energy Director Guilty Of Defrauding Kenyan Investors Sh23.5 Million

    Court Finds Shooble Energy Director Guilty Of Defrauding Kenyan Investors Sh23.5 Million

    Shooble Energy Limited director Mohamed Mohamud Hussein  has been found guilty of defrauding three investors Sh 23.5 million.

    Principal Magistrate Rose Ndombi rules that the prosecution had proved the case against Hussein beyond reasonable doubt.

    Hussein was charged in December 2023 alongside Shooble Energy and his Co-director Abdifatah Ali Hussein who was discharged.

    The three were accused of conspiracy to defraud and obtaining the said money through cheating.

    According to the charge sheet, the accused persons used fraudulent tricks to obtain Sh 15.5 million from Khalid Mohammed Jamal  between 7th July 2020 and February 2021 in Nairobi, jointly with others not before court.

    In addition, the court heard that the directors used fraudulent tricks to obtain Sh 4 million from Noor Ahmed Sheikh between 13th July 2021 and 12th February 2022 in Nairobi.

    Lastly, the accused persons were charged with obtaining another Sh 4 million from Ahmed Mohamed Dahir between July 2021 and February 2022.

    According to the witnesses, Hussein convinced them to invest the money in his company promising monthly returns of 2.5 percent of the invested amount.

    Upon investing the money, an agreement was signed between the parties with Hussein signing on behalf of Shooble Energy.

    However, as time went by, Hussein did not remit the returns to the suspects and eventually stopped picking their calls.

    In her judgement, the magistrate found that Hussein never explained what happened to the money invested thus the prosecution proving the offense of cheating.

    The magistrate ruled that the prosecution had proved its case beyond reasonable doubt as it was proven that Hussein engaged in a fraudulent investment scheme.

    “The prosecution has proven the said offenses beyond reasonable doubt, I therefore find the accused person guilty as charged,” the magistrate ruled.

    The case will be mentioned on 21st May for sentencing.

  • Why Ruto’s Favourite Candidate Adan Mohammed Could Be Locked Out of the KRA Top Job

    Why Ruto’s Favourite Candidate Adan Mohammed Could Be Locked Out of the KRA Top Job

    When the Kenya Revenue Authority board sat down this past week to shortlist seven candidates for the most consequential tax appointment in Kenya’s history, one name rose immediately above the rest.

    Not because he had applied quietly and let his credentials speak.

    But because the whisper networks inside State House had been working overtime for months, laying the groundwork for a political appointment dressed in the costume of competitive recruitment.

    Adan Abdulla Mohammed, born in El Wak in Mandera to a Garre Somali family, is by any conventional measure a remarkable Kenyan story.

    He emerged from a village where reaching secondary school was itself an act of almost supernatural ambition, worked his way through the University of Nairobi with a first-class BCom degree, trained as a chartered accountant with PricewaterhouseCoopers in London, spent three years as a consultant to Shell in Nigeria, and then built a towering corporate career at Barclays Bank across East and West Africa.

    He later added a Harvard Business School MBA to a CV that, by the time President Uhuru Kenyatta plucked him from the private sector in 2013, already read like a dream shortlist.

    Nine years as Cabinet Secretary across two ministries and two presidential terms later, a failed bid for the Mandera governorship in 2022, and a post at State House as President William Ruto’s Chief of Strategy Execution, Mohammed is now positioning himself for what may be his final act in public life: running Kenya’s revenue machinery at Times Tower.

    The problem is that this appointment, should it happen, would be many things. A merit-based competitive outcome is not among them.

    The KRA board has gone to the extraordinary length of commissioning a private legal opinion to justify appointing a man who, by the ordinary rules of Kenyan public service, is already past the mandatory retirement age.

    THE AGE QUESTION NOBODY WANTS TO ANSWER HONESTLY

    Mohammed turned 62 in December last year. He is, by his own publicly stated biography, two years above the mandatory public service retirement age of 60.

    Under normal circumstances, no state corporation board would shortlist such a candidate without attracting immediate legal challenge.

    The Kenya Revenue Authority Act and the broader public service framework have been clear on this threshold for decades.

    Yet the KRA board, chaired by former Laikipia Governor Ndiritu Muriithi, has reportedly sought and obtained a legal opinion dated May 7, 2026 from Independent Legal Counsel concluding that Mohammed may lawfully be appointed on a fixed-term contract basis.

    The advisory reportedly anchors itself to the same statutory provision used to extend former Commissioner-General John Njiraini beyond the retirement age.

    The provision exists. The precedent exists.

    The question that nobody in the room is asking loudly is why an institution that has consistently failed to meet its revenue collection targets is prepared to bend its own rules for a man whose primary qualification, at this stage of the process, appears to be his proximity to the occupant of State House.

    The KRA has set a revenue target of Sh2.78 trillion for the current financial year. As of the third quarter ending March 31, the taxman had collected Sh2.038 trillion.

    That is a deficit that will define whoever sits in the corner office on the 30th floor. It requires institutional credibility, operational depth, and the kind of independence from political pressure that is structurally impossible to maintain when the Commissioner-General owes his appointment to a legal workaround engineered at the direction of the same executive he is supposed to audit on behalf of taxpayers.

    THE KEBS SHADOW THAT NEVER FULLY LIFTED

    Mohammed’s nine-year Cabinet tenure was not without its embarrassments, and the public record deserves closer scrutiny than the celebratory narrative being promoted by his supporters in State House corridors.

    When Mohammed was Cabinet Secretary for Industrialisation, he appointed his former Barclays Bank colleague Charles Ongwae to head the Kenya Bureau of Standards in 2014. The appointment would later haunt the ministry.

    Ongwae was arrested and charged in connection with the importation of substandard fertilizer, an episode that became one of the uglier regulatory failures of the Jubilee era. Under Mohammed’s watch, KEBS and the Anti-Counterfeit Agency were also embroiled in the contraband sugar scandal that convulsed Kenya in 2018.

    Hundreds of thousands of metric tonnes of contaminated brown sugar reached Kenyan consumers and traders, with KEBS unable to demonstrate that it had discharged its regulatory mandate with the rigour that a food safety body demands.

    Mohammed’s response at the time was instructive.

    When Interior CS Fred Matiangi declared publicly that seized sugar contained mercury and cited Government Chemist tests, Mohammed contradicted him on the record, creating a damaging public split between two Cabinet Secretaries that left Kenyans unable to determine whether the food on their tables was poisoning them.

    The subsequent parliamentary joint committee hearings became a spectacle of blame-shifting, with Cabinet Secretaries queueing up to point fingers at the National Treasury, at each other, at port authorities, and at importers.

    Mohammed appeared before the joint committee flanked by his Principal Secretary, but the accountability trail led persistently back to the ministry he ran.

    The leather industry, which Mohammed had promised to transform into a domestic manufacturing powerhouse anchored on government procurement by the Kenya Defence Forces and the National Police Service, also recorded a conspicuous failure on his watch.

    Leather product imports rose from Sh9 billion in 2013 to Sh35 billion by 2016, precisely the opposite trajectory of what the Jubilee administration had pledged and what Mohammed had been appointed to deliver.

    These are not ancient history. They are the documented record of a man who is being positioned to run the institution that is supposed to hold the entire Kenyan economy to account.

    A man who cannot account for Sh35 billion in imported leather while running the Industrialisation docket is now being positioned to collect Sh2.78 trillion in taxes on behalf of 55 million Kenyans.

    COP28, THE ADANI GHOST, AND THE RUSSIAN BILLION

    The more recent period of Mohammed’s career raises questions of a different and more troubling character.

    As Ruto’s Chief of Strategy Execution, Mohammed has sat at the centre of the presidential economic advisory apparatus during a period when that apparatus has been implicated in some of the most controversial transactions in Kenya’s post-independence history.

    Former Public Service Cabinet Secretary Justin Muturi, in a bombshell television interview that aired in April 2025 and that the State House has never formally refuted, named Mohammed directly in his account of how he came to learn about the Adani airport deal.

    Muturi said it was Mohammed who invited him to COP28 in Dubai in 2023, and that it was at that gathering that he received detailed information about the planned Adani concession over Jomo Kenyatta International Airport.

    Muturi went further, recounting that during the same period, Russian oligarchs had offered to invest one billion US dollars in Kenya, and that Ruto called him personally at Dubai airport and instructed him to sign documents with the Russians immediately, without prior review. Muturi said he refused.

    Mohammed has not publicly addressed these allegations. Ruto cancelled the Adani deals in November 2024, hours after the Indian conglomerate’s billionaire founder faced bribery charges in the United States.

    The optics of that timeline, the deals that were built, the speed with which they collapsed, and the silence of the advisors who facilitated them, constitute a question that should be put directly to Mohammed before any KRA appointment proceeds.

    It is not a peripheral question.

    The KRA Commissioner-General oversees the taxation of every significant commercial transaction in Kenya, including the kind of large-scale infrastructure concessions and sovereign investment arrangements that defined the Adani episode.

    Placing a man at the centre of that machinery who was himself embedded in the advisory structure that brought those arrangements to life is precisely the kind of appointment that erodes institutional independence in ways that are difficult to reverse.

    STATE HOUSE INSIDER TURNED TAX COLLECTOR: THE INDEPENDENCE PROBLEM

    There is a structural impossibility at the heart of this appointment that the KRA board has chosen not to address publicly. Mohammed is not simply a former civil servant or a retired corporate executive coming in from the cold.

    He is the sitting Chief of Strategy Execution in the presidency of the man who appointed the board that is now interviewing him. He attends State House. He advises on the very economic agenda that his future institution would be expected to enforce without fear or favour.

    The Kenya Revenue Authority Act establishes the Commissioner-General as the accounting officer for the authority, responsible for its operations and its funds without reference to political direction.

    In practice, the KRA boss is expected to resist executive pressure to grant exemptions, to pursue politically connected tax debtors, and to publish accurate collection data even when it embarrasses the Treasury.

    Every one of those functions is compromised when the Commissioner-General is a presidential appointee whose elevation was engineered through a special legal opinion obtained by a board whose chairman serves at the pleasure of the same executive.

    The optics are compounded by the precedent. Humphrey Wattanga, whose departure from KRA opened this vacancy, was himself a political appointee whose tenure was marked by persistently missed revenue targets.

    Under Wattanga, the taxman consistently fell short of its mandated collections.

    The response of the executive is, apparently, to appoint another insider rather than a professional drawn from the institution’s own meritocratic pipeline or from the international tax administration community.

    Nancy Nyawanda, who has been serving as acting Commissioner-General since April 8 following Wattanga’s departure, is herself a credentialed professional. She holds a Bachelor of Commerce from the University of Nairobi, an MBA from USIU, a PhD in Public Policy and Administration from Walden University, and a Master of Philosophy in Public Policy, with over twenty years of experience in customs and domestic tax administration.

    She knows the institution from the inside. She has managed the crisis of transition. She has done so quietly and without scandal. Her candidacy, and those of other shortlisted professionals including KRA insiders, represents exactly what competitive recruitment is supposed to produce.

    Instead, the board is seeking legal cover to install the President’s personal advisor.

    When the taxman’s boss owes his job to the same man he is supposed to audit, the independence of the institution becomes a polite fiction maintained for the benefit of donor reports and press releases.

    THE ETHNIC FRONTIER AND ITS DOUBLE EDGE

    Supporters of Mohammed’s candidacy have pointed to the symbolic importance of a KRA Commissioner-General of Somali descent, noting that the Northern Kenya community has historically been excluded from the apex of revenue and security institutions.

    The argument has genuine resonance. Structural underrepresentation in state institutions is a documented injustice in Kenya, and the Somali community’s contribution to the Kenyan economy, particularly in trade and commerce, is wholly disproportionate to its representation in institutions like KRA.

    But symbolic inclusion achieved through the circumvention of merit processes and retirement age rules does not serve the community it is meant to honour.

    It merely provides political cover for an executive appointment while attaching an ethnic justification that cannot be challenged without appearing to attack the community itself.

    This is a well-worn playbook in Kenyan public appointments, and the Somali community deserves better than to have its representation used as the alibi for a deal that was cooked long before the shortlist was announced.

    A genuine commitment to inclusive excellence would mean building an institutional pipeline at KRA and across the revenue administration that brings professionals from all communities into senior roles through transparent and consistent processes.

    It would not mean bending the retirement age rules for a specific individual who happens to serve the President while simultaneously being of a particular ethnicity.

    THE BOTTOM LINE

    Adan Mohammed is a man of demonstrable intelligence and a career that, in its early chapters, represented the best of what meritocratic institutions can produce.

    But the version of Adan Mohammed who now seeks the KRA top job is not the PwC-trained analyst or even the Barclays executive.

    He is the State House insider, the man who was at COP28 when the Adani deal was being structured, the Cabinet Secretary whose decade at the Industrialisation docket saw KEBS collapse into scandal, sugar contamination consume the country, and leather imports triple instead of collapsing.

    He is also, by any ordinary reading of Kenyan law, a man who should already have retired from public service two years ago.

    The KRA board has obtained a legal opinion. Legal opinions are not law. They are paid arguments. The question that any serious accountability institution, any parliamentary committee, any taxpayer association, any court should now be asking is whether that opinion was sought in order to answer a genuine legal question or in order to provide retrospective justification for an appointment that was decided long before the interviews began.

    In a year when KRA must collect Sh2.78 trillion to fund a government that is already borrowing against its future, Kenya deserves a Commissioner-General whose first loyalty is to the institution, to the taxpayer, and to the law. Not to the occupant of State House who engineered his installation.

    The interviews are scheduled. The outcome, if the whisper networks inside Harambee House are to be believed, is already known. The only question is how loudly the public will object before it is announced as a competitive outcome.

  • DCI Arrests Woman in Sh55.7 Million Gold Fraud Targeting American Citizen in Nairobi

    DCI Arrests Woman in Sh55.7 Million Gold Fraud Targeting American Citizen in Nairobi

    Mildred Kache did not go quietly. When detectives from the Directorate of Criminal Investigations arrived at Crystal Villas in Kilimani on Sunday evening, she locked herself inside House No. 10, refused to surrender, and stayed on her phone coordinating with accomplices outside.

    When it became clear the officers were not leaving, she tried to scale the property’s perimeter wall. She did not make it.

    Detectives intercepted her before she could flee, and she was placed in handcuffs on the very compound from which she is alleged to have orchestrated one of Nairobi’s most elaborate fake gold conspiracies, a scheme that stripped two American nationals of $447,000, equivalent to approximately Sh57.7 million at prevailing exchange rates.

    On Monday, Milimani Magistrate Geoffrey Onsarigo ordered Kache, who also answers to the alias Sabreena Ayesha, and her co-accused Ahmed Bashar Mohamed detained at Kilimani Police Station.

    The DCI’s application to hold them for a further ten days pending the completion of investigations will be canvassed on Tuesday after the defence sought time to review the prosecution papers. The court allowed the request and adjourned.

    Investigators describe Mildred Kache as the mastermind and principal coordinator of the fraudulent scheme. Bashar is accused of being her cryptocurrency launderer, routing stolen millions through a Binance wallet before dispersing them to her network.

