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Boi Apilo Ododa
1.8K posts

Boi Apilo Ododa
@ochieng91
Online Academic Writer, Author, Humanitarian, Political Activist, Revolutionist, and Visionary Change Ambassador.
Nairobi, Kenya Katılım Şubat 2015
1.5K Takip Edilen734 Takipçiler

@sknerus_ That driver though! Came out saw danger but still chose to damage the vehicle and his life. Maybe that barrier is sacrosanct!
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@paulinenjoroge I think the youths need guidance. Whatever is happening is deeper than what most people think. Such things are hierarchical from ruto, omollo, murkomen, Ocpd, ocs, goons then action. If the president is sane then such things can't happen. Churches must close doors to politicians.
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@jaokojohnmark @edwin_kibiwot Why can't people always find a specific officer doing this & hunt him, deal with him. Law of the jungle for no investigation will help. Some kids have medical issues and lungs might even collapse. Wtf. These orders come from ruto, omollo, murkomen, Ocpd, ocs, and then the dogs.
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@cmspet @FurkanGozukara Japan should create more pathways for legitimate migrants through scholarships in colleges and work visas. A lot of folks in Kenya are well educated, genuine, hardworking with nursing licenses without jobs. Young people with good grades but no fees. Such should be tapped to help
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There is no easy answer for this problem.
I take care of my 90 year old dad with Parkinson's disease who still lives alone, but I see him every day and take him anywhere he needs to go. My dad is one of the lucky ones because the vast majority of the elderly have nobody.
When my mom died from Covid 4 years ago, the hospice nurse told me that 90% of the people she cares for die alone with no family to be with them at the end.
Living to a ripe old age isn't all it's cracked up to be for most people. I'll be more than happy to die in my late 70's or 80's instead of hanging around for so long and especially alone if it comes to that.
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@Murithire @ChiefJefree He could be worth more than that. Guy doesn't have liquid cash but assets. The value of what he owns is his worth. Anyway watu waweke bidii.
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@FGaitho237 Hizi pesa za kusafirisha watu si wajenge hospital and equip them. Si wadrill boreholes. I keep saying ruto is mad. Each person eats 8500 at events in statehouse and it's contracted to weston hotel, rutos. 8500*2000 is 17m plus transport 20m plus handouts 20m. Wasted 60m! Kenyans
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Ruto Booed At State House: Marsabit and Moyale Residents Reject Imaginary Projects and Mandazi Bribes
Residents of Marsabit and Moyale counties were herded to State House Nakuru yesterday like livestock for a so-called briefing on “development projects” by the British-backed war criminal and mass murderer William Ruto.
The moment the pathological liar opened his mouth - peddling fantasies about imaginary projects and shamelessly trying to steal credit for the Isiolo-Moyale highway built by Mwai Kibaki, the crowd erupted in boos, exposing the emperor’s nakedness.
Unable to stomach the barrage of empty rhetoric, the fed-up residents turned rowdy, forcing Ruto’s security to violently evict them from the venue.
They stormed out in disgust, rightly decrying the utter waste of time and the insulting emptiness of the entire charade.
In classic Ruto fashion, the regime attempted to buy their silence with a pathetic handout of two thousand (2,000) shillings each, accompanied by a few mandazis and tea - the standard bribe for subjects expected to clap for their own oppression.
Pathetic.
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@contra_press @Arcndege Please talk to ruto. The police is killing young Kenyans leaving their families devastated! @POTUS
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🇰🇪🇺🇸 | Kenyan police shot dead a protester as hundreds demonstrated against a US quarantine facility in Nanyuki.
The facility is for US nationals exposed to Ebola. Not for Kenyans.
The protester was shot in the head and at least 19 people were arrested, according to Reuters, at the site where the US is building a 50-bed unit at Laikipia Air Base.
Kenya has no Ebola case of its own; the unit would hold US nationals exposed to the virus in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda. It runs on roughly KSh 1.68 billion — about USD 13 million in US aid.
This is not the first killing: on 1 June police shot two protesters dead and arrested 31. Demonstrators call their country a "dumping ground" and have vowed to march until the plan is scrapped.
Washington says it "cannot and will not allow" any cases to enter US territory. Kenyan President William Ruto calls the deal "mutually beneficial" — while his own police keep killing the Kenyans who refuse it.
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@MigunaMiguna Millions in luxury jet to go to speak such nonsense in Norway, the other day he was at airplane engine company. I think ruto is mad. Such jokes he can always make through phone calls. Even his delegation is tired of flying but they fear saying. Drill boreholes in NE instead!!!
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@Thuranira_1 @Arcndege 3.5m he should have just bought a tractor install a tractor and lease it to sugar manufacturing companies. Angepata over 100k peacefully at home.
If there was no agreement then he has all the reasons to forget about it and start afresh.
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I attended court where the victim was a 63-year-old man who used his KSh 3.5 million pension to buy a minibus. His friend connected him to a seller, and the car worth KSh 5 million was given on terms that daily earnings would service the KSh 1.5 million balance, after which it would fully belong to him.
All was well until three months later when auctioneers repossessed the minibus. On inquiry, he was told the seller had taken a loan and used the same vehicle as security. He was now required to pay KSh 9.5 million to recover it.
The ordeal caused him severe stress and high blood pressure. His chidren dropped out of school and he has been in and out hospital for months.He lost all his pension and later discovered his own friend had conspired with the seller.
Trust no one. Question everything. Do thorough due diligence.
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@Dr_AustinOmondi Farouk hata signature hana. Jamaa anapewa gazeti kila siku na hawezi soma English.
Suomi

