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4ingaz
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4ingaz
@TheOpemo
♍ | Global Ideologies - African Principles | Take your time | Life is short act promptly | ♠ | ✌
Beigetreten Mart 2010
1.6K Folgt1.1K Follower
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We’ve received many requests about the new Bills signed by President William Ruto, especially on Cybercrime act and privatisation.
We did a good breakdown in the thread below.
Moe@moneyacademyKE
President Ruto has signed 8 Bills into law, including key ones that affect digital safety, crypto trade, air travel, and government operations. Here’s a breakdown of the signed Bills. Thread below:
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Deeply saddened by the passing of my dear friend and former Prime Minister of Kenya, Mr. Raila Odinga. He was a towering statesman and a cherished friend of India. I had the privilege of knowing him closely since my days as Chief Minister of Gujarat and our association continued over the years. He had a special affection for India, our culture, values and ancient wisdom. This was reflected in his efforts to strengthen India-Kenya ties. He particularly admired Ayurveda and traditional medicine systems of India, having witnessed their positive impact on his daughter's health. I extend my deepest condolences to his family, friends and to the people of Kenya in this hour of grief.

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The deeply alarming, and utterly reprehensible remarks attributed to Governor Mutahi Kahiga of Nyeri County—specifically the claim, "God killed Raila, for Kikuyus to survive," and his assertion that development was unfairly channeled to Nyanza—demand immediate and unequivocal censure from all responsible quarters.
These statements are not merely unfortunate; they constitute a profound betrayal of the non-negotiable principles of national unity, responsible governance, and inter-ethnic harmony that every leader is sworn to uphold.
For a leader holding the high office of Governor to invoke divine intervention, death, and ethnic survival in a single political pronouncement is an act of egregious moral and political recklessness.
The suggestion that development is only deserved by one community, or that God acts as a partisan agent rewarding one tribe while eliminating a political opponent, is the very definition of hate speech and divisive rhetoric.
It weaponises tribal prejudice, desecrates the sanctity of political discourse, and brazenly ignores the wounds of Kenya’s history, which are scarred by ethnic manipulation.
Governor Kahiga must be roundly admonished for using his platform to incite hostility.
His office carries the solemn mandate of unifying people across all divides, not of planting seeds of resentment and division.
His comments are an immediate threat to the peace and cohesion of the nation and undermine the constitutional commitment to equality and non-discrimination.
I caution all political leaders in Kenya, irrespective of their affiliation or ambition, against the insidious and destructive temptation of tribal rhetoric.
The future of this country cannot and must not be built upon the quicksand of ethnic hatred.
Political competition must remain firmly focused on ideas, policies, and tangible development agendas—not on manufacturing discord between communities through dangerous, inflammatory language.
Leaders have a moral obligation to serve as symbols of national cohesion.
Let this be a firm warning: those who choose the path of division in the pursuit of power will not only be judged harshly by the electorate but will also be held responsible for any instability their careless words ignite.
Governor Kahiga should immediately and sincerely retract and apologise for these malicious and irresponsible remarks.
We call upon all state and non-state actors to monitor and actively discourage such corrosive talk.
Kenya belongs to all its citizens, and our survival is intrinsically linked, not divinely segmented.
Leaders must rise above petty tribalism and commit to fostering a truly unified and peaceful republic where progress is inclusive, and dignity is universal for every Kenyan, regardless of their ethnic origin.
#SiMimiNiSisi


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@larryjones No way ,😹😹😹😹😹😹😹😹😹 I always assumed these were jokes. Damn innit different .
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This is epic pure talent. 🔥💯👌🔥🔥
This is amazing 🙌🙌
"..... Mbaya zaidi walimadwa na taifa lao 💔💔"
#RutoMustResignNow
#RutoMustGoNow
#RutoMustGo
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@alexmwanzo @Muriuki04 Aleki...best workshop to improve body works and being works for a Nissan Note? Trying to get the hustle cars proper after disappointing garages
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About a year ago i bought a golf (black one)
The idea was to build a golf gti big turbo
When i brought it home @Muriuki04 tempted me to atleast start it before swapping (big mistake) the car started fixed a few things and ive been dailing the car for morw than a year.
The dream for a golf gti stopped
This year on 23rd may i bought a gti shell
This thread will be interesting coz i will include prices and my parts guys