    The affidavit sworn by Corporal Dennis Mugambi, the investigating officer, lays out the scale of what investigators believe to be a transnational fraud operation.

    The complainants, identified in court papers as Terry Lee Schrubb Jnr and Kenneth J. Adler, were separately targeted by the syndicate and convinced they were entering into a legitimate gold export deal.

    The suspects represented to the Americans that they had genuine gold consignments weighing approximately 10 kilograms, 500 kilograms and 700 kilograms ready for export from Kenya to Dubai. Gold, as it turned out, was never part of the picture.

    A FEE FOR EVERYTHING, GOLD FOR NOTHING

    What makes this case stand apart from ordinary con artistry is the industrial precision of the financial extraction.

    The victims were not simply asked to pay for gold and then robbed. They were walked through a meticulously staged commercial transaction in which every step generated a new fee, each one plausible in isolation, each one adding to the total haul. They paid $56,000 in smelting charges.

    They paid $231,000 for insurance. They paid $121,000 for cargo jet services to ship the consignment to Dubai. They paid $11,000 for documentation. Not one of those fees produced a single gram of gold, nor any service of any kind. All of it vanished into the syndicate’s accounts.

    The payments were made through cryptocurrency wallets, a deliberate architectural choice by the suspects. Digital transactions leave trails, but also create distance and complexity, and the syndicate exploited both.

    Forensic analysis of blockchain records and cryptocurrency wallets, including a Binance account directly linked to Bashar, established the movement of the proceeds through multiple digital wallets. A Cyber Forensic Lab report filed as CFDL 332/2026 further confirmed the communication and financial transaction history between Kache and the American complainants.

    Kache Mildred alias Sabreena Ayesha and Ahmed Bashar Mohamed, before the Milimani Law Courts in Nairobi, on May 18, 2026.

    To sustain the illusion long enough to extract full payment, the suspects deployed what investigators describe as forged assay certificates, fabricated insurance documents, and false shipment papers.

    These are not documents produced in haste on a home printer. Their existence points to an organised counterfeiting infrastructure that operates in parallel to the fraud itself, generating the paperwork ecosystem on which large commodity deals depend and which ordinary investors have no reliable means of verifying.

    The suspects required intelligence from multiple security agencies and extended surveillance before they could be traced. Kache barricaded herself in her apartment, coordinated with accomplices by phone, and attempted to scale a perimeter wall before she was seized.

    THE ARREST THAT ALMOST DID NOT HAPPEN

    The DCI acknowledged in court papers that the suspects had persistently evaded arrest, requiring intelligence cooperation from multiple security agencies and an extended surveillance operation before they could be located and cornered.

    That Kache was found at Crystal Villas in Kilimani was the result of forensic lead-chasing, not a routine check. The apartment at House No. 10 was not a waypoint. It was, investigators believe, her base of operations.

    Her behaviour during the arrest itself became a key plank of the DCI’s argument for continued detention.

    Corporal Mugambi deponed that her conduct demonstrated she was a clear flight risk and that releasing her on police bail before the completion of investigations would likely result in her absconding the court process entirely.

    The magistrate agreed that she and Bashar should remain in custody.

    Bashar’s role was more transactional but no less critical.

    He is accused of knowingly receiving the fraudulently obtained funds through his Binance wallet and disbursing them to Kache and her associates, providing the money laundering architecture that transformed stolen cryptocurrency into usable cash. Without him, the financial pipeline breaks.

    With him, the syndicate had a functioning settlement mechanism that put distance between the crime and the proceeds.

    THE WIDER SYNDICATE IS STILL AT LARGE

    Two suspects in custody does not mean the syndicate is dismantled. The DCI is pursuing additional cryptocurrency records, KYC documentation and transaction logs from various platforms, and is actively hunting accomplices believed to remain at large.

    Among them is a figure referenced in the original DCI arrest bulletin as Ibrahim Yusuf Mohamed, who sensed officers closing in before Kache was arrested and fled, abandoning a black Mercedes-Benz E50 bearing registration number KCV 910C, which was seized and is now held as an exhibit at the Nairobi Regional Headquarters yard.The DCI said in court that releasing Kache and Bashar at this stage would greatly jeopardise ongoing investigations, interfere with the tracing of accomplices, and compromise the recovery of proceeds of crime.

    This case does not exist in isolation.

    It is the latest, and now the most forensically documented, episode in what has become a relentless wave of fake gold fraud in Nairobi, one that has been running for years but whose pace has accelerated dramatically.

    Court records at the Milimani magistrates court show at least 20 people arraigned in the past six months alone over gold fraud cases with a combined declared value of at least Sh5 billion.

    The city has quietly become the undisputed epicentre of Africa’s fake gold industry, with a syndicate infrastructure that spans staged smelting operations, forged assay certificates, cryptocurrency laundering pipelines, and cross-border accomplice networks extending into Tanzania, Dubai, and beyond.

    In February 2026, Willis Onyango Wasonga, alias Marcus, was arraigned at Milimani over a Sh32.3 million scheme targeting an American lawyer, John Sodipo, who had wired USD 250,500 as chartering fees for a 495-kilogram gold consignment to Dubai.

    The funds were routed through a National Bank of Kenya account operated by a company called Mohazcom Trading.

    A forex trader, Mohammed Noor, was separately charged in the same matter. Both cases were consolidated and are before the court. In January 2026, detectives investigated a Sh37 million fraud in which an American national, David White Odell, was taken to a staged smelting operation in Kilimani before being defrauded of his money. Suspects Paul Chogo and Collins Onyango remain at large in that case.

    In October 2025, police foiled a USD 5.6 million attempt, equivalent to approximately Sh723 million, in which two suspects tried to swindle an American businesswoman before a vehicle chase ended with their arrest and the seizure of two smelting machines and nineteen smelting moulds from their hideout.

    And in the most harrowing recent precedent, Australian investor Andrew Adel Gaballa was defrauded of over Sh77.5 million in a scheme that began in Dubai and carried him through Tanzania before unravelling in Nairobi.

    When he tried to leave Kenya after filing his DCI complaint, a red alert had been placed on his passport and he was detained for three hours at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport. He went into hiding for four days.

    The playbook is identical every time: a polished meeting in a Nairobi suburb, a smelting demonstration, fabricated assay certificates, a fee for every stage of a transaction that was never going to produce gold. The only variable is the name of the victim.

    Kenya’s gold trade remains dangerously informal. Despite legitimate mineral deposits in Migori, Turkana and Kakamega, the sector contributes barely one percent of national GDP and operates with minimal institutional oversight.

    There are no robust certification requirements for gold intermediaries, no reliable assay chain of custody for foreign buyers, and no central registry against which investors can verify that the individuals they are dealing with hold legitimate mining licences.

    That regulatory void is the environment in which the Kilimani gold fraud syndicate has operated and thrived.

    The DCI application to detain Kache and Bashar for a further ten days will be heard on Tuesday at Milimani.

    The matter of Ibrahim Yusuf Mohamed, the man who ran and left his Mercedes behind, remains open. Investigators say they are tracing his movements.

    The investigation into the wider syndicate, its financial networks, its document forgery infrastructure, and its cross-border reach, continues.

    Mildred Kache is described by investigators as the mastermind and principal coordinator of the scheme. She is in custody at Kilimani Police Station. The perimeter wall at Crystal Villas, it turns out, was not high enough.

  • The Man Who Starved Kenya’s Voice

    The Man Who Starved Kenya’s Voice

    In the bowels of Telposta Towers on Kenyatta Avenue, where the Ministry of Information, Communications and Digital Economy maintains its headquarters, a quiet administrative stranglehold has been methodically dismantling the operational capacity of Kenya’s oldest and most storied public information institution.

    The instrument of this destruction is not a policy, not a budget cut from Treasury, and not an act of Parliament. It is, according to multiple sources with direct knowledge of the matter, a single official — the ministry’s Chief Finance Officer, identified in internal correspondence as M.M. Mosiria.

    The consequences of Mosiria’s alleged conduct are no longer abstract. At this very moment, a team of government officials travelling on official duty is stranded in Eldoret, fundraising fuel money from the Government Advertising Agency to power their GK vehicle back to Nairobi — because their subsistence allowances were never processed, and their driver was dispatched with woefully inadequate fuel allocations. They are not the first. They will not be the last.

    OFFICERS PAY FROM THEIR POCKETS, TEAMS MAROONED ON THE ROAD

    The pattern has become routine. In early May 2026, a team of officers from the Ministry’s Communications and Digital Economy directorate travelled to Naivasha on official assignment. Three weeks on, their subsistence allowances remain unpaid. The mission was completed. The receipts were filed. The officers went home lighter in the wallet and heavier with resentment — still awaiting disbursements that should have preceded their departure.

    The situation reached a particularly ignominious nadir on one occasion documented by sources, when officers returning to Nairobi from an upcountry posting were compelled to pass a hat among themselves — drawing from personal savings — to purchase fuel for their government vehicle. The driver had been allocated insufficient fuel for the return journey, and the officers themselves had received no travelling allowances whatsoever. What should have been a routine official mission became an exercise in self-financing public service.

    “Officers had to fundraise from their own personal savings to fuel a GK vehicle while travelling back to Nairobi from official duties — the driver had been given inadequate fuel, and no one had been paid their allowances.”

    The latest crisis centres on the flagship Media Council of Kenya’s inaugural Journalism Clubs Expo scheduled to take place in Kakamega, Western Kenya — a premiere event designed to mentor secondary school students in the craft and ethics of journalism. The Media Council, a sister agency operating under the same ministry, invited the Kenya News Agency to partner in the event: to mount a historical exhibition tracing the evolution of Kenyan media, provide adjudication expertise, and sponsor a trophy for the best journalism club in interview skills. An official memo seeking facilitation and travelling allowances for the nominated officers was submitted to Mosiria’s office a full week before the event. It sat there, untouched.

    Efforts to reach the CFO bore no fruit. No approval was issued. No communication was returned to the Directorate explaining the delay or the grounds for inaction. The memo simply festered in his in-tray, holding hostage both the officers’ livelihoods and an event that Kenya’s youth were counting on.

    THE ARCHITECTURE OF A CHOKEHOLD

    Sources within the ministry describe Mosiria’s modus operandi as one of calculated passivity. Memos land on his desk and disappear into administrative purgatory. Officers nominated for official duties are dispatched without their allowances, or not dispatched at all when events cannot wait. Meanwhile, according to ministry insiders, certain officials enjoy what one source bitterly called ‘sky team’ privileges — a sardonic reference to a coterie of officers whose travel approvals are processed with alacrity, their foreign and domestic assignments funded without friction.

    The disparity raises uncomfortable questions about the criteria governing Mosiria’s approvals. Sources allege that he has pocketed a very senior official within the ministry hierarchy, a relationship that is said to insulate him from accountability and render him effectively untouchable by other relatively senior staff at headquarters. The allegation, if substantiated, would constitute a textbook case of institutional capture — a mid-level bureaucrat leveraging a patron relationship to operate beyond the reach of the ordinary chain of command.

    Adding a further layer of opacity is a family connection that sources have flagged: Mosiria is said to be related to a Mosiria of the Nairobi County Government. Whether that connection bears any relevance to his professional conduct or alleged protections is a matter that would require independent investigation, but the coincidence has not escaped the attention of ministry staff who feel powerless to challenge him.

    “He is untouchable. No one can question him. He has someone very senior in his corner — and he knows it.” — Ministry insider, speaking on condition of anonymity

    DEVELOPMENT FUNDS, DILAPIDATED STATIONS AND GHOST REFURBISHMENTS

    The financial strangling inflicted on the Directorate of Information is not limited to travel allowances. Multiple sources confirm that field stations — the county and sub-county information offices that form the connective tissue of KNA’s nationwide news-gathering infrastructure — are in a state of advanced deterioration. Computers are obsolete or absent. Camera equipment is outdated and lacks accessories. Internet connectivity, essential for the rapid sharing of news gathered across the country’s 47 counties and their sub-county offices, is either non-existent or too slow for professional use.

    What makes this particularly damning is not the absence of development funds — those funds exist and are disbursed — but where they are alleged to be channelled. Sources with detailed knowledge of the ministry’s internal expenditure patterns accuse Mosiria of directing huge sums of development budget to stations that have already been refurbished, while genuinely dilapidated field stations continue to rot. The motivation, sources allege, is selfish financial interest — a pattern consistent with the ghost project architecture that has plundered Kenya’s public institutions across multiple sectors.

    The consequence is that KNA, which operates 47 county offices and 25 sub-county stations across the country, cannot deliver on its mandate. National days go uncovered and unarchived. State functions are missed. The historical media record that KNA was created in 1963 to build and protect — the authoritative documentary memory of Kenya’s postcolonial journey — is being silently eroded, not by editorial failure, but by deliberate financial sabotage.

    A BUREAUCRACY REPORTING FULL SPEND WHILE OFFICERS STARVE

    Perhaps the most damning allegation levelled against the finance department is one of systematic fiscal deception. Despite the operational paralysis visible across the Directorate of Information — the unpaid allowances, the grounded officers, the missed events — sources allege that the ministry’s financial reports submitted to the National Treasury record total utilisation of allocated funds. On paper, the money is spent. On the ground, directorates are barely meeting their performance targets.

    This divergence between reported expenditure and operational reality points to one of two possibilities, neither of them benign. Either funds are being misapplied to activities and recipients not contemplated by approved budgets, or the accounting itself is unreliable — and possibly fraudulent. Either scenario demands the immediate attention of the Controller of Budget, the National Treasury, and the Auditor General.

    KNA’s Director of Information, Joseph Kipkoech, who was appointed in October 2023 with a mandate to modernise the agency, finds his reform agenda effectively paralysed by the financial chokehold at headquarters. Media experts and government insiders who spoke to this publication confirmed that by mid-2025, KNA’s ambitions for modernisation had stalled — and the stall is not for lack of editorial will.

    WHAT IS BEING DESTROYED

    The Kenya News Agency is not merely a government mouthpiece, though it has long served that function. It is, more fundamentally, Kenya’s primary national archival agency for media materials — the institutional memory of a country that came into being sixty-two years ago and has been documenting its own becoming ever since. That archive — of independence, of elections, of national disasters and triumphs, of the ordinary and extraordinary lives of Kenyans from Mandera to Kwale — is irreplaceable.

    When KNA’s officers cannot attend a national day because no one processed their travel allowances, that day goes unrecorded in the national archive. When field stations lack functioning cameras and internet, the stories of entire counties vanish before they are told. When a team is stranded in Eldoret fundraising fuel, the assignments that brought them there go unfinished. This is not bureaucratic inconvenience. This is the systematic destruction of a public institution — and it is happening, sources insist, with the connivance or at minimum the wilful negligence of the man at the finance desk in Telposta Towers.

    “KNA has become a shadow of her former glory due to financial suffocation — not from Treasury, but from within its own ministry headquarters.”

