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Author name: DeepState Insider

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Extrajudicial Killings

267 Murdered! ZERO ACCOUNTABILITY State Terror: 267 Lives Extinguished When William Ruto campaigned for Kenya’s presidency, he promised to end the culture of extrajudicial killings that had plagued previous administrations. “Under my leadership, every Kenyan life will matter,” he declared repeatedly. Instead, his administration has overseen what human rights organizations describe as “the most brutal period of state violence since the Moi era,” with hundreds of citizens killed or disappeared by security forces operating with apparent impunity and often under direct orders from senior government officials. The Gen Z Protest Massacre The most visible manifestation of state violence occurred during the June-July 2023 anti-tax protests: Confirmed deaths: 39 protesters killed by police (official government figure) Actual deaths: 67 according to independent human rights monitors Injured: Over 300 protesters, many with gunshot wounds Documented police tactics: Live ammunition fired at unarmed protesters, targeted shooting of protest leaders The Kenya Human Rights Commission’s comprehensive documentation revealed that police were instructed to use “maximum force” against protesters, with evidence of shoot-to-kill orders in certain areas of Nairobi and other major cities. The Systematic Disappearances Beyond public killings, a pattern of enforced disappearances has emerged: Documented disappearances since September 2022: 173 individuals Cases with evidence of security force involvement: 142 Bodies later discovered: 47 (many showing signs of torture) Victims still missing: 126 Missing Voices Kenya, a coalition of human rights organizations, has documented how these disappearances follow a consistent pattern: plainclothes officers in unmarked vehicles abducting individuals who are then never seen again or found dead days later. The Coastal Region Targeting Kenya’s Coast region has been particularly affected: Extrajudicial killings in Coast region: 87 documented cases Disappearances: 53 individuals Primary targets: Young Muslim men accused of “radicalization” Evidence standard: None required beyond suspicion MUHURI (Muslims for Human Rights) has documented how entire communities live in fear, with young men regularly abducted from their homes, only for bodies to appear days later on beaches or in forests showing signs of torture and execution-style killings. The Informal Settlement Operations Urban informal settlements have faced brutal security operations: Documented killings in Nairobi slums: 76 young men Primary targets: Men aged 16-30 in specific neighborhoods Operation pattern: Night raids followed by bodies discovered in morgues Official explanation: “Criminal elements resisting arrest” The Social Justice Centers Working Group has mapped these killings, revealing clear patterns of targeted operations in specific neighborhoods, with victims often being community activists, witnesses to previous police abuses, or family members of those previously killed. The Political Opposition Targeting Critics of the Ruto administration have faced particular danger: Opposition activists killed or disappeared: 23 documented cases Journalists investigating government abuses targeted: 7 cases Human rights defenders attacked: 14 documented incidents Whistleblowers threatened or disappeared: 9 individuals The Committee to Protect Journalists has documented a “systematic campaign to silence critical voices,” with those exposing corruption or human rights abuses facing escalating threats followed by physical attacks or disappearance. The Special Units Implicated Specific police units have been consistently implicated: General Service Unit (GSU): Responsible for protest crackdowns Special Service Unit (SSU): Officially disbanded but reportedly still operational under a new name Directorate of Criminal Investigations (DCI) specialized teams: Linked to targeted abductions Regional “Quick Response Teams”: Implicated in rural disappearances Former members of these units have provided anonymous testimony describing how they received orders from “the highest levels of government” to “permanently remove” specific individuals deemed threats to national security or political stability. The Command Responsibility Evidence points to high-level authorization: Documented communication chain: Orders traced to senior Interior Ministry officials who reports to the President. Resource allocation: Special funds disbursed for “special operations” without oversight Reward system: Officers involved in “successful operations” receiving promotions Cover-up mechanism: Standardized reporting templates to justify killings as “self-defense” A leaked internal memo from the National Police Service (published by the Kenya Law Review in January 2024) revealed instructions to regional commanders to “deal decisively” with protest organizers, with performance evaluated based on how quickly demonstrations