Tag: Kenya opposition

  • Why the April 21 Flopped Protests Expose Kenya’s Rudderless Opposition

    Why the April 21 Flopped Protests Expose Kenya’s Rudderless Opposition

    Kenya’s opposition pulled its best stunt yet on April 21, 2026, and the country barely blinked. The Linda Mwanachi-driven protests that were supposed to shake Kenya and rattle State House turned into a damp squib of embarrassing proportions.

    Kenyans, increasingly wise to the tricks of a rudderless opposition brigade, stayed home, went to work, and carried on with their lives.

    The flopped protests did not just fail—they delivered a loud, unmistakable verdict. President William Ruto is delivering, and most Kenyans now see through the noise.

    Why the April 21 Flopped Protests Expose Kenya's Rudderless Opposition
    President Ruto launches the Rironi-Mau Summit road project, one of many transformative developments his clueless opponents ignore while staging failed protests with zero alternative plans for Kenya. [Photo: Courtesy]

    The Flopped Protests Revealed an Opposition Running on Rage, Not Ideas

    Let us call this what it is. The Linda Mwanachi movement, propped up by ODM rebels and political opportunists, did not take to the streets because they had a plan for Kenya. They took to the streets — or tried to — because disruption is the only tool left in their shrinking toolkit. The flopped protests on April 21 were not a movement. They were a performance, and Kenyans refused to buy a ticket.

    At the centre of this theatre stands Siaya Governor James Orengo, a man whose own county continues to underperform on basic service delivery while he dedicates his energy to organizing street demonstrations in Nairobi. Then there is Nairobi Senator Edwin Sifuna, young enough to know better, yet choosing political grandstanding over the issue-based politics that his generation deserves. These are the faces of Linda Mwanachi—not reformers, not visionaries, just politicians using public anger as fuel for personal relevance.

    The critical question that neither Orengo nor Sifuna has answered remains this: What is your alternative plan for Kenya? What specific policies do you propose to replace what Ruto is doing? The silence is deafening.

    Protesting Fuel Prices Without Understanding Global Realities Is Political Dishonesty

    The trigger for these flopped protests was the fuel price increase announced by the Energy and Petroleum Regulatory Authority on April 14, 2026. EPRA set retail prices at Ksh 197.60 for super petrol, Ksh 196.63 for diesel, and Ksh 152.78 for kerosene, effective from April 15 to May 14, citing tax components and recent legislative amendments in the petroleum sector.

    Deputy President Kithure Kindiki addressed this directly while speaking in Tharaka Nithi on April 18. He pointed squarely at the Middle East crisis pitting Iran against the United States and Israel as the real driver of disruptions in global oil supply. Insecurity at the Strait of Hormuz — one of the world’s most critical oil shipping routes — has pushed fuel prices upward across the globe, not just in Kenya.

    “Going to the streets for protests won’t be a solution,” Kindiki said. “Even if Kenyans were to go to the streets to protest, at the end of the day the prices would still be high.” He reminded Kenyans that when opposition figures led protests over maize flour prices in 2023, the prices never fell during the demonstrations. They only dropped after the government deployed targeted policies to regulate them. The same logic applies to fuel. Street rage does not move oil tankers through safer routes.

    Organizing protests over a global commodity pricing crisis caused by geopolitical instability is not activism. It is political dishonesty dressed up as public concern. The opposition knows this. They simply hope Kenyans do not.

    Gachagua Cheers From the Couch While Asking Others to Risk the Streets

    Former DP Rigathi Gachagua loudly cheers protests from his couch, blesses Gen Z to risk the streets, and then conveniently stays indoors on the material day with his family. [Photo: Courtesy]

    Perhaps the most revealing subplot of the flopped protests saga involves former Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua. Impeached, sidelined, and politically wounded, Gachagua has thrown his energy into encouraging Kenyans—particularly from his Kikuyu extraction—to pour onto the streets in large numbers. He offered his “blessings” to Gen Z demonstrators during a K24 TV interview on April 20, urging security chiefs to avoid excessive force.

    What Gachagua conspicuously did not do was step onto those streets himself. Neither did his family, nor did Orengo’s and Sifuna’s. The pattern is consistent across the entire planless opposition brigade—they ignite the fire and watch others risk the burns.

    They live-tweet demonstrations from safe, air-conditioned rooms while asking young Kenyans to brave batons and tear gas for a cause the opposition itself cannot define with any policy coherence. This is not leadership. It is manipulation. And more Kenyans are recognizing it for exactly what it is.

    Three Days of Planned June Protests Are Already Built on Nothing

    The opposition is now touting a three-day protest programme scheduled from June 24 to 26, 2026. If April 21 is any indication, Kenyans should expect more failed protests. The June plan carries the same foundational weakness — it is built on manufactured outrage, not on any concrete policy alternative that the opposition is willing to put before the public.

    President Ruto has spread major infrastructure and development projects across the country. Roads, affordable housing units, healthcare programmes, and agricultural interventions are moving. Are these perfect? No government project is. But they represent deliberate, documented effort.

