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@vokelvo

sporadic random melodramatic flabbergasted are just big words .... am simple and LOVE GOD FROM THE CORE ...wanna know more ?...halla !!!

Mars, PA Katılım Mart 2011
958 Takip Edilen791 Takipçiler
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Mwende
Mwende@mwende_kyalo_·
Also, Caning in Kenya was legally introduced in 1906 by colonisers through " Police Ordinance of 1906". They had to import the canes though. The Ordinance can be found in UON repository. Someni historia yenyu tafadhali.
Mwende@mwende_kyalo_

This is exactly how Africans started beating their children. Before colonisation, most communities only had physical punishment for adults. Not kids. But colonisation changed the stakes. A wondering child could be shot by colonialists. So beat the kids to keep them alive

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BRAVIN YURI
BRAVIN YURI@BravinYuri·
“However, I don’t want 10 years now; I want us to agree on a five-year plan. If successful, add five more. If I fail, let us get a new person [as president]” -Deputy President William Ruto Hata yeye alisema ni Wantam.
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I am Chege
I am Chege@_James041·
His name is Daniel Ndia, 23 years old. Daniel is a boda boda rider from Ruiru, Kiambu County. During the #RejectFuelPrices protests, Daniel was shot seven rubber bullets by William Ruto's killer militia. He was admitted at Kiambu Level 5 Hospital where four rubber bullets were successfully removed before he was discharged. Frame two is an X-ray photo showing the bullets. Daniel was just asking to be heard, but the killer regime treated him like an enemy of the state. Hii madharau itaisha siku Moja. Quick recovery comrade. One day William Ruto will also die.
I am Chege tweet mediaI am Chege tweet media
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Gitz 
Gitz @Gitz__·
Al Jazeera dropped a piece on how Kasongo's government has turned surveillance tools on us & Safaricom being right in the middle enabling it.
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healthbot
healthbot@thehealthb0t·
If COVID shots were given away for free, because they are life saving, then why isn't chemotherapy, insulin, and EpiPens also given away for free?
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Malkia wa kizazi kipya 🌟
Malkia wa kizazi kipya 🌟@AishaWanjiku_·
Kila mwaka essential drugs expire in Govt warehouses. Who is benefiting?!
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Henix Obuchunju
Henix Obuchunju@Obuchunju·
Governance expert Cyprian Nyamwamu has dropped a bombshell on Spice FM. He claims that someone in the Uhuru Ruto government borrowed money on behalf of Kenya, stole it, then lent the same money back to the country. What kind of greed is this?
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Nelson Amenya
Nelson Amenya@amenya_nelson·
There is empty land on the side of Bomas why would they cut out the park?
Nelson Amenya tweet mediaNelson Amenya tweet mediaNelson Amenya tweet media
Nelson Amenya@amenya_nelson

1/2 Nairobi National Park will not be destroyed in one dramatic moment. On the contrary it’s being systematically erased, quietly, bureaucratically. One “small” project at a time. First the Southern Bypass, then the SGR, then the ICD road, and now another chunk of protected park land is being sacrificed, this time allegedly for a relocated animal orphanage and infrastructure linked to the Bomas International Conference Centre (BICC). But when you look closely at the documents, the story stops making sense. Because buried inside the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) are plans for a parking lot designed for 1,300 vehicles. That is not normal wildlife facility parking capacity. That is mall-scale infrastructure. The same EIA states parking provision for only 50 buses and 100 cars in one section, then suddenly expands into a gigantic 1,300-vehicle parking complex elsewhere in the document. The obvious question becomes: who exactly is this parking lot meant to serve, and why should protected national park land be surrendered for it? Friends of Nairobi National Park (FoNNaP), together with JustAct and Kituo Cha Sheria, have now moved to court to challenge the project and expose what they argue are contradictions, procedural violations, and serious environmental risks surrounding the development. The issue is not whether the Nairobi Animal Orphanage deserves better facilities. Of course it does. The issue is why the government insists on building it inside a protected ecosystem when it could literally be built elsewhere in Nairobi or anywhere else in Kenya without destroying wildlife habitat. Once protected land is lost, it is gone forever. The most alarming part is that the project documents themselves are riddled with inconsistencies. One section says the project requires 26 acres of land, another says 64 acres, another declares 76.6 acres, while KWS presentations reportedly referenced 89 acres. Which is it? How can an environmental assessment be considered credible when nobody can consistently explain how much land is actually being taken from the park? Then comes perhaps the most disturbing detail of all: a proposed 10-kilometre perimeter fence. Ten kilometres. That would enclose roughly 1,500 acres of land inside Nairobi National Park. Why does an animal orphanage need a 10km perimeter fence? What exactly is being enclosed? What future developments does this create space for? In a country where land grabbing has become normalized and where public land mysteriously transforms into commercial opportunities overnight, these are not paranoid questions. They are necessary questions. Especially because the same documents explicitly describe integration with the Bomas International Conference Centre through a walkway over Langata Road. KWS insists there is no connection between the massive parking infrastructure and the BICC, but common sense raises unavoidable questions. Why would an animal orphanage require parking infrastructure comparable to major shopping malls in Nairobi? Why has NEMA reportedly refused to release the BICC EIA documents that could clarify these linkages? What are Kenyans not supposed to see? Even more troubling is that the area being developed is classified in the 2020–2030 Nairobi National Park Management Plan as a “low-use zone” where development, including roads, is prohibited because of the ecological sensitivity of the habitat. Yet the EIA reportedly ignores this entirely. People familiar with the park also dispute claims that the area is rarely used by wildlife. Conservationists and regular park visitors say lions, leopards, black rhinos, birds, and numerous other species actively use this ecosystem. Grasslands are not “empty land.” Forests are not the only ecosystems that matter. Open habitat is critical to wildlife movement, biodiversity, water systems, and ecological balance.

