Mũmagethe🤞🏿
7K posts

Mũmagethe🤞🏿
@peace_techie
Techie 👨💻👨💻 |Science & Tech| I'm not mad to say....I was young and stupid| @LFC @murangaseal

🔴🔴COURT OF APPEAL SPEAKS: YOU CANNOT KEEP A CHILD FROM A SURVIVING PARENT IN THE NAME OF DOWRY, CULTURE OR TRADITION Across Kenya, many fathers and mothers are silently suffering; locked out of their own children after the death of a spouse, told to first pay dowry, perform cultural rites, or satisfy family demands before being allowed to raise their own child. In Faith Githongo & Another v Oscar Githanji Mburu (Court of Appeal, Nyeri, 2026), the Court of Appeal of Kenya has now given new hope to parents facing this painful reality. After the child’s mother died during childbirth, the maternal grandparents took custody and later refused to release the child to her biological father, demanding dowry and fulfilment of customary practices. The father went to court, and the Court of Appeal stood firmly on the side of parental rights and the best interests of the child. The Court delivered a powerful message: keeping a child away from a surviving parent in the name of culture, dowry, or tradition is unlawful. The judges emphasized that the Constitution and the Children Act place primary responsibility on biological parents, whether married or not. The Court rejected arguments that the grandparents had stayed longer with the child, that the father had remarried, or that cultural requirements had not been met. The Court was clear: a child is not a bargaining chip, not cultural property, and not a tool for enforcing dowry obligations. Unless there is proof that a parent is unfit, the surviving parent has the first and strongest right to raise their child. This judgment now stands as a beacon of hope for parents locked out of their children by extended family members. It also sends a firm warning to grandparents and relatives: holding onto a child and imposing cultural or dowry demands is not tradition; it is illegality. The Court has made it clear that love for a child must not turn into control, and family support must not become obstruction. For parents going through this struggle, the message is powerful and reassuring: there is a legal path, there is protection under the law, and the courts are ready to restore children to their rightful parents. Please retweet widely.


Two Kenyan Brothers United by Faith, Service, and a Life Without Marriage. Dr. Patrick Ngugi Njoroge, former Governor of the Central Bank of Kenya and his brother, Rev. Anthony Muheria, Archbishop of Nyeri, are remarkable examples of devotion to both faith and service. Dr. Njoroge, a member of Opus Dei, has chosen to remain unmarried to dedicate himself fully to professional excellence and spiritual commitments. Archbishop Muheria, on the other hand, embraces celibacy as a Catholic priest following the vows of his vocation. Together, they demonstrate that devotion and service can take many forms and that a life without marriage can still be rich in purpose, leadership and impact.




Budangu aliniambia "Wakati utaoa, usilale na bibi mchana, hio ni masaa ya kutafuta pesa".

My name is Dr. John Muriithi, a licensed medical doctor and General Surgeon with ten years of post-internship clinical experience. I graduated with a Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery (MBChB) from the University of Nairobi and, in 2025, attained the Fellowship of the College of Surgeons of East, Central and Southern Africa (FCS–Gen Surg) under COSECSA. My attention has been drawn to remarks I made during the Nakuru Revival Crusade concerning reported cases of HIV/AIDS healing following prayers offered by Prophet Dr. David Owuor. I wish to clarify the professional and clinical basis upon which those remarks were made. For any such case to be considered, strict medical criteria must first be satisfied. The individual must have been properly tested and confirmed HIV-positive, initiated on HAART, and followed up within a Comprehensive Care Clinic (CCC) with documented serial CD4 counts and viral load measurements. When a patient later presents claiming healing, the process does not begin with belief but with verification. We revert to the primary managing clinician, review the original medical records, and conduct repeat testing using standard diagnostic protocols. The recent case of Millicent Awino from Siaya County exemplifies this process. However, it is critical to state that this is not an isolated occurrence. We have identified a replicable longitudinal cohort of over 30 individuals who were previously HIV-positive and are now persistently seronegative for several years, with ongoing follow-up and confirmatory testing. Such outcomes represent a significant and well-documented medical anomaly. Indeed, in this context, #ScienceBows. Given the magnitude and implications of these findings, I am in full agreement that a serious, structured investigation or public inquiry be undertaken. I therefore welcome the involvement of @KmpdcOfficial, @HonAdenDuale, and @MOH_Kenya,@citizentvkenya, @ntvkenya, and support the public disclosure of findings following due scientific and regulatory review. As a medical doctor committed to ethics, evidence-based medicine, and patient welfare, I seek the good of all patients and will always stand with the truth—without ill will, without prejudice, and without malice aforethought.