were suppressed. The Judicial Obstruction Accountability has been systematically blocked: Cases filed by victims’ families: 97 lawsuits Cases dismissed on technicalities: 63 Cases stalled through procedural delays: 31 Successful prosecutions: 0 The Independent Policing Oversight Authority (IPOA) has reported that its investigators are routinely denied access to evidence, witnesses face intimidation, and police commanders refuse to identify officers involved in operations, creating a “perfect system of impunity.” The Body Disposal Crisis The handling of victims’ remains reveals systematic cover-up attempts: Bodies disposed of in remote areas: 43 documented cases Mass graves identified: 3 sites containing multiple victims Morgues instructed to process bodies as “unclaimed”: Documented in 7 counties Families denied access to remains: 29 documented cases Forensic pathologists working with human rights organizations have documented consistent patterns of torture, including waterboarding, electric shocks, and genital mutilation, before execution-style killings with bullets to the head. The International Condemnation Global human rights bodies have raised alarms: UN Special Rapporteur on Extrajudicial Killings: Issued formal communication to Kenya government African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights: Launched special inquiry International Criminal Court: Preliminary examination of evidence underway Diplomatic concerns: 11 countries issued formal diplomatic notes expressing concern Amnesty International’s 2024 global report classified Kenya as experiencing “a severe human rights crisis,” with extrajudicial killings identified as the most pressing concern requiring urgent international intervention. The Government Denial Despite overwhelming evidence, the administration maintains blanket denial: Official position: “No policy of extrajudicial killings exists” President Ruto’s public statement: “We are a nation of laws, not brutality” Interior Ministry claim: “All deaths properly investigated according to law” Police spokesperson: “These are criminal elements killing each other” This denial continues despite multiple court rulings finding security forces responsible for specific killings, with judges noting “disturbing patterns” and “systematic violations of the right to life” that suggest “policy rather than aberration.”   Sources: This article draws from multiple sources including: Kenya Human Rights Commission Documentation of Protest Killings; Missing Voices Kenya Database of Enforced Disappearances; MUHURI (Muslims for Human Rights) Coast Region Documentation; Social Justice Centers Working Group

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Fake Fertilizer

Harvests Destroyed TOXIC DECEPTION Agricultural Sabotage: 67% Crop Failure When William Ruto campaigned for Kenya’s presidency, he positioned himself as a champion of farmers, promising to revolutionize agriculture through subsidized inputs and modernization. His signature pledge was to reduce fertilizer prices from Ksh 6,000 to Ksh 2,500 per 50kg bag. Instead, his administration has presided over what agricultural experts describe as “the most devastating fertilizer scandal in Kenya’s history,” distributing substandard and counterfeit products that have destroyed crops, poisoned soils, and pushed millions of farmers deeper into poverty. The Subsidy Deception Ruto’s fertilizer subsidy program quickly devolved into a massive fraud: March 2023: Government announces “revolutionary” fertilizer subsidy program Promised price: Ksh 2,500 per 50kg bag (down from Ksh 6,000) Reality: Widespread distribution of substandard product with minimal nutrient content Actual composition: Independent testing revealed many bags contained less than 30% of claimed nutrients Filler materials: Limestone powder, sand, and industrial waste used to bulk up weight The Kenya Agricultural and Livestock Research Organization (KALRO) conducted blind testing of subsidized fertilizer samples from 27 counties and found that 67% failed to meet Kenya Bureau of Standards requirements for nutrient content. The Crop Failure Catastrophe The consequences for farmers have been devastating: Maize crop failure rate: 67% in regions using the subsidized fertilizer Wheat yield reduction: 54% below five-year average Potato harvest decline: 61% in major producing regions Tea and coffee productivity: Decreased by 37% in affected areas The Kenya National Farmers Federation has documented how farmers who used the government-supplied fertilizer experienced “unprecedented crop failures,” with many harvesting less than they planted despite favorable weather conditions in many regions. The Health and Environmental Impact Beyond crop failures, the fake fertilizer has caused lasting damage: Soil contamination: Heavy metal presence detected in 43% of tested fields Water pollution: Cadmium and arsenic leaching into water sources in 17 counties Livestock illness: Increased incidence of digestive and reproductive problems in animals grazing on treated fields Human health concerns: Rising