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Kenyans pay attention; Wahala is coming
In April 2021, the Kenyan Government signed a three-year, $2.34b loan with the International Monetary Fund (IMF)
The loan enabled Kenya to draw on its Special Drawing Rights (SDR), but the loan came with three conditions (or "conditionalities" as the IMF calls it)
1. Implementation of national tax policy,
2. Scrapping subsidies, including Fuel subsidies
3. Kenya Power's profitability
Did Ruto address these conditions while campaigning? He was sworn in August 2022
On June 11th 2024, Kenya agreed with the International Monetary Fund to "pave the way" for the disbursement of about $976m.
Conditions for that $976m? "adjust its 2024/25 budget to include more revenue-raising measures," aka 2024 Finance Bill
Based on the projected IMF inflow, Kenya borrowed a $1.5b fresh Eurobond loan at 9.75%. Where is the $1.5b going? To repay an earlier Eurobond loan of $500m due very soon.
I will not lie; this looks like a fiscal mess. Kenya needs the IMF loan, and the IMF requires the 2024 Finance Act. Without the IMF loan, can Kenya repay $500m? Comfortably?
Hmm, hii ni ngumu

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You will never convince our generation that you can ever be trusted, ever again. When young people marched patriotically, wearing Kenyan flags on their backs and raising their voices, you responded with bullets and death. And NOW you have supposedly ‘heard’ and want dialogue? For 20 months you have been speaking, it’s our time now.
No more commissions of enquiry, no more multisectoral taskforces, no more reports, no more diverting our attention. If you have heard us, then no more talking—just act. We want to wake up in the morning with budget allocations reworked, with the Appropriations Bill overhauled, your MPs sacked, your Cabinet Secretaries sacked, the wheels of Constitutional amendments to begin turning, and your resignation on Gen-Z's desk for them to decide whether to accept.
This will go down in history, and we are no longer in an era where history can be manipulated. #RutoMustGo
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Someone asked me "Kennar what next after we leave the streets" this is my answer.
We will leave the streets but we must continue with the journey.
I am a film maker and an entertainer I will speak of the revolution through my art.
If you're a gen z lawyer educate us about the law and defend us in courts
If you're a doctor speak of the change to your patient
If you're a gen z teacher tell your students change is not about age but about will
If you're a gen z journalist remember your words and camera are our shield and defender
If you're gen z pastor tell your congregants that Jesus served for 3 years and His impact is eternal
If you are a young parent, teach your kids to be just,let them know it's wrong to hurt others.
If you are a policeman, serve the people...be humane.
Speak with what you are blessed with and make a change with your vote.
Let everything speak of the change.Change is a process.
This will take years to accomplish.
The struggle must remain alive.
THE WORK IS NOT DONE.
LONGLIVE TO OUR FALLEN HEROES.

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The High Court has this evening rendered a ruling on the application by the Law Society of Kenya for conservatory orders against the deployment of the military to assist police in maintaining order. This measure was taken in pursuance of the Gazette Notice by the Minister of Defense on 24th June 2024 and the retroactive approval by the National Assembly through a sitting that was anything but parliamentary. Our petition impugns the procedure in the manner that this drastic measure was undertaken, lack of clarity in its scope and that it is disproportionate in the circumstances. This measure was taken in haste and irrationally in response to the tension caused by the recent wave of protests against the enactment of the Finance Bill 2024. There is no evidence of due consideration by the state organs, security council or parliament prior gazettment as contemplated by the Constitution.
The Judge in his ruling agreed with our arguments that the deployment fell short of the rigorous stipulations of Article 241 and relevant provisions of the Kenya Defense Forces Act. The court found that that the gazette notice engendered uncertainty as to scope, terms, conduct and timeframe. Court however held the view that the deployment is necessitated due to the circumstances that arose on Tuesday where the police appeared unable to control protestors.
The Constitution of Kenya 2010 provides an elaborate threshold of what constitutes an emergency that necessitates deployment of the military. The Judge appreciated that such deployment can amount in a rift between the citizens and the military who ought to protect them. In order to forestall the mischief, the Court maintained that the same can be remedied by a more detailed enumeration of the terms, scope, areas and duration of the deployment. Accordingly, the court has ordered that the Defence CS issues a new gazzette notice, within 2 days, highlighting clear terms of the deployment to enable the Public be adequately appraised.
The Law Society of Kenya respects but disagrees with the ruling of the court. Whereas article 241(3) contemplates deployment of the military where there is instability, unrest and situations of emergency, it is an incurably dangerous precedent for the threshold to be interpreted as being as low as the position taken by the court in today's ruling. The present action by the state is both procedurally unsound, not in conformity with article 241 and is outright disproportionate. In our view, the drastic measure of inviting military intervention in a controversy that is primarily political should not be taken lightly. Our defense forces is highly respected for its independence, professionalism, impartiality and respect for civilian rule. We should not taint it by liberally interpreting the limited scope of Article 241.
We maintain that the violence that has been witnessed during the protests has been perpetuated by or as a reaction to excesses of police force and arbitrariness. While the disruption of both public and private property and infrastructure is unacceptable, there is no evidence to indicate that the police are incapable of containing the current situation if they perform their duties within the limitations of the law.
We respectfully disagree with the court. We also express our reservations in the delay by the court to issue the full reasoned version in order to enable us to evaluate the options available to the Law Society. We commit to consider the written ruling and take the next course of action in defense of the Constitution and the rule of law.
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