Tag: Boniface Mwangi

  • Boniface Mwangi Speaks On Why He Believes Governor Mutua Was Behind His Home’s Bombing And Kenyans Treating Him Like God

    Boniface Mwangi Speaks On Why He Believes Governor Mutua Was Behind His Home’s Bombing And Kenyans Treating Him Like God

    My family is afraid because of the bombing of my house. Y’know, no one comes to lay explosives in your house as a sign of greetings. They are not coming to say ‘hi’. People who walk around with bombs and guns don’t do that to hand out candies. They hand out bullets and bombs and death.

    So will I have to tear down the whole house, whose construction began in July 2020? That will be decided by structural engineers, but there’s one room that is kaput. There are three major cracks on the entire building. The assailants put the explosives in the drainage pipes, so, the kitchen is entirely cracked.

    The foundation of the house is very good, which is why not much damage was done. They were putting explosives underneath to crack the foundation. Once the foundation cracks, the house is gone. Also, there was some luck because not all the detonators went off. I don’t know how many didn’t blow up because when the police bomb squad came they told us to move away from the scene.

    And I wonder: what if the construction workers were sleeping in that house? Much as the house is incomplete, workers spend time there sometimes. It could have been worse.

    By the way, when Isaac, one of the workers, first called to report, I thought it was just a person who had had one too many reporting a petty theft. It was a holiday, you know. And I had just come from an Eric Wainaina concert.

    The farm (in Lukenya) is at quite a remote place, eight kilometres from the road. There isn’t much of a road there. It’s a very dusty, hidden place on top of a hill.

    At first I told Isaac, ‘Okay, we’ll talk tomorrow.’ It was until they told me the house had been bombed; that it was cracking, that I was jolted. They even sent me videos. That’s when I lost my mind and I uploaded a video online.

    You want to know why I suspect Machakos Governor Alfred Mutua had a hand in this? See, the governor has separated from Lillian Ng’ang’a. And Lillian’s story is not mine to tell. But the governor is suspected of doing things, or is trying to do some things, to Lillian and Juliani (the gospel artiste, whose real name is Julius Owino and who has publicly declared being in a relationship with the Lilian) — which were reported to the police.

    (Governor Mutua, through his lawyers, has denied any involvement in the explosives incident, accusing Mr Mwangi of tarnishing his reputation and demanding a retraction of social media posts made in reference to him).

    I know the governor knows I am building there (this is no proof of any wrongdoing). When they were still an item, Lillian visited the site with the governor’s security and chase cars. And he knows I’ve been there since 2018. It’s because since 2018 I’ve been tweeting about the road heading there.

    And what people should know is that I didn’t know Lillian yesterday. I have known her since 2004. I met Lillian through the late) Ann Kamoni, who was my classmate in journalism school. Ann used to be Raila Odinga’s photographer at some point, having previously worked at the Standard Group. She went to the same school as Lillian. As for Juliani, I’ve known him personally for 11 years. So, combined, I’ve known both of them for 28 years.

    And I can tell you that those two people are under a lot of pressure. The reason they don’t want to share all they are going through is that people are mocking them. And Lillian loved the governor; so she can’t go public about it. And it’s not my story to tell.

    Some people have been saying I’m defying the ‘bro code’ by sharing photos of a happy Lillian with Juliani; that I’m spiting Governor Mutua by sharing the photos. Anafeelishwa kwa nini, si waliwachana? Why do you feel bad when your ex is happy? What is a bro code, my friend? Does the bro code mean that you’re jealous of your ex when they’re happy?

    There are those saying the incident at my house was a sympathy-seeking expedition. Sympathy for what? Did I ask anyone for money? Have I asked anyone for money? I know (former Chief Justice) Willy Mutunga has done a public appeal as Willy Mutunga, not as me. But Willy Mutunga understands the struggle I’ve gone through to build that house.