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James
James@MrJamesKe·
The saddest thing in politics is watching citizens defend the same system that keeps failing them.
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Nelson Amenya
Nelson Amenya@amenya_nelson·
We need more pressure on this guys we can’t let our national park continue to be annexed bit by bit while we remain silent.
Nelson Amenya@amenya_nelson

1/2 Nairobi National Park will not be destroyed in one dramatic moment. On the contrary it’s being systematically erased, quietly, bureaucratically. One “small” project at a time. First the Southern Bypass, then the SGR, then the ICD road, and now another chunk of protected park land is being sacrificed, this time allegedly for a relocated animal orphanage and infrastructure linked to the Bomas International Conference Centre (BICC). But when you look closely at the documents, the story stops making sense. Because buried inside the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) are plans for a parking lot designed for 1,300 vehicles. That is not normal wildlife facility parking capacity. That is mall-scale infrastructure. The same EIA states parking provision for only 50 buses and 100 cars in one section, then suddenly expands into a gigantic 1,300-vehicle parking complex elsewhere in the document. The obvious question becomes: who exactly is this parking lot meant to serve, and why should protected national park land be surrendered for it? Friends of Nairobi National Park (FoNNaP), together with JustAct and Kituo Cha Sheria, have now moved to court to challenge the project and expose what they argue are contradictions, procedural violations, and serious environmental risks surrounding the development. The issue is not whether the Nairobi Animal Orphanage deserves better facilities. Of course it does. The issue is why the government insists on building it inside a protected ecosystem when it could literally be built elsewhere in Nairobi or anywhere else in Kenya without destroying wildlife habitat. Once protected land is lost, it is gone forever. The most alarming part is that the project documents themselves are riddled with inconsistencies. One section says the project requires 26 acres of land, another says 64 acres, another declares 76.6 acres, while KWS presentations reportedly referenced 89 acres. Which is it? How can an environmental assessment be considered credible when nobody can consistently explain how much land is actually being taken from the park? Then comes perhaps the most disturbing detail of all: a proposed 10-kilometre perimeter fence. Ten kilometres. That would enclose roughly 1,500 acres of land inside Nairobi National Park. Why does an animal orphanage need a 10km perimeter fence? What exactly is being enclosed? What future developments does this create space for? In a country where land grabbing has become normalized and where public land mysteriously transforms into commercial opportunities overnight, these are not paranoid questions. They are necessary questions. Especially because the same documents explicitly describe integration with the Bomas International Conference Centre through a walkway over Langata Road. KWS insists there is no connection between the massive parking infrastructure and the BICC, but common sense raises unavoidable questions. Why would an animal orphanage require parking infrastructure comparable to major shopping malls in Nairobi? Why has NEMA reportedly refused to release the BICC EIA documents that could clarify these linkages? What are Kenyans not supposed to see? Even more troubling is that the area being developed is classified in the 2020–2030 Nairobi National Park Management Plan as a “low-use zone” where development, including roads, is prohibited because of the ecological sensitivity of the habitat. Yet the EIA reportedly ignores this entirely. People familiar with the park also dispute claims that the area is rarely used by wildlife. Conservationists and regular park visitors say lions, leopards, black rhinos, birds, and numerous other species actively use this ecosystem. Grasslands are not “empty land.” Forests are not the only ecosystems that matter. Open habitat is critical to wildlife movement, biodiversity, water systems, and ecological balance.

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Motorist Association
Motorist Association@motoristsoffice·
Global oil prices are down nearly 6%. Crude oil is down 5.8% to $91 per barrel while Brent crude is down 5.5% to $97 per barrel.| We told you there was no justification to increase fuel prices by a huge margin in the guise of the Strait of Hormuz.
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David Maraga
David Maraga@dkmaraga·
Statement on Kenya’s missing children
David Maraga tweet mediaDavid Maraga tweet mediaDavid Maraga tweet media
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I am Chege
I am Chege@_James041·
MAJAMAA, are you aware that in every Financial year, KSh 39 MILLION of taxpayers money is always allocated towards colonial-era pension payments? Yaani, our taxes are being used to pay some people in the U.K in the name of pension for the period they worked in Kenya. They looted our resources, land, killed and raped people and they are still being paid pension from our taxes? Listen to what @dianagichengo is saying here.
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June 25th
June 25th@Jasiri_D30·
@OleItumbi PS: Diesel price in India is 122.43 per litre of 10 PPM Diesel, the same quality we decide is too expensive.
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I. Cox
I. Cox@IanECox·
Arsenal was literally founded by the workers who made the ammo used by the British in taking over Africa.
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Joel Jirani
Joel Jirani@JoelJirane·
Harvesting rain water without a government license will be a criminal offence.
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Anwar Saddat
Anwar Saddat@AnuarSaddat·
They needed to distract Kenyans from the conversations about high fuel prices, G to G failures, the kshs 500 million plus jet scandal and the tribal diarrhea of the UDA Secretary General. So they unleashed a script about lapse of Ruto’s security. The guy who “rushed” Ruto is a police officer. These guys are very predictable!
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Joel Jirani
Joel Jirani@JoelJirane·
In just one week; - Hassan Omar showed tribalism against Kikuyus - A yamune working in the office of Felix Kosgei threatened to revive 2007 thing. But mumus DCI are silent. Children are missing and they are not moved at all. They are waiting for patriots tweeting about #RutoMustGo ndio wachangamke. Bwana is anything working under this incompetent government? No drugs, fuel prices are high, no good roads.
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