    If the opposition believes these programmes are misguided, the democratic avenue available to them is issue-based politics—detailed policy critiques, alternative budget proposals, and credible manifestos. What Kenyans do not need is a cycle of rage-bait demonstrations designed more to generate political heat than to solve national problems.

    Kenya is not short of challenges. But it is also not short of progress under the current administration. The opposition’s job—if it is serious about governance—is to engage that progress honestly, challenge it on merit, and present something better. Until Orengo, Sifuna, Gachagua, and the rest of the Linda Mwanachi brigade do that hard work, their flopped protests will keep flopping. And Kenyans will keep walking past.

  • Morara Warns: 2027 Opposition Candidate Will Be “Worse Than Ruto”

    Morara Warns: 2027 Opposition Candidate Will Be “Worse Than Ruto”

    Political activist Morara Kebaso has issued a scathing critique of Kenya’s opposition politics, warning that the country’s entrenched tribal coalitions will produce a 2027 presidential candidate who could prove even more detrimental than the current administration.

    Writing on his social media platforms, Morara expressed vindication over his earlier predictions about the opposition’s candidate selection process, particularly in light of recent declarations by former Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua positioning himself as the frontrunner for the opposition ticket.

    “I told you that the choice of the opposition flag bearer will be based on tribal numbers and money. The end result will be a presidential candidate who is worse than Ruto,” Morara stated, referencing criticism he had previously faced for raising these concerns.

    The activist’s comments come as opposition figures including Gachagua, Wiper leader Kalonzo Musyoka, NARC Kenya’s Martha Karua, and others jockey for position ahead of the 2027 polls. Gachagua recently declared himself the leading contender during a diaspora engagement in Boston, citing his influence in the Mt. Kenya region as a key asset.

    Morara’s analysis centers on what he views as the fundamental flaw in Kenya’s political landscape: the persistence of ethnic-based voting patterns that he argues will hand President William Ruto an easy victory in 2027.

    “As long as the 2027 presidential race is organized around tribal coalitions, William Ruto will win that election very fast,” he warned, suggesting that the opposition’s reliance on traditional ethnic arithmetic could prove counterproductive.

    The activist painted a stark picture of Kenya’s political culture, challenging voters who support leaders based solely on shared ethnicity despite records of corruption or poor governance.

    He specifically cited former President Uhuru Kenyatta’s controversial tenure, alleging massive financial impropriety while questioning why some Kenyans continue to celebrate him based on tribal affiliation.

    Similarly, Morara criticized voters who support Ruto purely on ethnic grounds or due to influence from regional leaders like ANC’s Musalia Mudavadi, arguing that such loyalty transcends rational assessment of leadership performance.

    “Change in Kenya will only happen the day we rise above our tribes,” Morara declared, positioning himself as an advocate for issue-based rather than identity-based politics.

    The activist’s message reflects growing frustration among some Kenyans with what they perceive as the cyclical nature of the country’s politics, where the same patterns of ethnic mobilization repeat across election cycles regardless of candidates’ track records or policy platforms.

    His warnings come at a critical juncture as opposition parties work toward forming coalitions for 2027, with discussions around the “Wantam” unity framework that Gachagua referenced during his U.S. tour.

    However, Morara’s intervention suggests that even unified opposition efforts may be insufficient if they remain anchored in traditional tribal calculations.

    The activist concluded with a pointed message to Kenyans struggling with unemployment and economic hardship, arguing that those who continue to vote along ethnic lines bear responsibility for their circumstances.

    Whether Morara’s diagnosis resonates with voters ahead of 2027 remains to be seen, but his critique highlights the ongoing tension between calls for transformational politics and the enduring influence of ethnic considerations in Kenyan elections.

    As the opposition shapes its strategy for challenging Ruto’s re-election bid, Morara’s warnings serve as a reminder of the broader structural challenges facing Kenya’s democratic evolution beyond mere changes in leadership.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

  • Opposition Vows To Take Ruto to ICC Over Extrajudicial Killings, Abductions and Links to Sudan Militia

    Opposition Vows To Take Ruto to ICC Over Extrajudicial Killings, Abductions and Links to Sudan Militia

    Kenya’s United Opposition coalition has announced plans to file a case against President William Ruto at the International Criminal Court, accusing his administration of orchestrating extrajudicial killings, deploying rogue police units, and forming illegal alliances with militia groups reminiscent of Haiti’s death squads.

    The opposition’s bombshell announcement comes amid escalating tensions following a series of violent incidents during recent protests, including the controversial shooting of 22-year-old street vendor Boniface Kariuki by a masked police officer on June 17, 2025.

    The current crisis was triggered by the death of blogger Albert Ojwang in police custody on June 8, 2025. Initially reported as a suicide by authorities, an independent autopsy revealed that Ojwang died from physical assault, directly contradicting the official police account and sparking widespread public anger.