    The reason the Directorate of Criminal Investigations sent a bomb squad to the farm was that there were explosives there. Now, listen: the only people who are trained in this country to use explosives are the Anti-Terrorism Police Unit, Recce Squad and the military. Your ordinary police officers don’t have those things. There is no way that attack was carried out by average citizens.

    This is yet another warning of death to me. I often joke that for me, death threats are like a change of weather; they just come and go. So, I hibernate for a while then come back.

    I’m not scared of death, but I’m scared of my children’s future should I die, because I believe they will be trolled and they’ll be told that I wished to die. I don’t wish to die. Ideally, I would love to be living my own life, enjoying it without being threatened.

    But why should I be the one feeling threatened and I’m not a criminal? Does that mean we have actually accepted that criminals have more power than good people? Are we admitting that criminal elements in this country have more power than people who do good?

    Man, I fought for Nairobi’s Lang’ata Primary School, whose land was about to be grabbed. I fought for Nakuru’s Naka Primary, where there were allegations of land grabbing. The land was worth Sh1.4 billion; it was not stolen. I’ve trained many activists in this country. I’ve helped make title deeds for all schools a policy for the government because of Lang’ata Primary School.

    I have done so much for this country. Why should I die young for saying the truth? (He’s 38). Are we saying that it’s okay for a father of three to die young for saying the truth? Why do you want to make me a martyr? I don’t want to be anybody’s ****ing martyr.

    But activism is in my blood and I am helping a lot of people with it. Do you know that I receive more than 100 messages on a typical day? Do you know that even police sometimes want me to help them push a cause or another? I have even got requests for help from some people at State House!

    So, you’ll find people asking for help here and there. It can be about rape, murder, abortion —name it. Numerous times, it takes just a phone call for people to get assistance. Like last year, during the lockdown, there was a lady who tried to do an illegal abortion. She was bleeding in the house and the boyfriend contacted me, saying she was in pain and there was nothing he could do. I called someone who took her to the hospital and ensured that she was cleaned up. There are many things that I actually help with that I don’t even put online.

    Sometimes a call comes from a tenant who has been told by the landlord that they are going to be kicked out without deposit. I call the landlord, I introduce myself, they get their money.

    But you see, I do these in my personal capacity. I don’t work for any organisation.

    So, I help a lot and my son has summed it up that people treat me like God: They deny I exist, until they need my help. That’s what my son says, because I have gone out with him at night to bail out people. Many Members of Parliament in this city call me when they have issues that require my intervention.

    I left Pawa 254, the organisation I founded, as I geared up to run for Starehe MP in 2017. But my wife, Njeri, still works there. So how do I make my money? Not by selling ugliness to foreigners as some people often say. I’m a photographer. I also teach. I’m teaching at the European University Institute.

    I quit politics a few months ago. I resigned from my position from Ukweli Party to be just a member in order to focus on my family. But that is not to say I will never vie for a position, even though I know for sure that I’m not running for any position in next year’s election.

    Also, I am fed up with the elective politics of this country because I’m a man of values and principles. I can’t go and buy popularity so I can get elected. Because if I bribe people to get elected, I’m going to become a thief. I don’t want to become a thief. I don’t want to become the people that I really, really despise.

    But I feel sorry for the people of Starehe. I feel so sorry for them, and Starehe is the story of Kenya. In the history of this country, this is the worst Parliament Kenya has ever had. We had better parliamentarians when we were a one-party State.

    The ‘Seven Bearded Sisters’ were in Parliament in the 1980s. They were Kanu MPs demanding answers from a Kanu president. Imagine today Jubilee members can’t challenge President Uhuru Kenyatta but in the ’80s Kanu MPs were challenging the president. Even under Mzee Jomo Kenyatta, the likes of Martin Shikuku and Waruru Kanja were challenging Mzee Kenyatta. And they were Kanu members!

    Nowadays, it’s who can dance better, or who has the best bling, or who has the biggest car, who gets elected. You are electing tongue tied people to go represent you and they have no idea what a policy is.