    THE RECKONING THAT IS OWED

    M.M. Mosiria did not respond to requests for comment. The Ministry of Information, Communications and Digital Economy had not issued a statement on the matter at the time of publication. Kenya Insights has, however, written to the Principal Secretary of the State Department for Information and to the Cabinet Secretary’s office seeking formal responses, which will be published in full upon receipt.

    What the evidence gathered by this publication makes clear is that a systemic governance failure is unfolding at Telposta Towers, one that demands immediate intervention by oversight bodies. The Public Service Commission should investigate the conduct of the CFO and the chain of command that has allowed this situation to persist. The National Treasury should audit the ministry’s expenditure reports against actual operational outputs. The Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission should examine whether the pattern of misdirected development funds meets the threshold for investigation.

    The officers stranded in Eldoret, passing the hat for fuel, are not just victims of poor administration. They are witnesses to something more troubling: a public institution being hollowed out from the inside, one unprocessed memo at a time.

  • Kenya Rallies Behind Justice Njoki Ndung’u in Historic Bid for ICC Judgeship

    Kenya Rallies Behind Justice Njoki Ndung’u in Historic Bid for ICC Judgeship

    At the highest levels of Kenya’s government, a quiet but powerful campaign is gaining momentum, one that could place one of Africa’s most distinguished legal minds on the world’s foremost international criminal justice space.

    On the sidelines of this Monday’s swearing-in ceremony for newly appointed Judges to the High Court and Environment and Land Court at State House, President William Ruto convened an intimate but significant caucus with Chief Justice Martha Koome, Prime Cabinet Secretary Musalia Mudavadi, Head of Public Service Felix Koskei, and the woman at the centre of it all, Lady Justice Njoki Ndung’u, Kenya’s candidate for a seat on the International Criminal Court.

    The meeting was brief, with an unambiguous message, Kenya is fully behind Justice Njoki.

    That President Ruto, Chief Justice Koome, and Prime Cabinet Secretary Mudavadi stood together this morning to strategize on her campaign speaks volumes. This is not a partisan endeavour; it is a national one.

    Kenya has produced legal giants who have shaped the continent. In Lady Justice Njoki Ndung’u, it now presents the world with a candidate whose life’s work has been the relentless pursuit of justice, for women, for the marginalised, and for the rule of law itself.

    The ICC would not simply be gaining a judge. It would be gaining a champion.

    To understand why Justice Njoki Ndung’u is the right candidate for the ICC, one need only trace the arc of a career that has consistently placed justice, particularly for the most vulnerable, at its centre.

    When Kenya’s Supreme Court was established in 2011, Justice Njoki was there from day one. For over a decade, she has helped shape the nation’s highest jurisprudence, contributing landmark decisions in both constitutional and criminal law that have defined Kenya’s legal identity in the post-2010 constitutional era.

    But her influence reaches far beyond Kenya’s borders. Long before she ascended to the Supreme Court bench, Justice Njoki was already changing lives. As the principal architect of Kenya’s Sexual Offences Act, she led the transformation of the country’s legal framework for addressing gender-based violence, a law that gave voice to survivors who had long been failed by the system.

    Her continental footprint is equally profound. Justice Njoki played a central role in the development of the Maputo Protocol, the African Union’s landmark treaty on the rights of women, an instrument that has shaped gender jurisprudence across 54 nations and remains one of the most significant legal achievements in Africa’s modern history.

    Kenya’s campaign for the ICC judgeship seat is ongoing. A successful bid would see Justice Njoki Ndung’u become one of 18 judges serving on the International Criminal Court in the Hague, Netherlands.

  • Kenya’s gambling industry pushes back against a licensing bill

    Kenya’s gambling industry pushes back against a licensing bill

    Kenyan operators and industry associations strongly criticized the draft Gambling Control Act, calling the proposed payments and requirements “unprecedented and punitive.” In the view of market participants, the new rules could deal a serious blow to the legal sector, pushing business into the grey market. The comments were made at public forums held by the Gambling Regulatory Authority (GRA) at the Kenyatta International Convention Centre (KICC) in Nairobi on 31 March and 1 April 2026.

    Where the bill stands

    The regulator is holding public consultations on the draft Gambling Control Act, collecting proposals from market participants, experts and ordinary citizens. The forums at KICC were part of this procedure, as required under Kenya’s legislative process.

    After the public participation period ends, the GRA plans to refine the final version of the document and send it to Parliament. That is why the stakes for the industry are higher than ever.

    The main dispute: money and market access

    The focal point of the debate was the financial part of the bill. Operators said that the combination of new fees, levies and bonding requirements makes operating legally economically unviable. High entry barriers are compounded by existing excise taxes and contributions, creating a cumulative burden that, in the industry’s view, could undermine the viability of licensed companies and reduce tax receipts for the budget.

    The draft law provides for an impressive set of financial parameters:

    • The application fee is 5 million shillings (≈$38 684), while the licence fee is lower at 4 million shillings (≈$30 947).
    • High bonding requirements (security bonds), including a guarantee or cash deposit of 200 million shillings (≈$1.55 million).
    • A new 10% levy on operators’ advertising budgets.
    • For foreign companies, a paid-up capital requirement of 100 million shillings (≈$773 694) plus an additional guarantee/cash deposit of 200 million shillings.
    • Separate payments are provided for jackpot products.

    Why the model looks illogical for the legal market

    Forum participants pointed to inconsistencies in the fee structure being proposed. Judith Kiragu, a board member of the Association of Gaming Operators of Kenya (AGOK), asked a direct question: “The application fee is higher than the licence fee itself. It is 5 million, while the licence costs 4 million. How can the fee for obtaining the document be higher than the cost of the licence itself?”

    One market representative at the forum stressed that inflated barriers create a loophole for illegal operators, and urged the regulator to review the amounts of fees and guarantees while keeping the capital requirements.

    A threat to the economy and jobs

    Industry representatives warned of a cascade of negative consequences: mass business closures, job losses and reduced activity in the regulated sector. The result, they estimate, will be weaker compliance and a drop in tax collection.

    A particular sore point was the existing 15% contribution from gross gaming revenue (GGR), earmarked for supporting sports infrastructure. Paul Mutegei, an AGOK representative, said: “We are already heavily taxed, while the tax base remains unchanged. Even the 15% GGR that goes to sports infrastructure will suffer or fall sharply if this new fee structure is introduced.” In other words, the new financial burden risks undermining the sources that fund the development of sport in the country.

    Capital, guarantees and jackpots also drew criticism

    In addition to licence fees, a separate line of complaints concerned capital thresholds for foreign operators and new payments for jackpot products. AGOK CEO John Mutua said that a jackpot is “no different from any other product” and should not be subject to additional charges. He noted that operators already maintain fixed deposit accounts to secure prize funds, and therefore additional payments lack economic justification.

    Mutua also criticized the proposed requirement to calculate minimum capital adequacy quarterly, calling such frequency “too frequent” and likely to create operational inefficiencies. In his words, constant monitoring creates the feeling that the regulator is “looking over our shoulder all the time.” As an alternative, he proposed a semi-annual review cycle.

    The regulator’s stance: player protection as a priority

    The GRA, for its part, insists on the need for reforms. In the agency’s view, the sector has remained “under-regulated” for decades, and the current legislation dates back to the 1960s and is “wholly inadequate” for modern realities. GRA Director General Peter Karimi said: “The President has made it clear that the player must be protected. Responsible gambling and player protection, especially young people and children online, are our top priority as regulators. Everything else, including ensuring a fair operating environment and collecting taxes, comes after that.” The regulator emphasized that feedback from market participants will be taken into account when refining the final document.

    The changes also affected betting. Regulation of sports betting, including online, is being transferred to the Gambling Regulatory Authority, which will oversee bookmakers, including their tax compliance. The regulator is also responsible for player protection. Similar regulatory models are used in some other African countries, including Rwanda. According to official data, Rwanda Sports Betting Sites have a state licence. which gives them the right to operate legally. Illegal sites, including offshore ones, are actively blocked.

    Overall, this suggests that tighter market requirements are not limited to Kenya, but also affect other African countries.

    A national lottery with up to 2% of GDP potential

    In parallel with the licensing reform, the GRA is promoting an initiative to create a national lottery to be run by a licensed private operator. According to the agency’s estimates, the project could generate up to 2% of Kenya’s gross domestic product. One participant in the discussion indicated an intention to enter the sector in order to set an example of a “responsible operator,” putting player protection, transparency and fairness at the heart of the approach. The initiative’s unofficial slogan was the phrase Tucheze Tujenge Kenya.

    What happens next

    The public participation submission period closes on 13 April 2026. The GRA urged all interested parties to submit written comments by the specified deadline, after which the final draft will be prepared to be tabled in Parliament.

  • Kenyan player wins a Ksh3.2 million jackpot

    Kenyan player wins a Ksh3.2 million jackpot

    An ordinary Tuesday in Nairobi turned into a life-changing moment for an anonymous player. A smartphone notification told him that he’d landed the jackpot in the Sevens Joy mobile slot game worth Ksh3.2 million (about $24,600). The platform billed it as a “life-changing” win. The news stood out not so much because of the prize amount, but against the backdrop of the rapid growth of digital gambling in Kenya, where such success stories are becoming fuel for an entire industry.

    The mobile slots boom in Kenya behind this headline win

    Big jackpots are no longer the preserve of land-based casinos and lottery kiosks. Once gambling moved online, it became popular across Africa. Even celebrities are being enlisted to promote casinos. It often ends in controversy. Millions of Kenyans carry a “casino in their pocket,” accessing games through smartphone apps at any time of day. This format is becoming normalized faster than society can process.

    Isolated big wins like the Sevens Joy payout act as a powerful visibility boost for the market. Every story about a new millionaire fuels the interest of those who haven’t downloaded the app yet.

    From sports betting to “instant” slots

    The structure of Kenya’s betting market is undergoing a major transformation. Traditional sports betting is tied to an external event: a football match or horse racing. Between placing a bet and the result, there is a built-in delay that gives players a chance to stop. Digital slots remove that buffer entirely: the outcome is revealed within seconds.

    That speed changes behavior. Betting frequency multiplies, and decisions are made impulsively, without calculation. It is precisely speed and simplicity that turn slots into a mass-market product available to any phone owner.

    Why slots are “addictive”

    Engagement mechanics in digital slots are built around several key elements:

    • Instant feedback: the “bet — result” loop takes just a few seconds.
    • Algorithm-driven content delivery: bright visual design and dynamic animation encourage continued play.
    • A zero barrier to entry: no knowledge, strategy, or understanding of a particular sport is required.

    Taken together, these features increase the time spent in the app and raise the likelihood of impulsive play.

    Hope for quick money as part of a demand-driven economy

    The popularity of mobile slots cannot be explained without the socio-economic context. Volatile employment, rising living costs, and limited household disposable income create the conditions in which the promise of instant wealth takes root especially quickly. A sum of Ksh3.2 million looks disproportionately attractive against the backdrop of traditional but slow savings instruments.

    For a noticeable share of the audience, slots are seen not as entertainment but as a risky way to top up the household budget. For the same reason, other gambling entertainment are also popular in the country, and increasingly Kenyan players choose games with very short rounds.  These include not only crash games, but also live game show–style games such as live Funky Time, Dream Catcher, Crazy Time or Lightning Storm. They are widely available in Kenyan online casinos and heavily promoted. An additional attractive factor is that live games are easy to play on a smartphone, and in Kenya the core audience of online casinos is, in fact, mobile players.

    However, while for some people such games can be a decent way to have fun, for the majority of the population they are seen as a way to earn money. And experts keep saying that this attitude toward gambling is deeply misguided and dangerous.

    Revenue growth and a regulatory dilemma

    According to the Betting Control and Licensing Board (BCLB, the Betting Control and Licensing Board), digital platform revenue is up about 22% year over year, and the main driver is instant-play apps. The National Treasury notes that excise duties on betting have become a steady, if controversial, revenue source.

    However, the social costs—household instability, rising debt, a drain on scarce resources—are far harder to quantify. Regulation is not yet keeping pace with the speed of the digital market.

    Responsible gambling and enforcement gaps

    Public health experts and analysts at the University of Nairobi point out that risk warnings in apps are largely perfunctory. Self-limiting tools and mandatory breaks are either absent or poorly enforced. What remains under debate is not only the tax burden, but also game speed itself combined with 24/7 availability.

    The UK precedent for Kenya’s market

    The UK has already introduced limits on maximum stake sizes in digital slots and mandatory breaks (timeouts) for players. This precedent is regularly cited by Kenyan lobbyists as a possible benchmark for the BCLB and parliamentarians.

    “This isn’t entertainment—it’s an attempt to cover expenses”

    One university student in Nairobi (name not disclosed) admitted that he treats mobile slots as a financial tool. He described a daily chase for small wins to cover current expenses, which in the long run inevitably leads to losses.

    Such motivation is found among a significant number of players and aligns with the World Health Organization’s observations: gambling is increasingly becoming a coping mechanism for financial instability. Day-to-day gambling is tied to necessity, not leisure.

    The jackpot as an exception and a marketing signal

    The Ksh3.2 million winner is a statistical outlier, a rare case that nevertheless provides the industry with powerful “social proof.” Every billboard with a winner’s portrait overshadows countless small, unseen losses that collectively make up operators’ profits. The contrast between one lucky person’s story and the broader context of the population’s growing debt remains stark.

    Questions for the regulator about what comes next

    A number of open questions face the BCLB and lawmakers. What limits on game speed and stake sizes could be introduced in the coming months? Will mandatory responsible-gambling measures appear, similar to the UK-style timeouts? Will it be possible to balance tax interests with growing social risks? The answers will shape the face of Kenyan gambling against the backdrop of continued growth in mobile platforms.

  • Health at Stake, Industrial Ambitions, and the Mystery of Ancient Teeth — Africa in a Day

    Health at Stake, Industrial Ambitions, and the Mystery of Ancient Teeth — Africa in a Day

    Three stories from different corners of Africa have come together into a vivid snapshot of today’s agenda. In Kenya, gambling is increasingly shifting from entertainment to a public threat. In Madagascar, 16 states signed on to a plan for an industrial push. And in northeastern Ethiopia, a discovery was unearthed that could rewrite anthropology textbooks.

    In Kenya, gambling is no longer just a personal matter

    Kenyan authorities and the medical community are increasingly classifying an interest in gambling as a public-health issue. Sports betting and other “games of chance” are booming in the country. Tens of thousands of Kenyans place bets every day in hopes of hitting the jackpot, and the betting industry actively stokes this demand with advertising and easy access via mobile apps.

    Online casinos are keeping pace and use a wide range of marketing tools to attract new players. Most often these are affiliate programs, as well as streams that may be targeted either specifically at Kenyans or at audiences in other countries. In the latter case, they usually bring in people who are widely known internationally, from Africa to New Zealand. Streamers typically don’t show real-money wagers in online casinos directly, but they may talk about the features of the game using free spins on sign up. The danger is that viewers develop a false sense of security about betting. As a result, the risk of gambling addiction increases.