    The revelation has intensified scrutiny of Kenya’s law enforcement agencies and their handling of civilians, with activists and opposition leaders demanding accountability for what they describe as a pattern of state-sponsored violence.

    ## Graphic Police Shooting Captured on Video

    The situation reached a boiling point during protests on June 17, when Boniface Kariuki was shot in the head at close range by a masked police officer. The incident, captured on video by an Associated Press photographer, has since gone viral and intensified public outrage against police brutality.

    The 22-year-old Kariuki, a hawker like his father, was holding a packet of face masks and is believed to have been caught up in a confrontation with two officers in Nairobi as hundreds of protesters clashed with police. One officer, who had concealed his face with a mask, shot him in the head, according to reports.

    Kariuki remains in critical condition at Kenyatta National Hospital, where he has undergone surgery. His father has demanded accountability for the officer involved, while the National Police Service has since suspended two officers in connection with the shooting.

    Opposition’s Sweeping Accusations

    In a strongly worded joint statement released on Wednesday, June 18, the United Opposition coalition, led by prominent figures including Wiper Party leader Kalonzo Musyoka, former Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua, Martha Karua, Eugene Wamalwa, and Justin Muturi, outlined serious allegations against the Ruto administration.

    The opposition has accused the government of:

    State-Sponsored Violence: The coalition claims the National Police Service has been transformed into “judge, jury, and executioner” under what they describe as a “paranoid and repressive regime.”

    Militia Collaboration: Perhaps most controversially, the opposition alleges that police are working in coordination with militia groups similar to Haiti’s armed gangs to violently suppress protests and dissent.

    International Arms Trafficking: The coalition has made explosive claims linking firearms used by Kenyan police to weapons allegedly supplied by the Ruto government to Sudan’s Rapid Support Forces (RSF) militia.

    Haiti Connection: The opposition suggests that Kenya’s leadership of the Haiti Multinational Security Support Mission was not a peacekeeping effort but rather “a benchmarking trip by Ruto on the use of militia to terrorize a nation on taxpayers’ money.”

    Evidence Collection for ICC Case

    The United Opposition has revealed that it has been systematically collecting evidence to present to the International Criminal Court, seeking to have President Ruto held accountable for alleged crimes against humanity.

    “The United Opposition has announced plans to collect evidence and submit it to the International Criminal Court (ICC), urging the prosecutor to investigate what they describe as crimes against humanity committed by the Kenyan government,” the coalition stated.

    The opposition argues that the regime’s actions contravene both Kenya’s 2010 Constitution and international laws, including the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, which Kenya has signed and ratified.

    This is not the first time President Ruto has faced potential ICC scrutiny.

    He previously faced charges at the ICC related to Kenya’s 2007-2008 post-election violence, when he served as a government minister.

    However, those charges were ultimately dropped in 2016 after key witnesses withdrew their testimony or died under mysterious circumstances.

    The opposition’s current push comes against a backdrop of what human rights organizations describe as ongoing concerns about extrajudicial killings and police brutality in Kenya.

    As in 2024, Kenya also experienced protests in 2023 in response to tax proposals in the Finance Bill 2023. President Ruto signed the 2023 bill into law despite a parliamentary report showing more than 90 percent of Kenyans opposed it, according to Human Rights Watch.

    The Ruto administration has not yet issued a comprehensive response to the opposition’s allegations.

    However, the National Police Service has taken action in the Kariuki case, suspending the two officers involved and launching an investigation.

    The dramatic nature of the allegations, particularly those linking the Kenyan government to international arms trafficking and militia collaboration, is likely to draw significant international attention and scrutiny.

    The incidents have sparked widespread condemnation from civil society organizations, religious groups, and ordinary Kenyans. The Catholic Church has declared a 14-day prayer session following the Kariuki shooting, while various human rights organizations have called for independent investigations into police conduct.

    Demonstrations against police violence erupt after 31-year-old Albert Ojwang dies in custody, according to Al Jazeera, highlighting the sustained nature of public anger over alleged police brutality.

    Despite the gravity of their accusations, the opposition has called on Kenyans to remain united and unafraid. “The will of the people shall prevail, and the courage of Albert Ojwang and countless others will not be in vain. We stand united, resolute, and unafraid,” their statement concluded.

    The coalition has asserted that “no regime can sustain itself on bullets and lies,” positioning their ICC petition as both a legal strategy and a broader call for democratic accountability.

    The opposition’s promise to file an ICC case represents a significant escalation in Kenya’s political tensions.

    The success of such a case would depend heavily on the quality and credibility of evidence collected, as well as the ICC prosecutor’s assessment of whether the allegations meet the threshold for crimes against humanity.

    Meanwhile, the immediate focus remains on the ongoing investigations into the deaths of Albert Ojwang and the shooting of Boniface Kariuki, both of which have become symbols of broader concerns about police accountability and human rights in Kenya.

    The international community will likely watch closely as these events unfold, particularly given Kenya’s important role in regional security and its leadership of international peacekeeping missions, including the controversial Haiti deployment that the opposition has now called into question.