    When you are elected to go to Parliament, it’s not entertainment you’re going for. This thing of electing people for looks — slay queens and kings — shows that even progressively, the IQ of Kenyans has dipped very low.

    Proverbs 26: 11 says: ‘As a dog returns to its vomit, so a fool repeats its foolishness.’ Kenyans have a way of behaving like dogs. They keep on repeating the same foolishness over and over. We keep voting the same thugs, expecting different results.

    Kenyans, don’t be cowards. Read Revelation 21:8, which says: ‘But as for the cowardly, the faithless, the detestable, as for murderers, the sexually immoral, sorcerers, idolaters, and all liars, their portion will be in the lake that burns with fire and sulphur, which is the second death.’

    The Bible has put cowards together with murderers and the vile. Don’t fear. In my fearlessness, some people think I’m always this angry person. And I am actually angry. I have so much trauma within myself. I was a witness to the 2007/2008 post-election violence. I have been a witness to many police brutality cases. At The Standard I worked at the crime desk. I used to go and cover those police shootings.

    And then, I can see through the lies of politicians because I’ve covered them as a photojournalist, so we know some of their secrets. Then we see them lying to people every day. It makes me very angry. So, yes; I’m angry that my children are growing up in this country. Our children’s present has been stolen, their future is mortgaged. They are born into debt, and right now they can’t even exist.

    I’m angry that injustice is a way of life every day. Extra-judicial killings never get resolved and suspects are never apprehended.

    We must address political murders. Because if tomorrow I’m killed, it will be a political murder. And they will say ‘no stones will be left unturned’ but they’ll never turn any stone.

    Joanna Stutchbury, the Kiambu-based environmentalist, was murdered in July. The President even issued a statement. But have the murderers been arrested? No. That is a big problem that Kenya must address, because it means that people can decide that instead of reason, they will send assassins.

    I’ve gone through everything. I’ve been shot, I’ve been beaten. I still even have the wound from last week at Pension Towers in Nairobi. I have so many scars in my body. No one likes scars. Do you think I like being beaten?

    My parting shot would be the words of Francis Imbuga, a Kenyan playwright who died in 2012. He once wrote that when the madness of an entire nation disturbs a solitary mind, it is not enough to say the man is mad.

    I’m not mad. I just really, really deeply love this country. Let me tell you; the easiest person to get an asylum is me. I can leave this country. But activism comes from a place of compassion, empathy and love. We fight for a better Kenya because we love this country. If we really, really didn’t love this country, we would have joined the eating class. We wouldn’t really care.

    And I think the political class would like to push me out because they can’t stand my guts and they can’t stand the truth. But I don’t want to go. I want to be here. And I really don’t have a death wish. My family would never forgive me if I’m killed. They’ll be broken forever.

    And for those who don’t have a voter’s card, go get one. It’s still important to choose among the pigs the least-smelling one.

    Article first appeared on the DAILY NATION

  • ‘I Won’t Sue You But I Can Harm You’ A Threat Kirubi Gave Boniface Mwangi On A Story He Wrote On Him

    ‘I Won’t Sue You But I Can Harm You’ A Threat Kirubi Gave Boniface Mwangi On A Story He Wrote On Him

    By Boniface Mwangi

    In 2012-2013 PAWA 254 was running a website called Mavulture. We used to publish stories of powerful crooks. We did a story on Chris Kirubi and he requested for a meeting through a mutual friend. When we met, he threatened me, he said “You know l won’t sue you but l can harm you”. We created so many enemies by the stories we published, received so many threats, and we decided to fold the website. No regrets. Kenyans mistake truth for hate and love those who steal from them. Here is that Chris Kirubi’s story:

    Why Kirubi’s ‘midas’ touch grinds golden public investments to dust

    Flamboyant entrepreneur’s successful streak in private business magnifies failures at Kenatco and Uchumi, raising suspicions of large-scale sabotage
    To a generation of young Kenyans, Chris Kirubi is the quintessential self-made man: he is immensely wealthy and stylish, yet eschews the demeanour of a lady’s man stomping Kenya’s cocktail circuit with bevies of beauties in tow.