    The flip side of gambling looks far less appealing. A significant share of players end up trapped in addiction, which entails a chain of severe consequences:

    • recurring financial losses, often leading to financial ruin for families;
    • rising debt burdens on the most vulnerable segments of the population;
    • mental-health problems associated with an inability to stop gambling.

    Treating gambling as a public-health issue signals that Kenya is ready to address the problem not only through the lens of market regulation, but also through mechanisms of medical and social support.

    Madagascar hosted a SADC summit for the first time, and 16 countries pledged an industrial push

    On an island that had never served as a venue for such meetings before, the 45th Summit of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) has concluded. All 16 states in the regional bloc reaffirmed their intention to expand manufacturing and industrial capacity. The key idea of the agreed plan is that the countries of the region should build up their own industrial production, rather than remaining primarily suppliers of raw materials to global markets.

    In addition to the economic agenda, the summit was marked by a symbolic leadership change. The President of Madagascar assumed the rotating chairmanship of SADC. For the island state, this is both a diplomatic win and an added responsibility: it is the chair who will have to coordinate the implementation of the ambitious industrial commitments over the coming year.

    Fossilized teeth from Ethiopia nearly three million years old

    In northeastern Ethiopia, in a region long referred to by anthropologists as the “cradle of humankind,” another striking discovery has been made. Archaeologists unearthed fossilized teeth estimated to be approximately three million years old. The antiquity of the artifacts in itself is nothing exceptional for this area; however, their morphology has raised questions among scientists.

    According to preliminary assessments, the teeth may belong to a previously unknown hominin lineage. If the hypothesis is confirmed, the discovery will challenge the familiar linear model of evolution, according to which hominin species replaced one another in sequence. The real picture, apparently, resembled a branching tree, on which several related but distinct populations existed at the same time. However, researchers promise to draw final conclusions only after the full laboratory analysis is complete.

    Together, these three stories from a single day capture the range of challenges Africa faces: from protecting public health and the push for economic self-reliance to scientific discoveries reshaping our understanding of the past of all humankind.

  • I Will Bribe Every Judge in Town- MP Jack Wamboka

    I Will Bribe Every Judge in Town- MP Jack Wamboka

    The suspension was barely forty-eight hours old when the defiant boast reached the newsroom. Bumula Member of Parliament Jack Wanami Wamboka, stripped of his chairmanship of the National Assembly’s Public Investments Committee on Governance and Education over credible allegations that he solicited bribes from witnesses who came before the committee, was already plotting his comeback — and the playbook, sources with direct knowledge of his intentions tell Kenya Insights, is as brazen as the conduct that triggered his fall.

    Wamboka, according to multiple sources who requested anonymity given the sensitivity of disclosing a sitting lawmaker’s intentions, has been openly telling associates that he intends to shop for a compliant judge, bribe his way to a favourable court order, and use the injunction to nullify the National Assembly’s decision suspending him. ‘I am untouchable,’ he has reportedly told confidants. ‘I will bribe every judge in town to get my orders.’

    “I am untouchable. I will bribe every judge in town to get my orders.” — Wamboka, according to sources with direct knowledge of his intentions

    THE SUSPENSION THAT SHOOK THE HOUSE

    On Wednesday, April 22, 2026, National Assembly Deputy Speaker Gladys Boss Shollei delivered a ruling that brought the chamber to a hush.

    In measured but devastating terms, she announced that Wamboka stood suspended from chairing the Public Investments Committee on Governance and Education — one of Parliament’s most consequential oversight organs — pending the outcome of an investigation by the Committee on Powers and Privileges.

    The trigger was a formal petition to Speaker Moses Wetang’ula from the National Cohesion and Integration Commission. In its letter, NCIC Chairman Samuel Kobia described what he called open hostility, harassment, and demeaning treatment of commission officers who had appeared before Wamboka’s committee to respond to queries arising from Auditor-General reports for the 2021/2022 and 2023/2024 financial years.

    But beyond the hostility, the NCIC levelled a charge that cut to the bone: that Wamboka had demanded bribes as a precondition for granting audience or offering favourable consideration during committee proceedings.

    ‘In order to safeguard public trust in the work of the Public Investments Committee on Governance and Education during the pendency of the inquiry, I am further persuaded to suspend the Honourable Jack Wamboka from chairing the committee,’ Shollei declared, her words falling into a chamber that understood the gravity of the moment.

    The probe has been handed to Ainabkoi MP Samuel Chepkonga, a veteran parliamentarian, with a 45-day deadline to table findings — a report the House must receive by June 9, 2026. Shollei co-opted MPs Sarah Korere and Robert Gichimu to strengthen the investigative panel, and directed the Minority leadership — Wamboka sits on the Minority bench — to nominate an interim committee chair by noon the following day.

    By Thursday evening, Luanda MP Dick Maungu had been installed as interim chairman.

    A LAWMAKER WHO PROTESTS TOO MUCH

    Wamboka, a Democratic Action Party of Kenya legislator representing Bumula Constituency in Bungoma County, rose to address the House after the ruling.

    His response was defiant.

    He dismissed the NCIC’s complaint as politically motivated, arguing that the commission’s grievances were connected to the committee’s scrutiny of its operations — including questions over recruitment and financial management.

    He further pointed to what he described as suspicious timing, suggesting the complaint had been revived after lying dormant, which he framed as evidence of bad faith.

    ‘The allegations are unfounded and possibly related to the robust examination of reports and accounts of the NCIC by the committee,’ Wamboka told the House. He questioned why the complaint was surfaced at a particular moment, characterising the delay as proof that it lacked merit from inception.

    Minority Leader Junet Mohammed offered public support, expressing confidence that Wamboka would be vindicated, describing him as ‘a law-abiding Member of Parliament.’

    Majority Leader Kimani Ichung’wah praised the Deputy Speaker’s ruling as balanced, cautioning against generalising the allegations to the entire committee while endorsing the process as one that would deliver fair administrative justice.

    Wamboka had demanded bribes as a precondition for granting audience or offering favourable consideration — NCIC Chairman Samuel Kobia, in petition to Speaker Wetang’ula

    Constituents in Bumula staged street protests on Thursday, with demonstrators carrying placards through market centres in Bungoma, insisting the suspension was political punishment for a vocal opposition MP. Edwin Wafula, a spokesperson for the protesters at Kabula market, accused the Kenya Kwanza government of orchestrating the removal. ‘This move is not about accountability but politics,’ he said.

    NOW HE THREATENS THE JUDICIARY

    What Kenya Insights has established goes beyond the parliamentary record. Well-placed sources — among them persons who have interacted directly with the embattled MP in the days since the suspension — say Wamboka has made no secret of his intention to weaponise the courts. His stated plan is to file proceedings challenging the National Assembly’s decision, and to ensure those proceedings succeed not through the merits of his arguments, but through corrupting whichever judge the case lands before.

    The statements, our sources say, have been made with the confidence of a man who believes money is the ultimate leveller.

    Wamboka’s reported willingness to approach the judiciary with the same transactional logic he allegedly applied to witnesses before his committee speaks to a deeper pathology — one in which public office is merely a vantage point for extraction, and institutions exist to be gamed rather than served.

    If realised, such a scheme would constitute at least two separate offences under Kenyan law. Section 117 of the Penal Code criminalises the corruption of judicial officers, carrying custodial penalties.

    The Anti-Corruption and Economic Crimes Act similarly penalises any person who corruptly gives, promises or offers any advantage to a state officer — a category that includes members of the judiciary — in connection with their duties.

    For a sitting Member of Parliament, the exposure extends further: Article 75 of the Constitution requires public officers to behave with integrity, and Chapter Six’s leadership requirements would be directly engaged.

    The Director of Public Prosecutions, the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission, and the Office of the Director of Criminal Investigations have jurisdiction over the conduct now being attributed to Wamboka. His threats, if substantiated, would constitute criminal

    conspiracy before a single bribe has changed hands.

    THE COMMITTEE HE STOOD TO LOSE

    The Public Investments Committee on Governance and Education is not a backwater assignment. It is a frontline oversight organ tasked with examining audit reports on public investments across some of Kenya’s most consequential sectors — education, governance, justice, and law and order.

    The Auditor-General’s findings in these areas often expose billions of shillings in unexplained expenditure, procurement irregularities, and outright fraud by state agencies.

    A chairman who controls the flow of that scrutiny controls, in significant measure, the fate of public servants and institutional chiefs who come before the committee.

    The power that attaches to such a chairmanship is substantial — and, critics say, it is precisely that power that Wamboka allegedly sought to monetise.

    The NCIC’s complaint suggests the pattern of extracting inducements from witnesses was not an isolated incident but an operating method, deployed across the examination of multiple audit periods.

    Deputy Speaker Shollei, in her ruling, was alert to the systemic implications. She warned that even the perception of impropriety could undermine the committee’s constitutional mandate, and that summoning entities on matters outside the committee’s remit risked antagonising both those entities and the broader institution.

    Her caution reads, in hindsight, as a diagnosis of a committee that had drifted from oversight into exploitation.

    CORRUPTION’S BOOMERANG

    There is a bitter irony in the trajectory of this story. Wamboka chairs — or chaired — a committee designed to hold public agencies accountable for the misuse of public resources.

    The very instrument of accountability became, if the allegations against him are true, an instrument of personal enrichment. And now, facing consequences for that alleged enrichment, he reportedly plots to extend the same corruption to the institution designed to adjudicate such matters.

    It is a logic that, if left unchecked, would metastasise into every organ of the state. A legislator who can demand bribes from witnesses with impunity, and then buy off a judge to escape the reckoning, would demonstrate to every corner of Kenya’s public sector that accountability is not a constraint but a commodity.

    The Powers and Privileges Committee now holds the first line of institutional response. Chepkonga’s panel has 45 days.

    The clock started Wednesday. But given the extraordinary nature of what Wamboka is alleged to have said since his suspension — words that amount, at a minimum, to a declaration of intent to commit a serious crime — the question before the DPP, the EACC, and the Judicial Service Commission is whether they are prepared to move faster than Parliament.

  • Receivers In TransCentury Sh6B KRA Tax Arrears Are Biased And Must Be Removed, COFEK Claims

    Receivers In TransCentury Sh6B KRA Tax Arrears Are Biased And Must Be Removed, COFEK Claims

    A bombshell court filing has ignited fresh controversy at the heart of the most protracted corporate insolvency battle in Kenya’s recent history.

    The Consumer Federation of Kenya, better known as COFEK, has gone before the Commercial High Court demanding the removal of two PricewaterhouseCoopers liquidators managing the affairs of infrastructure holding group TransCentury PLC, alleging that the pair has conducted the receivership in a manner so nakedly partial to Equity Bank that the interests of the Kenyan public, specifically billions of shillings in outstanding tax obligations, have been deliberately relegated.

    The two men in the crosshairs are George Weru and Muniu Thoithi, senior PwC Kenya partners who were first appointed by Equity Bank as joint receivers and managers of TransCentury on June 16, 2023, and as joint administrators of its subsidiary, East African Cables, on the same date.

    Their mandate, which has survived multiple rounds of litigation and no fewer than three High Court injunctions, covers the recovery of what Equity Bank now puts at a staggering Sh6 billion in accumulated principal, accrued interest and penalties arising from credit facilities extended to the TransCentury group over several years.

    “The quantum, magnitude and persistent non-discharge of these statutory obligations place beyond any doubt the fact that these are not mere private commercial claims, but monies owed to the State for the benefit of the Kenyan public.” – COFEK court papers

    Kenya Insights has reviewed the court papers filed by COFEK, whose secretary general, Stephen Mutoro, is the organisation’s most visible face in the litigation. COFEK has also listed the Kenya Revenue Authority, the National Assembly and the Attorney General as interested parties in its suit, alongside Equity Bank and the National Taxpayers Association.

    The breadth of that party list is itself a declaration of intent: COFEK is arguing that the receivership, far from being a private commercial affair between a bank and a defaulting borrower, has taken on enormous public interest dimensions because TransCentury and its subsidiaries owe the taxman Sh1.6 billion that the receivers have allegedly failed to aggressively pursue.

    THE ANATOMY OF THE BIAS ALLEGATION

    The centrepiece of COFEK’s case is a legal argument that cuts to the very nature of what a receiver manager is in Kenyan law.

    Under the Insolvency Act and the broader common law tradition that governs receivership conduct in this jurisdiction, a receiver is not a mere agent of the appointing creditor.

    The receiver owes duties not only to the secured creditor who appoints them but to the company in receivership, to preferential creditors, to employees, and to the public interest.

    It is this multi-directional duty that COFEK says Weru and Thoithi have quietly but unmistakably abandoned.

    The lobby’s papers allege that the two receiver managers have, by reason of the circumstances of their appointment and the manner in which they have conducted the receivership, demonstrated a clear and apparent bias in favour of Equity Bank as the first interested party.

    COFEK further argues that Weru and Thoithi have failed in their duties as quasi-officers of the court to discharge their mandate with the degree of impartiality, independence and fairness required by law.

    The lobby accuses the pair of conducting the process in a manner calculated to maximise Equity Bank’s recovery while systematically deprioritising the State’s competing claims.

    The KRA angle is where the COFEK case becomes particularly explosive.

    The lobby accuses the revenue authority itself of failing to aggressively pursue the Sh1.6 billion that TransCentury and its subsidiaries are said to owe the public purse.

    In a country where KRA has been deploying forensic banking data, satellite imagery and artificial intelligence to chase informal traders over a few hundred thousand shillings in tax, the allegation that a Sh1.6 billion corporate tax debt has been allowed to fester while a bank recovers its private loan carries heavy political symbolism.

    THREE YEARS OF LEGAL WARFARE

    To understand how Kenya arrived at this juncture, one must trace the slow unravelling of TransCentury’s finances.

    The group, once celebrated as the archetype of a pan-African infrastructure champion anchored in Nairobi’s storied business elite, had by 2022 accumulated total debt exposures estimated at Sh9.6 billion across its three main operating units.

    Equity Bank’s exposure, through debentures covering TransCentury’s core operations, was the largest single creditor position.

    The trigger was a disastrous rights issue. TransCentury sought Sh2 billion from shareholders to partly service the Equity Bank debt.

    The market demurred.

    The company raised only Sh828 million, a subscription rate of barely 40 per cent, and even then offered the bank only Sh108 million out of the proceeds while requesting Equity to write off over Sh2.8 billion.

    Equity Bank declined and moved to appoint receivers on June 16, 2023.

    TransCentury fought back immediately, obtaining an emergency injunction from Justice Alfred Mabeya the following day.

    Mabeya’s order, finding that the bank had jumped the gun while negotiations were still active and that premature receivership would cause irreparable harm to employees, customers and the broader economy, temporarily suspended the appointment.

    What followed was nearly three years of rolling litigation that saw the company obtain and then lose injunctions, approach overseas refinanciers including a Cayman Islands-registered entity called TLG Africa Growth Impact Fund, and ultimately fail to secure the refinancing it promised the court.

    Equity Bank’s own lawyers told the court that the outstanding debt had ballooned to Sh5.5 billion by January 7, 2025, a figure that the company’s own lawyers disputed as inflated and miscalculated.