@georgediano South Africa still has remnants of their oppressors in their systems. They feel oppressed but they fear acting for the scars of apartheid aren't healed. I can imagine a chief Justice who is a white right now in Kenya, or senior government officials who are white. Kenya haiwezi.
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@HonOscarSudi A leader reasoning like this. Rutos goons and developed economy is an oxymoron. There is no day Kenyans will enjoy growth with such minds in control. If we want to be developed then leaders minds must grow!
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@FaithOdhiambo8 @Ekiababah My question is: if a quality check on a motor vehicle shows that the manufacturing process had missaps, would they release the car to the market??? This applies to all products. You all know what happens for such to be delivered to customers. Now that is clear in the court!
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Yesterday's High Court judgment on the impeachment of H.E. Rigathi Gachagua raises serious and legitimate questions that our constitutional jurisprudence must grapple with honestly. The three-judge bench found that the Senate violated the former Deputy President's right to a fair hearing under Article 50 of the Constitution specifically by declining to grant an adjournment when he was unable to attend the proceedings. The court acknowledged that violation, issued a declaratory order and awarded Ksh.50 million in constitutional damages. Yet the bench ultimately upheld the impeachment itself. I respect the court and the constitutional role it plays. But I believe this outcome calls for serious reflection on the coherence of our remedial framework.
The tension in the judgment lies in this, if the Senate's refusal to adjourn was a constitutional infirmity serious enough to warrant a finding of violation and a Ksh.50 million award, then the question that naturally follows is whether that infirmity was capable of tainting the entire removal process. The right to a fair hearing is not procedural decoration. It is a substantive constitutional guarantee, particularly in proceedings that result in the removal of a person from high public office. Courts must therefore grapple carefully with what it means to vindicate a right while simultaneously affirming the outcome that flowed from its violation. It is a difficult balance and I appreciate that the bench was navigating complicated constitutional terrain.
It is instructive to recall the reasoning of the Supreme Court in the landmark 2017 presidential election petition delivered by the then Chief Justice David Maraga. The court, in a 4-2 majority, nullified the presidential election not on the basis that the outcome was necessarily wrong but on the basis that the process through which it was arrived at did not conform to the Constitution and the law. The court found that irregularities and illegalities in the transmission of results had compromised the integrity of the election and that the constitutional standard required more than a plausible result, it required a process that was itself constitutionally compliant. That principle that a flawed process cannot produce a constitutionally valid outcome remains a pillar of our public law.
When we place that 2017 reasoning alongside yesterday's judgment, a legitimate concern emerges. Both cases involved constitutional violations in the course of a high-stakes removal or electoral process. In 2017, the violation of constitutional standards was sufficient to nullify the result entirely. Yesterday, a violation of the right to a fair hearing was found, remedied in damages but the result was preserved. These are not necessarily irreconcilable positions, courts do have discretion in fashioning remedies but the distinction must be clearly reasoned and transparently justified because the precedent being set will govern how future impeachments are conducted and how future courts respond to violations within those processes.
My concern is about the precedent this decision may establish. If a constitutional violation during impeachment proceedings can be remedied by damages without disturbing the outcome, future Parliaments and Senates may not feel the full weight of their constitutional obligations when handling removal proceedings. The court itself noted the urgent need for Parliament to enact a dedicated statutory framework under Article 150 governing the removal of a Deputy President which is a legislative gap that should never have existed this long. That recommendation must not be ignored. A constitutional democracy is built on the integrity of its processes not merely its outcomes. We must ensure that the right to a fair hearing in Kenya remains substantive and not merely symbolic.



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@VictorAmollo6 @MigunaMiguna @NjokiNgugii @rigathi Some judges and magistrates are openly incompetent. Unashtakiwa unalipwa that the process of hearing was unlawful, unalipwa for that then unaambiwa you're still guilty 😂😂. Truly, it's laughable.
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The court has cooked @rigathi. Two fatal findings on public participation and bias have sealed his fate. But I believe the court’s findings on these two issues are implausible and incoherent in view of the evidence before them. We will wait for the decisions of the Court of Appeal in 2028 and the Supreme Court in 2029!
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@eiosay Idk but the first thing they could have done is to remove the tie lossen the belt, remove the shoes, and make him feel relaxed. My thoughts that is
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@KenyanSays Omari is bringing peace. Alai ashaambiwa hii kesi ni mbaya utalipa 250m juu itakushinda sasa wewe toa 50m tutoe kesi🤣🤣🤣
Indonesia

@ClintonObonyo Hakuna street lights hapa. The road should be properly lighted.
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