    This picture-perfect perception is enhanced by Kirubi’s alter-ego, DJ CK, which he adopts on his Capital FM music blitz.

    Kirubi’s growing stature in business was affirmed recently when he was ranked by the Forbes magazine as 31st richest and most influential man in Africa.

    Forbes said Kirubi struck it rich by buying small dilapidated residential and commercial real estates in Nairobi which he renovated and disposed off at a profit.

    This, the magazine went on, transformed his fortunes and made Kirubi a business mogul whose estimated worth is $300 million (Sh2.4b).
    Kirubi’s empire includes Nairobi’s International House, a 49 per cent stake in Haco Tiger Industries, as well as substantial stake at equity firm Centum and UAP Insurance – one of Kenya’s largest insurance companies – and construction firm Sandvik East Africa.

    He also owns the DHL franchise in Kenya, and Capital FM, one of Kenya’s most popular radio stations.

    After his Forbes listing, Kirubi subsequently told Drum magazine that he really did not know how much he was worth as numbers did not bother him; he was more concerned with what money can do.
    Such philosophical contemplations contradict the 70-year-old bachelor who struts around the city in Italian designer suits with girls young enough to be his grandchildren.

    “They know me personally,” Kirubi says of his tailors, which is what every Kenyan would say of their tailor.

    While quite a few would say they know Kirubi personally, much fewer know how he made his money – beyond the official narrative that implies he picked cash with the ease of a farmer harvesting mango from a tree.

    That may be so, only that Kenyans do not know which specific tree he did the harvesting. What’s evident is that Kirubi’s big break came during his stint as manager with Kenya National Transport Company (Kenatco). This was a state parastatal established in the 1970s to offer logistical solutions to Kenya and the neighbouring countries of Uganda, Congo Sudan, Burundi and Rwanda.

    Kenatco was, however, transformed into a smuggling network by a group of politically-connected individuals in President Jomo Kenyatta’s inner circle.

    The period between 1975 and 1976 provided a peak in smuggling after coffee market prices were spiked by frost that affected Brazil coffee. Smuggling hit fever-pitch as Kenyans jostled for coffee beans in the region – with Kenatco transport network becoming the centrepiece of the illegal operations.
    Kirubi is alleged to have emerged from Kenatco a millionaire although the reason that he attracted attention was not the alleged financial transformation but the foundering of the parastatal.

    Kenatco was placed under receivership in February 1996, after it failed to service its loans and meet other financial obligations due to mismanagement. The genesis of its problems was a Sh22.4m loan it was advanced by Industrial and Commercial Development Corporation (ICDC), ironically, also owned by the State.

    The loan was meant buy new vehicles to revitalise Kenatco’s fleet but by June 2008 the debt had skyrocketed to Sh368 million, despite the struggling company having paid back Sh26.3m. It was against this background that ICDC appointed a receiver manager to run the company.

    Kenatco, which once held great promise, has now made history as the only state owned corporation which has been under receivership for a record 16 years, exposing it to plunder and mismanagement.
    At one point, Parliament was told how some of its expensive Mercedes limousines were sold for a paltry Sh500. Kirubi was mentioned as one of the managers who had contributed in running down the company.

    An outraged David Musila said Parliament in June 2006: “Kirubi has been bragging how rich he is. He was responsible for the collapse of Kenatco but nothing happened to him. He was indeed given Uchumi to manage which [has now] faced similar problems.”

    Interestingly, Kirubi was to become a major shareholder of ICDC when the Government released some of its shareholding, indirectly placing him at the helm of Kenatco, a company whose collapse he had earlier been accused of overseeing.