    The receivership was finally reinstated in June 2025 after a 90-day extension of court orders expired and TransCentury could demonstrate no credible refinancing.

    PricewaterhouseCoopers issued a formal public notice confirming that Weru and Thoithi had reassumed full control of the company’s assets and affairs, stripping the board of directors of all powers of management.

    The administrators simultaneously opened a window for potential investors to recapitalise, refinance or acquire key subsidiaries, particularly AEA Limited, the group’s engineering and infrastructure arm with a presence across Uganda, Tanzania, Kenya and Rwanda.

    THE SEPARATE BATTLE OVER DUE PROCESS

    Running parallel to the receivership management dispute is a separate suit in which TransCentury itself has consistently argued that the entire receivership is procedurally tainted.

    Through its long-standing advocate Philip Nyachoti, the company has maintained from the outset that Equity Bank moved to appoint receivers on the very day it issued a demand notice, depriving TransCentury of the time required by law to respond.

    Nyachoti argued in submissions that the bank failed to calculate the correct balance owed, demanding Sh6 billion when the actual figure, accounting for the Sh1.7 billion the company had already repaid, was materially lower.

    TransCentury also filed a separate case alleging that Equity Bank illegally occupied its premises and appointed the receiver managers without due process, taking over the physical offices before any legal authority for such action had crystallised.

    The company’s chairman, Shaka Kariuki, described the bank’s actions as an ill-intended process that blindsided a partner with whom the company believed it was in productive dialogue the day before the receivership notice was executed.

    Equity Bank’s senior counsel Kiragu Kimani countered in court that the company had approached with bad faith by concealing from the court that it had already acknowledged all the debts in private correspondence and had pleaded for a 90-day grace period during negotiations.

    Kimani argued that the bank could not indefinitely allow interest to accumulate on a deteriorating loan book while the borrower deployed litigation tactics to delay the inevitable.

    PUBLIC INTEREST VERSUS PRIVATE RECOVERY

    COFEK’s intervention shifts the battleground entirely. Where the litigation between TransCentury and Equity Bank has largely been a private commercial duel, the consumer federation’s case injects the State as a competing creditor whose interests it argues are being illegitimately subordinated.

    Privately appointed receivers are placed in a position of statutory authority.

    They are officers of the court in a functional if not formal sense, and the courts have consistently held that their conduct must reflect that obligation.

    The federation argues that a privately instructed receiver manager, appointed at the behest of a commercial bank and in circumstances where there are unresolved tax claims by the State, allegations of bias and professional conduct concerns, does not adequately serve the public interest.

    COFEK has told the court that Weru and Thoithi cannot lawfully be relegated beneath the claims of the first interested party, Equity Bank, in the course of the receivership, and that their continued appointment is an affront to the principle that public debts to the State are not merely private commercial claims to be extinguished or deferred at the convenience of a secured creditor.

    COFEK is asking the court to declare that the conduct of the receivership has been so systemically partial as to amount to a breach of the receivers’ statutory and common law duties, and to order their removal and replacement with independent office holders.

    The case also lands at an uncomfortable moment for KRA.

    The authority has in recent months launched an aggressive digital enforcement campaign, deploying automated systems that cross-check tax declarations against electronic invoices and bank records in real time.

    It has pursued hotel owners in Naivasha over unexplained M-Pesa deposits and threatened businesses over minor invoice mismatches.

    The allegation that it has simultaneously allowed Sh1.6 billion in corporate tax arrears from a high-profile receivership to remain uncollected will invite pointed questions from parliamentarians and civil society.

    The case is filed at the Commercial High Court in Nairobi and is expected to be assigned to the division handling TransCentury’s existing disputes.

    The attorneys general and KRA, as interested parties, will be required to respond, potentially forcing the revenue authority to publicly account for the state of its enforcement against the receivership estate.

    Weru and Thoithi, through their principals at PwC, have not yet filed a formal response to the COFEK application as of press time.

    Legal analysts who have followed the TransCentury saga say COFEK’s intervention, while novel, is not without legal foundation.

    The courts have in previous rulings acknowledged that receivership is not merely a debt recovery tool for the appointing creditor but carries obligations to the broader creditor hierarchy, including preferential creditors.

    Whether the Commercial High Court will extend that principle to hold that KRA’s claims impose a positive obligation on receivers to aggressively pursue tax collection on behalf of the State is a question that Kenya’s insolvency jurisprudence has not squarely addressed.

    What is beyond dispute is that the TransCentury receivership, now entering its fourth year of contested administration, shows no signs of resolution. The PwC administrators are actively marketing key subsidiaries to investors, but no binding transaction has been announced.

    The debt, initially put at Sh4.8 billion, has under the accrual of interest reportedly grown to figures north of Sh6 billion.

    And now, with COFEK adding a new front to the litigation, the prospect of any clean exit from the receivership is receding further into a Nairobi judicial calendar already straining under the weight of the dispute.

    For TransCentury’s thousands of shareholders, employees and creditors, the entry of a consumer lobby group into what was already a three-party courtroom war is either a welcome reinforcement of accountability or one more complication in an already exhausting process.

    For COFEK’s Mutoro, the answer is simple: the Kenyan public is a creditor too, and it is long past time someone in that courtroom said so.

  • Odibets Bought Stolen Data From Millions Of Kenyans

    Odibets Bought Stolen Data From Millions Of Kenyans

    On May 13, a High Court in Nairobi will deliver a judgment that reaches far beyond any single case and threatens to fundamentally alter the legal landscape of Kenya’s multi-billion-shilling betting industry.

    At the centre of the coming reckoning is Odibets, the Parklands-based betting firm operated by Kareco Holdings Limited, and the question at the heart of a Directorate of Criminal Investigations forensic report: did the company knowingly and repeatedly purchase the stolen personal data of millions of Kenyans to build its customer base?

    The answer embedded in that official forensic record is yes. And the scale of what was bought goes far beyond what has previously been reported in the public domain.

    The DCI forensic report does not describe a one-time transaction. It describes a systematic, multi-tranche commercial relationship between Odibets and the perpetrators of the largest data heist in Kenyan telecommunications history.

    THE HEIST: 29.9 MILLION KENYANS EXPOSED

    The story of Kenya’s most consequential data theft begins in June 2018, nearly a full year before the police sting operation that eventually brought it into the open. Simon Billy Kinuthia, at the time a senior Safaricom manager with unrestricted access to network and M-Pesa audit systems, began extracting subscriber information from the company’s servers and transferring it, via Google Drive, to a network of insiders and commercial buyers. His accomplice was Brian Wamatu Njoroge, then head of regional expansion at the telco. Together, the two men operated what court documents describe as a systematic, sustained scheme to harvest and monetise Safaricom’s most sensitive subscriber data.

    The WhatsApp forensic analysis, conducted by the Directorate of Criminal Investigations and submitted as an official forensic report in these proceedings, established the scope of the theft definitively. On July 17, 2018, Kinuthia sent Wamatu a message that should be read as a statement of intent and achievement in equal measure: “I have the full details of our 29.9M Customers backed up somewhere.” This was not speculation. The data had already been extracted. Every Safaricom subscriber in Kenya at the time, not merely those identified as gamblers, had their most sensitive personal information lifted from the company’s servers.

    What was taken was not merely a list of phone numbers. Court documents detail a surveillance dossier on millions of Kenyans encompassing full names, national identity card numbers, passport numbers, military identification numbers, alien card numbers, M-Pesa transaction histories, total amounts wagered on betting platforms, individual gambling patterns and frequencies, handset IMEI numbers, dual SIM specifications, and precise geolocation data down to county and locality level. The gamblers-specific subset, covering 11.5 million subscribers who had used their Safaricom lines to bet, constituted twenty-three percent of the company’s customer base and represented the commercially valuable core of what was sold to betting firms.

    The data moved through a chain that the DCI forensic investigators traced with precision. Kinuthia extracted it and pushed it to a Google Drive. Wamatu served as the conduit to external buyers. Charles Njuguna Kimani, a third Safaricom employee, facilitated meetings and transfers. The chain was designed, with deliberate criminal intent, to insulate the original sources from direct contact with purchasers. As Sergeant Joseph Chebor noted in his investigating officer’s statement: “The chain worked so that the end person did not know the origin of the data.” The architecture of deception protected the sellers. It did not cleanse the buyers.

    ODIBETS: NAMED DIRECTLY IN THE FORENSIC RECORD

    The DCI forensic report, compiled from the WhatsApp conversation extracts recovered from the devices of Kinuthia and Wamatu, names Odibets directly as one of the companies that received the stolen subscriber data. This is not an allegation based on inference or circumstantial association. It is the finding of an official criminal investigation conducted by Kenya’s Directorate of Criminal Investigations and submitted before a court of law.

    The data distributions to Odibets were not conducted as a single bulk transaction. The forensic evidence shows multiple transfers across the eleven-month period, with datasets segmented commercially to suit individual buyers. Records of 50,000 subscribers, 100,000 subscribers, and 200,000 subscribers were transferred in separate tranches. Prices were negotiated. Sample datasets were provided to prospective buyers as proof of the data’s authenticity and commercial utility. Upon confirmation of payment or agreement, full databases were transmitted. Odibets, which was incorporated in 2018 and launched its platform the same year the theft commenced, was a recipient of multiple such deliveries across that period.

    Odibets was not alone in this market. The DCI forensic record identifies other firms as having also received the stolen data. Those firms received it multiple times. The evidence places Odibets within a network of buyers who collectively stripped the privacy of tens of millions of Kenyans for commercial advantage. But Kenya Insights concentrates in this report on Odibets, because it is Odibets whose corporate identity, whose licence, and whose senior officers are most directly accountable to the questions the forensic record raises for a single, identifiable, Nairobi-registered company.

    Odibets did not acquire a marketing database. It acquired a precision targeting system built on the stolen financial histories and gambling records of millions of Kenyans who never consented and were never told.

    KARECO HOLDINGS: THE COMPANY BEHIND THE BRAND

    Odibets is the trading name of Kareco Holdings Limited, registered at Plot No. LR 209/2167, Crescent Lane, Parklands, Nairobi. Jimmy Kibaki, widely reported as the son of the late President Mwai Kibaki, serves as chairman and is the most prominent public face of the company’s operations. The firm has expanded beyond Kenya into Ghana, Zambia, and Zimbabwe and claims a user base exceeding ten million across East Africa. It holds a bookmaking licence under the newly established Gambling Regulatory Authority of Kenya and was among the 99 firms approved for licensing by the BCLB for the 2025/2026 financial year.

    The company launched in 2018, the same month the data theft commenced. It built its brand on aggressive outreach across matatus, billboards, print media, and digital platforms, targeting Kenya’s youth with promotions, free bets, and M-Pesa integrated deposit incentives. Its marketing proposition, summarised by the hashtag BetExtraODInary, was aimed squarely at the demographic most likely to be represented in the stolen Safaricom database: young, urban, financially active, and already betting on mobile platforms.

    The company presents itself as a responsible operator. Its website carries mandatory responsible gambling notices. Its homepage states that persons under eighteen years are not eligible to participate. Its terms and conditions describe a company operating within a regulated framework and committed to lawful conduct. Against those assurances, the DCI forensic report places a stark and unresolved contradiction. The company that advertises responsible gambling launched its growth trajectory on stolen intelligence about which Kenyans were already the most deeply addicted to it.

    Independent reviewers assessing the Odibets platform as recently as June 2025 noted that the company does not provide built-in tools for users to set daily, weekly, or monthly spending limits from their account dashboard. Users seeking self-exclusion must contact customer support manually rather than using a self-service toggle. There are no in-app reminders or time-out alerts. The gap between the company’s responsible gambling rhetoric and the functionality available to its users is, on its own terms, significant. In the context of the forensic record, it is damning.

    THE COMMERCIAL LOGIC OF BUYING STOLEN CITIZEN DATA

    To understand why Odibets purchased stolen Safaricom subscriber data, it is necessary to understand precisely what that data contained and what it made possible for a company competing in one of the most saturated betting markets in Africa.

    The stolen records did not merely contain names and phone numbers. They contained each subscriber’s complete betting history: the precise amounts they had wagered over time, how frequently they bet, across which platforms, the size of individual transactions, and patterns of loss. Combined with M-Pesa transaction records and geolocation data accurate to the locality level, this information answered the question that every betting company’s marketing department is trying to answer through legitimate means: which specific Kenyans are already betting, how much are they losing, how often do they return, and where do they live?

    The stolen database answered all of those questions simultaneously, for 11.5 million people, with clinical precision. A company that purchased even a single tranche of 100,000 subscriber records from this database gained more actionable targeting intelligence about Kenya’s gambling population than any legitimate marketing exercise could produce in years. A company that purchased multiple tranches, as the DCI forensic record establishes Odibets did, accumulated a cumulative intelligence advantage over every competitor operating without stolen data.

    These were not marketing leads in any conventional sense. They were vulnerability profiles assembled without consent from the most intimate financial and behavioural records of millions of Kenyans. The people in the database had not signed up to receive betting advertising. They had not agreed to share their financial histories with commercial operators. They had used their phones, made their payments, and placed their bets in the reasonable expectation that Safaricom would protect that information. Odibets purchased it anyway.

    THE DEAL THAT NEVER CLOSED: HOW THE CRIMINAL SCHEME WAS EXPOSED

    The original target of the data conspirators was not Odibets. Mark Nderitu, who served as the commercial agent for Kinuthia and Wamatu, initially sought to sell the stolen database to the dominant betting platform in Kenya at the time. Benedict Kabugi, brought into the scheme as a networking intermediary because of his connections in Nairobi’s business community, arranged two meetings between the data vendors and the target company’s chief executive, the first at Club Milan in Westlands on June 3, 2019, and the second at ABC Place on June 7.

    At those meetings, sample data was shown and the commercial proposition was made. The deal collapsed. The target company’s executive declined to complete the transaction, and did something the conspirators had not anticipated: he reported the approach to Safaricom. That report triggered the criminal complaint to the DCI, initiated the sting operation, and led to the arrests of Kinuthia and Wamatu. The company approached had not completed a purchase. It had, in the end, triggered the prosecution.

    The distinction is legally and factually important. The company that declined and reported does not appear in the DCI forensic analysis as a buyer of stolen data. Odibets does. The difference between those two positions in 2019 is the difference between being a witness and being a subject of criminal inquiry.

    THE HUMAN COST: WHAT THE DATA PURCHASE ENABLED

    The commercial rationale for purchasing stolen Safaricom subscriber data was cold and calculated: identify which Kenyans bet, how much they bet, how often they lose, where they live, and what their financial patterns look like through M-Pesa. Then target them with precision. The human consequences of that targeting are now documented in public health research, court submissions, and the inquest records of young people who have died.

    Kenya is now the most gambling-saturated country in Sub-Saharan Africa by participation rate. A GeoPoll survey spanning six African countries found that 83.9 percent of Kenyans polled had gambled, the highest proportion recorded across the continent. According to data cited in court documents in the subscriber petition, nearly 80 percent of Kenyans seeking psychiatric treatment at relevant institutions are now classified as problem or pathological gamblers. A 2025 peer-reviewed study of peri-urban men in Kajiado County confirmed that 69 percent were using betting as a maladaptive coping mechanism for economic stress, while 93.1 percent reported intense guilt following gambling losses and 51.7 percent experienced a material deterioration in their mental health as a direct consequence of gambling behaviour.