    Uchumi Supermarket’s journey to the dogs followed a similar route. It was incorporated as a private company on December 17, 1975. Upon its incorporation, 51.5 per cent of the stake went to the Government through 24.9 per cent shareholding by Industrial and Commercial Development Corporation Investment (ICDCI), Kenya Wine Agencies Ltd (KWAL) 18.8 per cent and ICDC, 7.8 per cent.

    At the peak of its growth, Uchumi had 28 branches scattered across the country, employing more than 1,000 Kenyans. It became a public company in 1992 when it was listed at the Nairobi Stock Exchange.

    When its fortunes dwindled despite the Government and the public injecting more revenue, Kirubi and 13 other senior employees of the supermarket were ultimately charged with defrauding the supermarket.

    Like common criminals, Kirubi and others were charged before resident magistrate Stella Muketi on June 10, 2008.

    They were accused of selling a piece of land on Aga Khan Walk in Nairobi belonging to Uchumi Supermarket at a paltry Sh147 million, although its true value was more than Sh400 million. Kirubi and others allegedly sold the land to Allgate Company.

    After the sale, Uchumi supermarket was then forced to pay Sh1.7m monthly rent to the new landlord. Kirubi was further accused of breaching public trust during his tenure at Uchumi as board chairman.

    Uchumi supermarket has since been revived by a team led by Jonathan Ciano although Kirubi has been struggling to clear his name over the Uchumi saga.

    Kirubi’s private enterprise, however, continues to flourish, as he told the Drum magazine.

    ”If you are wondering in what ways Kirubi could possibly be a part of your life, they are many. Haco Tiger Industries give you cocoa butter in its many applicable glories. You write using Bic pen, use his bleach on your fabrics, rinse your clothes in his fabric softener before hanging them out to dry – using his pegs.

    “You must have eaten his company’s rice, taken a mouthful of his oats, and shaved using his razors if you live in South Africa because, well, he is part of a company that is listed on the Jo’burg Stock Exchange that manufactures razors.”

    One wishes Kirubi was as forthcoming about his journey to the top, and clarify whether the trail of failures in his public tour of duty were inadvertent mistakes that forged his business acumen, or deliberate sabotage calculated at lining the pockets of his Italian suits.

    Works cited

    Nation, June 11,2008
    The Standard February 10,2010
    Nation, June 7,2008
    Kenya Times, August 10, 2006
    Nation, October 10, 2008
    East Africa, May 26,2008
    The Hansard (Kenya National assembly Records) November 26,2008
    The Hansard( Kenya National assembly Records) June 13, 2006
    Source:www.forbes.com

  • Boniface Mwangi: Ahmednasir Is NIS Lawyer And Uses Information For Blackmailing

    Boniface Mwangi: Ahmednasir Is NIS Lawyer And Uses Information For Blackmailing

    The photographer who doubles as Human Rights activist and the PAWA254 founder Boniface Mwangi has slammed Senior Counsel Ahmednasir Abdullahi for supporting and offering legal service to city land grabbers. In 2017, the activist exchanged words with the lawyer over the same issue. Here is a tweet Boni posted on 4th April 2017.

    Earlier today, Boni tweeted that the court has allowed them to reclaim Racecourse Primary School land which had allegedly been grabbed by the Ahmednasir’s client.

    Boni went ahead and invited SC for a Team Courage they demolish the structures his land grabbing client erected.

    In his defence, Senior Counsel Ahmednasir Abdullahi said that the case was settled in court and Boni with his Team Extortion are busy going to evict non-existing developers. He also said Boni is a “Greedy Boy”

    The senior counsel has also been accused of allegedly using privileged information from those he deals with directly and illegally shares the Intel with the State agencies, like NIS, if the deal goes south.

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Boniface Mwangi: Kibra Residents, This Is Mariga For You

    Boniface Mwangi: Kibra Residents, This Is Mariga For You

    Pawa254 Founder and street activist Boniface Mwangi has released what KOT terms as the most factual video about Ruto’s Kibra candidate Mc Donald Mariga.

    Well, as much as Kenyans have allowed themselves to be an audience for imbecility, the result and consequences of this slap in HD or as Aristotle expressed it “Tolerance and apathy are the last virtues of a dying society.

    In yet another political lunacy on the people of Kibra, majority of whom- according to multiple surveys, are living below the poverty line, Ruto’s Man McDonald Mariga on Sunday, November 3, 2019, promised to follow in the area’s former Member of Parliament(MP) the late Ken Okoth to fight for the legalization of marijuana.

    “Mnataka tuongelee mambo ya Shada. Shada mmeskia inacure cancer. Hio lazima tuipush. Hatutaki mambo ya shada ya kupiga watu. Muniingize bunge tuskume mambo ya shada”

    This is not new to the ears of Kenyans and here is a video of the home and genesis of Mariga’s success and his hard work on ”giving back all to his community”. The video was recorded by Boniface Mwangi and shared on his Twitter account.

    Well, Mariga or as I call him since he joined Jubilee via backdoor MaRIGa, also has his fans who expressed their contrary opinion about this. Here are sample tweets of Ruto’s candidate supporters.

    https://twitter.com/kibuchimzito/status/1191672167131422722?s=19

    https://twitter.com/Turkana_Oil/status/1191679261431750656?s=19

    https://twitter.com/Kenribs/status/1191808385924190214?s=19

    To me, MaRIGa’s fans don’t see the sense in what Boni is saying particularly about Kenyan politics. Every politician uses Kenyans who foolishly give them time and audience to project themselves and their own agenda without, allow me to cuss on my opinion—giving a fuck— about what is happening or happens to the ordinary citizen.

    Republics decline into democracies that later generate despotism, this is the effects of trying to make unequal thing equal my fellow Kenyans.

     

     

  • I Will Finish You; Boniface Mwangi Refuses To Apologize To Ruto Over Killing Juma Remarks Dares Him To Sue

    I Will Finish You; Boniface Mwangi Refuses To Apologize To Ruto Over Killing Juma Remarks Dares Him To Sue

    Battle of Titans seems to be lined up as the journalist and human rights activist Boniface Mwangi declined to apologize and retract a tweet aimed at the DP Ruto. Through his lawyer Kilukumi, Ruto had given Mwangi a grace period to retract and apologize for a tweet in which he accused and warned the DP against killing him the same way he did to the Spain businessman Jacob Juma who was murdered in a suspected State execution.

    Before his execution, Jacob Juma had transformed into an anti-corruption crusader who vehemently insisted and accused the DP of being a corrupt figure and pointed fingers at him for plotting to execute him over his vocal stand against him. It will be interesting to watch of the furious DP who attacked Mwangi in a TV interview as a drunkard will go ahead with the lawsuit given stakes that it holds or will chicken out.

    screenshot_2016-10-05-14-24-31-1 screenshot_2016-10-05-14-24-23-1
    Reacting to demands by Ruto to retract tweet and apologize, Mwangi has dared the DP to go ahead with filing a lawsuit so he can find an opportunity to defend himself in Kenyan court over his involvement in PEV which he didn’t get a chance to defend himself since the case was terminated with prosecution citing incorporation from the State and interference with the witnesses. Yebei, a key witness in Ruto’s case, has been adversely mentioned in this angle.screenshot_2016-09-29-07-35-45-1mwangi1-680x365

    Mwangi has dared to go ahead with the intended lawsuit so he can defend himself against allegations in him that were publicly made by the slain businessman on plotting to kill him. In a cracking punchline through his lawyer Gitobu Imanyara, Mwangi maintains Ruto is a public servant who should stand harsh criticism going further to say the DP has no reputation to protect as the public portrays him as a corrupt and filthy figure. How this case goes we can only catch a breath and watch

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