    In 2024, Kenyans bet a total of Sh766 billion, a figure that surpasses the entire national education budget of Sh656 billion for the same year. The Kenya Revenue Authority collected Sh13.233 billion in excise duty from the betting sector in the 2024/2025 financial year, which the government cites as evidence of the industry’s economic contribution. What does not appear on any government balance sheet is the human cost of that revenue.

    In October 2024, Susan Njeri, a small-scale trader in Kakamega County known as Mama Sammy, died by suicide after losing Sh60,000 on a betting platform. In the same year, a first-class honours graduate from Maasai Mara University lost Sh900,000 in a single night of betting and took his own life. His family buried him in Baringo. Between 2019 and 2021, there was a documented rise in gambling-related suicides, predominantly among young men who had lost everything from tuition fees to life savings on single football matches. Addiction counsellor Harrison Irungu has described the invisible nature of the crisis: you cannot drink Sh100,000 worth of alcohol in one night without someone noticing. A Sh100,000 bet happens in seconds, on a phone, and leaves no physical trace until the human being behind it collapses.

    The people whose data Odibets purchased from the criminal scheme were not abstract data points. They were the most financially exposed gamblers in Kenya, identified with precision through their stolen records, targeted with intelligence no legitimate operator possessed, and pushed deeper into addiction by a company that knew exactly how vulnerable they already were.

    These were not marketing leads. They were the stolen financial records of Kenya’s most desperate gamblers, bought and used to ensure they could never escape the company targeting them.

    THE LEGAL ARSENAL: WHAT PROSECUTORS AND REGULATORS CAN DO TO ODIBETS

    The legal exposure facing Odibets, Kareco Holdings, and its senior officers is substantial, multi-dimensional, and far from theoretical. Kenya’s Data Protection Act, which came into force on November 25, 2019, provides for administrative fines of up to Sh5 million per violation or, in the case of a business entity, up to one percent of annual turnover for the preceding financial year, whichever is lower. For a company operating at Odibets’ scale, with operations across four African countries and a claimed user base exceeding ten million, one percent of annual revenue could represent a far more significant penalty than the statutory ceiling. The Office of the Data Protection Commissioner has demonstrated a clear willingness to enforce these provisions, having imposed the Sh5 million ceiling in its first major enforcement action in 2022 and having issued multiple enforcement notices in the years since.

    Beyond administrative penalties, the Data Protection Act provides for criminal liability for directors and company officers who have committed wilful violations, with the possibility of imprisonment. The Computer Misuse and Cybercrimes Act separately criminalises the receipt and commercial use of data obtained through unauthorised computer access, with penalties including prison terms of up to ten years for individual offenders. If the court on May 13 accepts the forensic evidence that Odibets knowingly purchased data extracted from Safaricom’s servers without subscriber consent, the company’s exposure extends from regulatory sanction through to the criminal prosecution of its controlling officers.

    The Gambling Regulatory Authority of Kenya, which superseded the BCLB under the Gambling Control Act of 2025, holds independent statutory power to investigate licensed operators, impose fines, suspend licences, and initiate revocation proceedings. The GRA demonstrated its enforcement appetite in early 2025 by shutting down more than fifty unlicensed betting firms, introducing strict advertising prohibitions banning celebrity endorsements, and mandating the resubmission of detailed documentation from all licensed operators. A finding that Odibets purchased stolen citizen data would represent a category of misconduct of an entirely different order from the advertising and licensing violations the GRA has addressed to date.

    Then there is the civil liability. The constitutional petition before the High Court seeks Sh1.5 million per subscriber from Safaricom for 11.5 million affected subscribers. Should the court validate the forensic evidence of data purchases by Odibets, the legal architecture for equivalent civil claims against the company by those same subscribers becomes immediately available. The 29.9 million subscribers whose data was also extracted, though not yet forming the core of a separate claim, represent a potential second wave of litigation. At Sh1.5 million per affected individual, even a fraction of that cohort pursuing claims against Odibets would generate figures that could fundamentally threaten the company’s financial viability.

    SEVEN YEARS OF SILENCE: THE QUESTIONS THAT MUST NOW BE ANSWERED

    The DCI forensic report naming Odibets as a buyer of stolen data was compiled in the course of an active criminal investigation that commenced in 2019. The former Safaricom employees at the centre of the scheme, Simon Billy Kinuthia and Brian Wamatu Njoroge, were charged with computer fraud and the unlawful copying and transfer of privileged subscriber data. Their criminal case has been proceeding in the courts for seven years. Benedict Kabugi, the man whose report to police initiated the prosecution, faces his own criminal charges of demanding money with menaces, which he denies. The DCI has had the forensic evidence identifying Odibets as a buyer since the investigation commenced.

    Seven years later, no criminal charges have been brought against Kareco Holdings Limited, Odibets, or any of the company’s senior officers in connection with the purchase of stolen subscriber data. The Office of the Data Protection Commissioner has not opened a formal investigation into Odibets’ data handling practices arising from the theft. The BCLB did not initiate licence proceedings against the company on the basis of the forensic evidence. The GRA renewed Odibets’ licence for the 2025/2026 financial year without any public acknowledgment of the company’s appearance in a DCI forensic report.

    Legal analysts who have reviewed the case documents observe that a judgment validating the evidentiary basis of the petition, including the forensic identification of Odibets as a purchaser of stolen data, would create irresistible institutional pressure on the DCI and the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions to explain why prosecution has been confined to the sellers and not extended to the buyers. The police officers who compiled the forensic analysis documented both sides of every transaction. The institutional decision to charge only one side of those transactions has never been publicly explained.

    The DCI documented the buyers. The DCI documented the transactions. The DCI documented the prices. Seven years later, only the sellers face charges. On May 13, that silence becomes a scandal in its own right.

    THE RECKONING ODIBETS CANNOT ESCAPE

    Odibets has invested considerable effort in building the image of a Kenyan success story: locally owned, youthfully aspirational, deeply woven into the fabric of popular culture through matatu branding, social media presence, and the BetExtraODInary identity. Jimmy Kibaki’s chairmanship lends the company a recognisable public face and a narrative of Kenyan entrepreneurship operating within a legitimate regulatory framework.

    The DCI forensic report tells a different story. It describes a company that, in the first year of its existence, acquired intelligence on millions of Kenyans through a criminal enterprise, used that intelligence to identify and target the most financially vulnerable gamblers in the country, and built a multi-country, multi-billion-shilling business on the proceeds. It describes a company that paid for stolen data knowing that the people whose information it was buying had never consented, would never consent, and had no knowledge that their M-Pesa histories, identity documents, and betting records were being commercially exploited.

    The Gambling Regulatory Authority of Kenya has sweeping powers to investigate, sanction, and revoke the licences of operators found to have violated the terms under which they were licensed. The Data Protection Commissioner has the power to impose fines, issue compliance directives, and refer matters for criminal prosecution. The Director of Public Prosecutions has the authority to charge the directors of Kareco Holdings Limited with criminal offences under the Data Protection Act and the Computer Misuse and Cybercrimes Act.

    Seven years have passed since the forensic report was filed. On May 13, the court will speak. What the regulators and prosecutors do next will determine whether Kenya’s data protection laws mean anything at all, or whether a betting company can purchase the stolen private information of thirty million citizens, profit from that crime for years, build an empire on it, and walk away without consequence.

  • 64-Year-Old KIM Faces Shutdown As Regulator Declares Its Certificates Worthless, Orders Employers To Shun Graduates

    64-Year-Old KIM Faces Shutdown As Regulator Declares Its Certificates Worthless, Orders Employers To Shun Graduates

    The Kenya Institute of Management, a business school that has trained generations of corporate Kenya’s finest minds since 1954, is staring at an existential crisis after the Technical and Vocational Education and Training Authority (TVETA) declared its certificates worthless, ordered all its campuses shut and directed employers across the country to reject its qualifications outright.

    In a sweeping public notice dated April 20, 2026, TVETA Director-General Timothy Nyongesa announced the immediate revocation of KIM’s accreditation under Sections 36 and 37 of the TVET Act Cap 210A, declaring that any diplomas, certificates or professional qualifications the institution issued from 2018 onwards carry no legal weight and will not be recognised for purposes of employment, further education or professional advancement.

    The directive puts 10,000 currently enrolled students in immediate jeopardy and leaves an estimated 100,000 former students who graduated from KIM’s diploma and certificate programmes since 2018 holding paper that their employers may now be legally obliged to disregard. KIM CEO Dr Muriithi Ndegwa confirmed both figures.

    At the heart of the crisis is a regulatory reckoning that has been building for more than a decade. When the TVET Act came into force in 2013, it required all institutions operating under the repealed Education Act to seek fresh accreditation from TVETA within two years. The regulator extended that window to 2018 to accommodate students already mid-programme. KIM, which had been operating since 1954 under the authority of its founding charter, failed to transition its diploma and certificate offerings into the new framework by that deadline.

    Instead, Nyongesa said, KIM continued issuing what TVETA characterised as internal qualifications with no approved legal basis. The regulator issued its first formal warning to the institution in 2021. Audits, follow-up meetings and engagements continued through 2025, including a session in August of that year at which KIM proposed forming a compliance partnership with accredited colleges. That plan, Nyongesa said, never materialised.

    “The first notice we gave to KIM was in 2021, telling them that what they are offering was internal qualifications, which was not good,” Nyongesa told Business Daily. “So in August 2025, we called them for a meeting and our resolutions included that they should actually get to do programmes that are approved.” When no action followed, TVETA moved to enforcement.

    Beyond the compliance gap on its programmes, the regulator accused KIM of engaging trainers who lacked valid licensing from TVETA, a separate violation of Section 23(1) of the same law. The accusation means that not only were the courses unapproved, but the instructors delivering them were, in the regulator’s view, also operating outside the law.

    KIM’s public response has been a study in controlled crisis management. In a statement signed by Dr Ndegwa on April 20, the institution described TVETA’s move as catching it off guard, with management sources in one interview characterising it to Nation as political propaganda. Officially, however, KIM struck a measured tone, saying it was reviewing the notice and engaging regulatory authorities to chart a way forward. Dr Ndegwa urged students and stakeholders to remain calm. The institution insists it remains operational in training and consultancy areas that fall outside TVETA’s jurisdiction.

    The law, however, leaves KIM with a narrow escape route. Section 37.2 of the TVET Act provides a window of appeal to the Cabinet Secretary for Education. Nyongesa confirmed this avenue exists but was blunt about the current legal position. “As it stands, the law is clear. Certificates and diplomas issued from 2018 onwards should not have been awarded,” he said.

    The fallout has been immediate and visible. At KIM’s Nairobi CBD campus, panic-stricken students arrived in large numbers seeking clarity on their status. Phones rang incessantly as graduates who had already secured employment called in to ask whether their jobs were at risk. One admin staff member attempted to contain the anxiety, telling callers that the institution had a government mandate and that management was addressing the situation. Neither assurance carried much legal weight against TVETA’s unambiguous notice.

    On social media, the public reaction has been furious and largely directed at the regulator rather than the institution. “This is pure nonsense. This is 2026, what have you been doing since 2018? Revoking certificates from KIM offered since 2018 is an indication of laxity and failure from your side,” one commenter posted. Others questioned why an institution predating TVETA’s own existence by more than four decades was being subjected to a shutdown rather than a structured remediation process.

    The Consumers Federation of Kenya (COFEK) has entered the fray, calling for an urgent review of TVETA’s implementation approach. While not defending KIM’s non-compliance, COFEK drew a sharp distinction between institutional failures and student culpability. “We are alarmed that TVETA’s notice makes zero provision for the protection of thousands of currently enrolled students who bear no responsibility for KIM’s institutional failures,” the consumer rights body said in a statement.

    KIM students speaking in Kisumu on behalf of their peers echoed the same sentiment. Student representative Ojijo John called on TVETA to function as a partner rather than a punisher, demanding a grace period for compliance and a structured corrective action plan that would not disrupt the academic calendar. “Our education cannot be paused by a press release,” Ojijo said. “It must be protected through collaboration and partnership.”

    The regulatory action sits against a broader backdrop of Kenya’s push to expand technical and vocational training as an economic development lever. That expansion has produced a proliferation of training centres, many of which have struggled to meet accreditation standards, raising systemic questions about the quality of certifications flooding the labour market. KIM was not the only institution caught in the regulatory gap created by the 2013 law, but it is, by far, the most prominent.

    Critics of TVETA’s approach have noted the anomaly at the heart of its enforcement logic: several specialised government training institutions, including the Kenya Medical Training College, the Kenya Revenue Authority’s KESRA college, the Central Bank of Kenya’s Institute of Monetary Studies and the Kenya Institute of Mass Communication, operate under their own Acts of Parliament and are therefore outside TVETA’s regulatory reach. KIM, which lacks a standalone statute, has no such protection.

    For the 100,000 Kenyans holding KIM qualifications issued since 2018 and the 10,000 currently enrolled, the coming days will depend on whether the Cabinet Secretary intervenes, whether KIM mounts a successful legal challenge, or whether TVETA’s enforcement stands exactly as issued. Until that clarity arrives, their paper hangs in a legal limbo that no employer’s HR department can safely ignore.

  • THE BRAZEN RETURN: Triton Thief Yagnesh Devani, Who Pillaged Kenya of Sh7.6 Billion and Fled, Now Asks the Same Courts He Escaped to Restore His Stolen Wealth

    THE BRAZEN RETURN: Triton Thief Yagnesh Devani, Who Pillaged Kenya of Sh7.6 Billion and Fled, Now Asks the Same Courts He Escaped to Restore His Stolen Wealth

    Yagnesh Mohanlal Devani has the nerve of a man who has never truly been made to pay. Last week, the principal shareholder of the long-collapsed Triton Petroleum Company Limited walked into the High Court’s Commercial and Tax Division, clutching an urgent petition demanding a full account of his company’s 17-year receivership.

    The same receivership that followed, inexorably, from his own documented fraud.

    The same courts whose processes he tied up for over a decade fighting extradition from Britain. The same Kenya whose fuel supply he plunged into chaos, whose banks he bankrupted of billions, and whose long-suffering taxpayers were left to absorb the systemic fallout of his spectacular greed.

    The petition, filed through Echessa and Bwire Advocates LLP, names the appointed receiver managers, Kenya Commercial Bank, the Eastern and Southern African Trade and Development Bank, and the Central Bank of Kenya as respondents. In it, Devani argues with remarkable straightforwardness that the receivers have for 17 years failed to provide the company’s board of directors with updates on the status of the receivership, the disposal of assets, or the composition of outstanding loan balances.

    He wants a forensic audit.

    He wants an independent inquiry into potential misconduct. He wants compensation for losses he says were suffered during the receivership period.

    The court has certified the matter as urgent and directed respondents to file their responses within seven days. A mention has been set for April 29 for further directions.

    A man who stole 126 million litres of fuel worth Sh7.6 billion now returns to court complaining that his receivership has been insufficiently transparent.

    THE ANATOMY OF A CAREFULLY PLANNED THEFT

    Devani did not stumble into fraud. He engineered it, over years, with the precision of a man who understood exactly which institutions he could corrupt, which officials could be compromised, and which legal loopholes could be exploited to buy time when the scheme eventually collapsed.

    Triton Petroleum Company Limited was registered in 2000, with Devani holding 4,999,500 of the company’s five million shares. The remaining 500 shares were held by a shell entity called Triton Business Solutions.

    From the beginning, the corporate architecture was designed to concentrate control while obscuring accountability.

    Forensic auditors who later picked through the wreckage noted that despite operating a multi-billion-shilling business with multiple subsidiaries, Triton rarely kept complete records. As one audit observation grimly noted, the company’s files revealed “a lot of information gaps.” Those gaps were not accidental.

    The scandal’s foundations were laid through a system known as the Open Tender System, through which the Kenya Pipeline Company awarded monthly contracts to a single importer to supply petroleum products across Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi.

    The logic was straightforward: economies of scale would benefit the entire market.

    Triton, despite being a relatively small player with an 11.5 per cent market share, managed to outmanoeuvre seasoned international giants including Shell and BP to secure a six-month national oil supply quota.

    According to the African Centre for Open Governance, which produced one of the definitive analyses of the scandal in July 2009, there was considerable evidence to suggest that Triton enjoyed exceptional political connections that could have given it preferential treatment at KPC.

    Those connections were not subtle. At the 2006 launch of Triton’s LPG depot in Nairobi, the guest list included then Vice President Moody Awori, Raila Odinga and Uhuru Kenyatta.

    During President Daniel arap Moi’s administration, Triton had secured lucrative contracts to supply petroleum products to the Kenya Power and Lighting Company. Devani was, by his own carefully cultivated design, the kind of businessman Nairobi’s political establishment wanted at their tables.

    The actual theft, as reconstructed by the PricewaterhouseCoopers forensic audit and subsequent investigations, was executed between November 2007 and November 2008.

    Taking advantage of a new computerised stock-tracking system at KPC that had not yet been fully implemented and could not provide live data, Triton conspired with KPC officials to draw oil from the pipeline system for which it had not paid.

    KPC staff then falsified records to show the stocks remained in the system. By the time financiers demanded accurate stock positions, 126.4 million litres of petroleum products worth Sh7.6 billion had been irregularly and illegally released to Triton without the authorisation of the financiers who held the cargo as collateral.

    THE BANKS LEFT HOLDING PHANTOM COLLATERAL

    The scale of the financial damage was staggering. When KCB wrote to KPC asking for the official stock position of Triton products held for the bank, it discovered to its horror that 25.9 million litres of fuel it believed was being held in storage was simply missing.

    By the time the full picture emerged, Triton had accumulated an estimated Sh7.6 billion in obligations it could not meet: Sh1.85 billion owed to KCB, Sh2.3 billion to Glencore Energy UK Limited, Sh906 million to Fortis Bank of the Netherlands, and Sh2.5 billion to Emirates National Oil Company of Singapore.

    The Kenya Revenue Authority separately demanded Sh4 billion in unpaid taxes and penalties, plus Sh2 billion in unpaid corporation taxes.

    These were not abstract figures on a balance sheet. Banks that had issued letters of credit and financial guarantees on the strength of collateral that did not exist were facing catastrophic losses.

    The Collateral Financing Agreement that governed such transactions required KPC to hold oil stocks and release them only upon written authorisation from the financiers.

    That requirement was systematically ignored, with KPC issuing false acknowledgement letters while Devani’s company drew down inventory it had not paid for and sold it into the market.

    The country’s entire petroleum supply system was thrown into crisis.

    The illegal drawdown of stocks at the Kipevu Oil Storage Facility left insufficient storage space for other oil marketing companies to import their own products fast enough to fill the resulting shortfall. Fuel shortages spread across the country.

    Total Kenya Limited, which had a supply contract with Triton to fuel KenGen’s thermal power plants, was forced to terminate the arrangement after Triton consistently failed to deliver.

    With Kenya already experiencing a drought that had pushed power producers toward greater reliance on thermal generation, the prospect of fuel shortages compounding a power crisis was not theoretical. The country teetered on the edge of electricity rationing.

    Televisions and radio stations broadcast the chaos. Ordinary Kenyans queued for fuel they could not find, and paid more for power they could barely afford.

    THE SPIRITUAL CLEANSING AND THE LONG FLIGHT

    In mid-December 2008, as the walls closed in, Devani and his right-hand man Mahendra Pathak boarded a flight to Prayagraj, India, ostensibly to attend the Magh Mela pilgrimage, a Hindu religious festival held at the confluence of the Ganga, Yamuna and Saraswati rivers, where pilgrims bathe to cleanse themselves of their sins.

    Whether the spiritual symbolism was intentional or merely coincidental, both men knew exactly what was waiting for them in Nairobi.

    Triton was placed under receivership on December 19, 2008, at the request of KCB and the Eastern and Southern African Trade and Development Bank, after the company’s catastrophic inability to service its debts became undeniable.

    Pathak eventually returned to Kenya and faced charges. Devani did not. He surfaced in London, where he would spend the next 15 years deploying an extraordinary array of legal arguments to resist extradition, while Kenya’s banking sector absorbed his losses and ordinary Kenyans paid the price of disrupted fuel markets.

    An arrest warrant was issued in June 2009. Interpol was activated. Kenya filed extradition proceedings with the British authorities in 2011.

    What followed was a masterclass in how wealth, access to expensive legal representation, and the structural complexity of international extradition law can be weaponised to delay accountability indefinitely.

    Devani argued variously that he would not receive a fair trial in Kenya, that Kenyan prisons were dangerous, that there was cholera at Kamiti Maximum Security Prison, and that his extradition would violate his human rights.

    He appealed at every available level of the British judicial system. The UK Court of Appeal ultimately dismissed all his challenges in the judgment Secretary of State for Home Department v. Yagnesh Mohanlal Devani (2020) EWCA Civ 612, delivered on May 7, 2020 by Lord Justice Underhill.

    The court found his claims about Kenyan prisons and trial conditions unsubstantiated. Even then, the actual extradition did not happen for nearly four more years.

    He was finally returned to Kenya on January 23, 2024, after more than 15 years as a fugitive.

    The country that had spent enormous diplomatic and legal capital extracting him from Britain expected, at minimum, a reckoning.

    THE PROSECUTION COLLAPSE THAT BEGGARED BELIEF

    What followed was not a reckoning. It was a farce that exposed the deep rot in Kenya’s accountability infrastructure with almost surgical precision.

    On his return, Devani was charged with four counts over the irregular sale of petroleum products at Kipevu, relating to a Sh1.5 billion jet fuel case, and released on bail of Sh1 million.

    In August 2024, the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission separately arrested him and charged him afresh with 11 counts in the Sh7.6 billion case, including two counts of fraudulent disposition of mortgaged goods, eight counts of conspiracy to defraud, and one count of obtaining by false pretences.

    He pleaded not guilty to all charges and was eventually freed on a Sh5 million cash bail after spending 13 days in remand at Industrial Area Prison.

    The charges were detailed and specific. Count one alleged that on September 5, 2008, as managing director of Triton Petroleum, he disposed of 13,054.85 cubic metres of diesel valued at US$10.2 million to Total Kenya Limited without the consent of Emirates National Oil Company, the mortgagee.

    Count two alleged the disposal of aviation fuel worth US$550,020 to the same company without authorisation. Counts three through ten alleged conspiracies to defraud Kenya Shell Limited, Engen Kenya Limited, GAPCO Kenya Limited, Hashi Empex Limited, Muloil Kenya Limited, and Emirates National Oil Company of sums totalling hundreds of millions of shillings, by fraudulently representing that Triton held stocks at Kipevu that it no longer owned.

    By October 2024, Anti-Corruption Magistrate Harrison Barasa had allowed Director of Public Prosecutions Renson Ingonga’s application to withdraw the entire case.

    The stated reasons were: the death of certain witnesses; the unwillingness of former Energy Minister Kiraitu Murungi, once described as the man who ordered the original investigation, to testify; and the inability to locate the original complainant. The magistrate found that the DPP and EACC could not be compelled to proceed when key witnesses had become uncooperative.

    The case that Kenya had spent 15 years and substantial diplomatic capital to prosecute collapsed in under a year of Devani’s return, without a single conviction, on the ground that witnesses who had been alive for the entire period of his fugitive existence were suddenly unavailable when the moment of reckoning actually arrived.

    Fifteen years in hiding. Fifteen years of diplomatic effort. Fifteen years of waiting. Collapsed in ten months. Without explanation.

    POLITICAL CONNECTIONS AND THE ARCHITECTURE OF IMPUNITY

    The Devani story is impossible to understand outside the context of his extraordinary political network. The Africog analysis noted explicitly that Triton’s past transactions with government, its ability to secure lucrative state contracts from the Moi era onward, and the presence of senior political figures at its corporate events all pointed to connections that extended deep into the Kenyan state.

    The company held the tender in partnership with Total Kenya to supply petroleum products to KenGen, the state power producer. It was considered a local champion in an industry historically dominated by multinationals.

    Forensic auditors noted that despite his company’s multi-billion-shilling operations, Triton maintained minimal records.

    The company’s cross-ownership structures, spreading assets across Triton Bulk Storage, Triton Gas Stations Limited, Triton Service Stations and Triton Network Solutions Limited, created a corporate maze that complicated any attempt to trace funds or hold a single entity accountable. This was not the structure of a businessman who expected to be investigated. It was the structure of a businessman who expected to be protected.

    When the scandal broke, the then-managing director of KPC was fired immediately. The chairman of the KPC board was removed shortly thereafter.

    Several KPC officials were charged with corruption.

    The managing director, the chairman, the board, and multiple line staff all faced consequences. The man who had bribed and conspired with them to steal 126 million litres of fuel, and who had then run to London, faced nothing for 16 years.

    THE PROPERTIES, THE ASSETS, AND THE RECEIVERSHIP GAMES

    Triton was placed under receivership in December 2008. Abdul Zahir Sheikh and Peter Kahii were appointed receiver and manager by KCB. The receivership, now entering its 18th year, has become a legal battleground in its own right.

    What is not disputed is the extraordinary breadth of assets that once existed in the Triton estate. Devani’s own petition before the High Court records that the receivers took full control of the company’s warehouses, vehicles, stocks, offices and even post office boxes.

    Triton operated service stations in Nairobi, Kisumu, Eldoret and Nakuru, as well as in Kampala, Uganda. Separate litigation has established that the Triton estate once included Karen Cross Road Mall, Lang’ata Road Arcade, Westland Plaza along Waiyaki Way, 60 acres of land in Karen, and over 20 other properties, most of them petrol stations.

    A deed of settlement signed between Triton, Devani and the receivers on March 16, 2009 referenced the Camelot property, to be sold for not less than Sh1.1 billion.

    KCB sued Devani for Sh2.7 billion. The bank also sued Triton for Sh2 billion. Courts ordered the disposal of various Triton assets to service debts. Devani was separately stopped from offering for sale shares or assets held in 19 other companies until KCB’s case was heard and determined.

    Now, in 2026, Devani argues that he has never been informed of how those assets were disposed of, what recoveries were made, what expenses were incurred during the receivership, or what remains of the company’s estate after 17 years.

    He frames this as a transparency and accountability issue, invoking the equitable jurisdiction of the courts to compel a trustee who has remained in possession of trust assets to render account.

    He wants a full forensic audit. He wants an independent inquiry into potential misconduct. He wants compensation.

    THE OBSCENITY OF THE CURRENT PETITION

    It is worth pausing to appreciate fully what Devani is asking for.

    A man who engineered the theft of 126 million litres of petroleum products, who conspired with state officials to falsify inventory records, who defrauded international banks of the equivalent of US$100 million, who fled the country on the eve of his arrest, who spent 15 years in London exhausting the British legal system with arguments about Kenyan prisons, and who watched the case against him collapse through witness attrition he may well have had some hand in creating, is now petitioning the Kenyan High Court, on an urgent certificate, to protect assets he claims were mishandled during the receivership his own fraud necessitated.

    He argues that shareholders have never been informed of the status of loan accounts, that assets have been disposed of without transparency, and that there has been no meaningful regulatory intervention despite repeated complaints.

    The Central Bank of Kenya, he argues, failed in its oversight role.

    The receivers failed in their statutory obligations.

    The lenders failed to account for assets under their control. Having destroyed the company, stolen its inventory, bankrupted its creditors, and evaded justice for nearly two decades, he is now positioning himself as the wronged party in a badly managed insolvency.

    The audacity of the argument would be almost admirable if it did not represent such a profound insult to every institution, every creditor, every worker, and every ordinary Kenyan citizen whose daily life was disrupted by fuel shortages that Devani’s greed directly caused.

    He has the temerity to call himself a shareholder seeking accountability. The rest of Kenya calls him something rather different.

    THE CITIZENS WHO PAID

    The Triton scandal is often discussed in the financial press as a corporate governance failure and a banking sector crisis.

    This framing, while accurate, systematically understates its human cost.

    When 126 million litres of fuel disappears from the national supply chain in a market as dependent on petroleum imports as Kenya’s, the consequences do not stay inside boardrooms and balance sheets.

    They spread into every sector of the economy, carried on every lorry that cannot refuel, every matatu that raises its fare, every generator that goes dry, every farmer whose produce cannot reach market.

    By early January 2009, fuel shortages were visible and reported across the country.

    Televisions and radio stations broadcast the queues. The termination of Triton’s supply contract with Total Kenya, and Total’s consequent inability to meet its obligations to KenGen, threatened to compound a fuel crisis with an electricity crisis at a moment when Kenya was already managing drought-related power pressures. The threat of a return to power rationing, with its cascading damage to manufacturing, services, and small businesses, was entirely real.

    KRA’s demand for Sh4 billion in unpaid taxes meant revenue that would otherwise have supported public services simply did not exist.

    The exposure of KPC, a wholly state-owned parastatal, to multi-billion-shilling lawsuits from defrauded international financiers meant that any damages awarded would ultimately be absorbed by the Kenyan public.

    The systemic damage to the banking sector’s confidence in collateral financing arrangements for petroleum imports had long-term effects on how those arrangements were structured and priced, with costs ultimately passed on to consumers.

    None of the ordinary Kenyans who queued at petrol stations in January 2009, who paid inflated transport costs, who sat in the dark during unscheduled power outages, who absorbed higher prices for goods whose supply chains ran on diesel, none of them have ever received any acknowledgement from Yagnesh Devani that his actions caused their hardship. Nor have they received compensation. Nor, it now appears, will they.

    A WARNING TO INVESTORS AND HOST COUNTRIES

    Devani spent his London years living in a house estimated to be worth Sh550 million. In 2007, at the peak of his fraudulent enterprise, he flew guests in first class from London and India to celebrate his wife’s 40th birthday in Nairobi.

    He chartered a private jet for an Indian performer. He brought hairdressers from London and the UAE. He gave each guest a Rolex watch. The entire event was estimated to cost Sh300 million.

    This was the lifestyle of a man whose business model depended on stealing from state infrastructure, corrupting public officials, and bankrupting international banks.

    The United Kingdom, which hosted Devani for 15 years and became the venue for his prolonged legal resistance to extradition, deserves to know the character of the man it sheltered.

    The elaborate proceedings in the British courts, the claims about prison conditions and fair trial rights, were not the principled stand of a man persecuted by an unjust state.

    They were the tactical deployment of a wealthy fugitive’s legal resources against the legitimate accountability claims of a country he had robbed.

    Any investor, business partner, or financial institution that is currently dealing with Devani, in whatever jurisdiction, should understand that they are dealing with a man whose fundamental business method, as documented in thousands of pages of forensic audit findings, criminal charge sheets, and court judgments, has been the systematic falsification of records, the corruption of public officials, the exploitation of regulatory gaps, and the strategic use of legal delay to avoid accountability.

    The receivership petition now before the Kenyan High Court is entirely consistent with that method. Its purpose is not justice. Its purpose is asset recovery.

    WHAT THE COURTS MUST DECIDE

    The High Court’s Commercial and Tax Division will on April 29 give further directions in Devani’s receivership petition.

    The respondents, KCB, the Eastern and Southern African Trade and Development Bank, the receiver managers, and the Central Bank of Kenya, have been directed to file their responses within seven days.

    There is a legitimate question embedded within Devani’s petition, entirely separate from the question of whether he deserves to benefit from the answer. Receiverships that run for 17 years without formal reporting to shareholders are a governance problem.

    The accountability obligations of receiver managers under Kenyan law are real, and a court is entitled to examine whether those obligations were met. These are questions the commercial courts have the capacity and the authority to address.

    But the Kenyan judiciary must be clear-eyed about the context in which these questions are being asked, by whom, and for what purpose.

    This petition is not a good-faith inquiry by a wronged shareholder.

    It is the latest manoeuvre in a 17-year campaign by the principal architect of one of Kenya’s largest corporate frauds to recover, preserve, or otherwise access assets that were pledged as collateral for debts his own fraud created.

    Every order it secures, every disclosure it compels, every forensic audit it initiates, will be scrutinised not merely for its compliance with receivership law but for what it ultimately delivers into Devani’s hands.

    There is also a broader accountability question that neither this petition nor the criminal case collapse has answered.

    What happened to the assets? Where did the Sh7.6 billion worth of stolen petroleum products ultimately go? Who, beyond Devani and his immediate co-conspirators, benefited from the scheme? These questions have never been fully answered in a court of competent jurisdiction, because the man who held the answers spent 16 years in Britain and his prosecution collapsed in under a year of his return.

    Kenya deserves those answers.

    The institutions that lost billions deserve them. The workers who lost their jobs when Triton collapsed deserve them.

    The ordinary citizens who paid through their fuel bills and their electricity tariffs and their transport costs for a scandal that enriched one man and his associates deserve them.

    Yagnesh Devani has returned to Kenya’s courts. He will not find the sympathy or the silence he found in London. Not this time.

  • City Lawyer Kimani Mwangi Charged With Stealing Client’s Money

    City Lawyer Kimani Mwangi Charged With Stealing Client’s Money

    The Director of Public Prosecution (DPP), Renson Ingonga, has opposed the release of city lawyer Paul Kimani Mwangi, who is charged with stealing Ksh. 7.59 million from a client and making an unauthorized Kenya Commercial Bank (KCB) credit entry.

    Mwangi appeared before Makadara Magistrate Wandia Nyamu and pleaded not guilty to all charges.
    According to the prosecution, Mwangi stole Ksh. 7.59 million from his client, Joseph Kimani Muchiri, between June 13, 2023, and March 4, 2025.

    The court was told that on October 11, 2024, Mwangi fraudulently made a KCB bank credit advice and KRA domestic payments slip for Ksh. 800,040.

    The slip purportedly indicated KRA income tax payments related to Muchiri’s purchase of property No. LR/8226/70.

    Further allegations suggest that Mwangi, on several occasions in 2024, made similar fraudulent bank credit entries in an attempt to deceive Muchiri and facilitate the purchase of the aforementioned property.

    In an affidavit filed by the investigating officer, Dennis Owino, the court heard that Mwangi stole Ksh. 7.59 million from his client.

    It was also revealed that Mwangi’s practicing certificate, number P.105/13315/17, was last renewed in 2023.

    The investigating officer also noted that Mwangi’s mobile phone was frequently unreachable, and he had moved from his known residential address to an undisclosed location.

    Efforts to contact Mwangi’s family members were unsuccessful, with the family stating that they could not reach him and did not know his whereabouts, raising concerns that he might be a flight risk.

    The affidavit opposing bail also indicated that Mwangi had closed his operational office at Post Bank House along Banda Street/Market Lane, 5th Floor, in Nairobi’s Central District in October 2024.

    The complainant, Muchiri, no longer has access to an office location where Mwangi could be contacted.

    The court further heard that, at the time of the alleged fraudulent transactions, Mwangi did not have an active operating license.

    Mwangi remains in custody pending further directions from the court.

  • The Kewota Racket: How Kenya’s Female Teachers Are Being Bled Dry

    The Kewota Racket: How Kenya’s Female Teachers Are Being Bled Dry

    On a bulletin board inside a school staffroom in Kiambu, a notice once urged women teachers to embrace their new welfare association. The Kenya Women Teachers Association, it promised, would be their financial lifeline, their professional shield, their collective voice.

    What nobody told those teachers was that by the time they looked at their payslips, Sh200 would already be gone, with or without their permission, transferred via the Teachers Service Commission straight into the accounts of an organisation they had never formally joined.

    That was 2019. Six years and approximately Sh1.4 billion later, Kenya Insights has reviewed internal documents, payroll records, and financial correspondence that paint a deeply troubling picture of how a government-recognised welfare body became, by all available evidence, a family business funded by some of Kenya’s most underpaid public servants.

    The documents show a payroll that reads less like a welfare association and more like a family reunion with a generous expense account.

    The Architecture of a Monthly Extraction

    The Kenya Women Teachers Association, registered in 2007 and formally structured over the years that followed, currently counts approximately 95,000 members across the country. Each member contributes Sh200 per month, a sum deducted directly from TSC payslips and transferred to the association.

    That means Kewota receives approximately Sh19 million every month, or roughly Sh228 million every year. It is not a small operation.

    The association’s stated mandate is unimpeachable in its ambition: financial empowerment, career development, mentorship, advocacy against gender-based violence, support for the girl child, and dignified exit from public service for women who have given their careers to the classroom.

    On paper, Kewota occupies a unique and necessary space in Kenya’s education sector. On the ground, the story documents now tell is something altogether different.

    Teachers across the country, from Taita Taveta to Kiambu to Kisumu, have been challenging the deductions for years.

    As far back as 2019, fifty-four women teachers from Gatundu went to court over what they described as deductions made without their knowledge or consent. In 2023, more than 171 female teachers from Taita Taveta petitioned their county senator to demand the deductions be stopped and investigated.

    Court filings reviewed by this publication show that some of those cases reached the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission, which confirmed the complaints had been received and entered into active investigation. Nothing visible has changed.

    What changed instead, documents suggest, is who got paid.

    A Payroll That Runs in the Family

    At the centre of the scandal is CEO Benta Oswago Opande, who has led Kewota since its formative years and built its public profile through press conferences on teacher mental health, advocacy against betting among educators, and lobbying at parliamentary committees.

    In public, Opande has presented herself as a fierce champion of women in the profession. In private, documents suggest she constructed a compensation structure of remarkable generosity, primarily directed at herself and those who share her bloodline.

    ALLEGED FAMILY PAYROLL BREAKDOWN

    Benta Oswago Opande Chief Executive Officer   Sh250,000 to Sh350,000/month

    Dan Oswago Son   Sh200,000/month

    Daughter (1) Staff   Sh200,000/month

    Daughter (2) Staff   Sh150,000/month

    Former husband Consultant   Sh100,000/month

    Sister Kisumu coordinator   Sh50,000/month

    Niece Kisumu office head   Sh40,000/month

    Brother Managing director   Sh40,000/month

    Source: Internal Kewota payroll documents reviewed by Kenya Insights

    The CEO’s family does not merely cluster in Nairobi. The nepotism, if the documents reflect reality, is geographically distributed with apparent intentionality. Her niece is placed at the head of the Kisumu office. Her sister coordinates activities from the same city. Her brother holds a managing director title in Kericho.

    The effect is that key regional outposts of the association, through which millions in membership fees flow, are staffed at senior levels by people whose primary qualification appears to be their surname.

    The web extends to the organisation’s second-most senior figure. National Treasurer Jacinta Ndegwa, who co-founded Kewota alongside Opande and has publicly defended the association against years of criticism, is herself reported to draw a monthly salary of approximately Sh270,000.

    Documents reviewed by Kenya Insights further indicate that additional payments were routed to Ndegwa through multiple bank accounts, a dispersal pattern that raises questions about transparency and tax compliance. Ndegwa’s relatives, including her daughter and nephews, also appear on the payroll, according to documents seen by this publication.

    Perhaps most extraordinary is what investigators found when they contacted some of the people listed as Kewota employees. Several individuals, when reached by reporters, reportedly said they had no knowledge of their employment at the organisation. Their names were on the payroll. Their salaries were, presumably, leaving the association’s accounts. They themselves were not aware they were working there.

    Cash, Ghosts, and a Parking Lot Near KICC

    The financial irregularities described in documents reviewed by Kenya Insights go beyond nepotism. They point to what appears to be a deliberate, multi-layered system for extracting cash from the organisation in ways designed to evade paper trails.

    One method involves the overpayment of Kewota staff. According to the documents, employees were at various points paid amounts in excess of their stated salaries. The surplus, rather than being recovered through normal payroll correction, was withdrawn in cash and routed elsewhere. Who received the cash, and for what purpose, is not clearly documented, which appears to be precisely the point.

    A second method, arguably more brazen, involved the fabrication of recruitment drives. Documents indicate that individuals at the association created fictitious membership campaigns, attaching made-up names of teachers to these drives, then used the invented activity to justify withdrawals from Kewota’s bank accounts. The phantom members never existed. The money did.

    Cash was reportedly handed over in a parking lot near the Kenya International Conference Centre. No record of the transaction was kept.

    The documents go further still. They allege that the CEO approved payments described as gestures of appreciation to at least one director at the Teachers Service Commission.

    In January 2024, a TSC director is alleged to have received Sh100,000. Critically, subsequent payments of this nature were reportedly restructured to be made entirely in cash, outside any banking system, to prevent the transactions from leaving a traceable record.

    One such handover, according to sources familiar with the matter, took place in a parking lot near the Kenya International Conference Centre in Nairobi. No bank statement records it. No Kewota receipt acknowledges it.

    If accurate, these allegations constitute something far more serious than internal mismanagement. The payment of money to TSC officials, the government agency that administers the very payroll deductions that fund Kewota, would represent a textbook instance of regulatory capture: the corrupting of the oversight relationship between a state body and the private entity it is supposed to supervise at arm’s length.

    It would explain, with uncomfortable neatness, why TSC has continued facilitating Kewota deductions even as court petitions, union complaints, and EACC referrals have piled up for years without resolution.

    The June 2024 Payments

    Among the most concrete findings in documents reviewed by Kenya Insights are transactions from June 2024. In that month alone, Opande reportedly received payments exceeding Sh900,000, dispersed across two separate bank accounts. The pattern of splitting payments across multiple accounts, rather than receiving a consolidated salary, is a commonly documented method for obscuring the true scale of compensation drawn from an organisation.

    In the same month, Treasurer Ndegwa is alleged to have received approximately Sh700,000 across multiple accounts.

    The combined sum extracted by the two most senior officials of a welfare association in a single month, according to documents, exceeds Sh1.6 million. That figure represents the equivalent of the monthly contributions of more than 8,000 ordinary teachers, women who trust that their Sh200 is building something for them.

    Documents also raise questions about office expenditure. Kewota reportedly pays rent for premises in Kisumu that are, in practice, used by separate businesses linked to the CEO. The association’s members, whose contributions fund that rent, would have no reason to know that the space serving as a Kewota office in the lakeside city apparently doubles as commercial space for enterprises connected to their chief executive.

    The Association Speaks

    In a separate statement issued through its national secretariat, the association described allegations of financial misconduct as malicious, defamatory, and part of a coordinated attack on its reputation.

    It vowed legal action against named individuals, including a blogger identified as Mr. Amunga, whom it accused of orchestrating the damaging narrative.

    The statement maintained that the organisation operates transparently, accountably, and fully within the law. It described itself as firm, lawful, and unshaken.

    Kenya Insights was unable to independently verify every specific figure in the documents reviewed. Some transactions cited in the material may be disputed by the organisation.

    What can be said with confidence is that the documents reviewed raise serious and specific questions about the governance of an organisation entrusted with hundreds of millions of shillings belonging to tens of thousands of women who are, by the nature of their profession, unlikely to be in a position to individually audit where their money goes.

    A Problem Years in the Making

    What is not in dispute is the history. Since 2019, when Kewota first raided TSC payslips before even officially launching as an organisation, teachers have been fighting to understand what was happening to their money. Former KNUT Secretary-General Wilson Sossion wrote to the DCI and the EACC that year, accusing TSC of loading automatic deductions in collusion with Kewota without teacher authorisation. Teachers in Taita Taveta, Kiambu, and other counties went to courts and regulatory agencies.

    The EACC confirmed it had opened investigations. The TSC defended itself in affidavits, arguing that teachers had the ability to cancel deductions through its online portal. The deductions continued.

    None of Kenya’s oversight bodies, not the EACC, not the DCI, not the TSC, not any parliamentary committee with jurisdiction over education or public welfare, has yet produced any public accounting of how Sh228 million a year in mandatory contributions from working women teachers has been governed, spent, or safeguarded. That silence has been expensive.

    Kenya’s oversight bodies have yet to produce any public accounting of how Sh228 million a year in mandatory contributions from working women teachers has been governed.

    The association was built on a genuine need.

    Women teachers in Kenya face unique professional pressures, financial vulnerabilities exacerbated by predatory lending, and career challenges that gender-neutral unions have historically handled inadequately. The founding logic of Kewota was sound. What the documents reviewed by Kenya Insights suggest is that the institution built to address those needs became, somewhere along the way, an instrument for addressing the financial needs of a much smaller group of people entirely.

    The DCI has not confirmed or denied any current investigation into Kewota’s internal finances. The TSC has not responded to questions about the nature of its relationship with the association or whether it has reviewed the payment allegations involving its director. The EACC has not issued any public finding on the years of complaints lodged by teachers.

    Meanwhile, on the first of every month, across Kenya, in classrooms from Turkana to Mombasa, Sh200 disappears from the payslips of 95,000 women who were told it was going to their welfare.