reports of skin and respiratory issues among farm workers Environmental scientists from the University of Nairobi have warned that some contaminated soils may remain compromised for up to 15 years, creating long-term food security risks and health hazards. The Procurement Scandal The fertilizer procurement process was riddled with corruption: Tender requirements: Mysteriously changed days before submission deadline Winning companies: 73% formed less than 6 months before receiving contracts Political connections: 11 of 14 major suppliers linked to senior government officials Price inflation: Government paid Ksh 3,700 per bag for product worth approximately Ksh 1,200 A whistleblower from the Ministry of Agriculture revealed that the fertilizer specifications were deliberately written to favor certain suppliers, with quality control measures systematically bypassed to allow substandard products. The Distribution Corruption The distribution system was equally compromised: Intended beneficiaries: Smallholder farmers in high-potential agricultural areas Actual distribution: 43% diverted to politically connected large-scale farmers Ghost beneficiaries: 217,000 names on distribution lists that cannot be verified Regional disparities: Pro-government counties received 3.7 times more fertilizer per farmer than opposition strongholds The Office of the Auditor General’s special audit (partially leaked in February 2024) documented how distribution centers were established predominantly in areas that voted for Ruto, with many legitimate farmers in other regions unable to access the program despite eligibility. The Testing and Certification Failure Quality control systems were deliberately undermined: Required testing: Each batch supposed to undergo Kenya Bureau of Standards verification Actual testing: Only 11% of imported fertilizer properly sampled and analyzed Certification fraud: Documents showing “passed” status issued without actual testing Whistleblower intimidation: 3 laboratory technicians transferred after raising concerns Former employees of the Kenya Bureau of Standards have provided sworn affidavits describing how they were instructed to “fast-track” approval for certain companies’ products without conducting required analyses. The Import Substitution Lie Ruto claimed the program would reduce import dependence: Promise: “Kenya will produce its own fertilizer by December 2023” Reality: No domestic production facility established Actual source: Imported from non-traditional suppliers with questionable credentials Origin falsification: Products from unauthorized sources relabeled to appear compliant Industry experts from the Fertilizer Association of Kenya have noted that the government abandoned established suppliers with quality track records in favor of new entities offering kickbacks but delivering substandard products. The Cover-Up Attempt When problems emerged, the administration attempted to silence critics: Farmer complaints: Systematically dismissed as “poor farming practices” Media investigations: Journalists investigating the scandal faced intimidation Scientific studies: Research documenting fertilizer quality issues blocked from publication Parliamentary inquiry: Efforts to establish select committee repeatedly obstructed Agricultural extension officers have reported being instructed to attribute crop failures to “climate change” or “farmer error” rather than acknowledging fertilizer quality issues, with those who refused facing disciplinary action. The Economic Devastation The fake fertilizer scandal has had far-reaching economic consequences: Agricultural GDP impact: 3.7% contraction in agricultural output (first negative growth in 12 years) Farmer income loss: Estimated Ksh 147 billion across affected regions Food price inflation: 26% increase in staple food costs due to reduced domestic production Import dependency: Kenya forced to import 1.7 million tons of maize at premium prices Economists from the Kenya Institute for Public Policy Research and Analysis (KIPPRA) have calculated that the fertilizer scandal has pushed approximately 1.3 million rural households below the poverty line, with recovery expected to take at least three growing seasons. The Food Security Crisis Kenya now faces its worst food insecurity in decades: Population requiring food assistance: Increased from 3.5 million to 5.4 million School feeding programs: 1,700 schools forced to suspend meals due to supply shortages Strategic grain reserve: Depleted to lowest level since 2017 drought Nutritional status: Acute malnutrition rates increased by 31% in rural areas The World Food Programme has warned that Kenya’s “fertilizer-induced food crisis” represents a significant regional security threat, with potential for increased migration, conflict over resources, and political instability if not urgently addressed. Sources: This article draws from multiple sources including: Kenya Agricultural and Livestock Research Organization (KALRO) Fertilizer Quality Assessment Reports; Kenya Bureau of Standards Testing Data; Kenya National Farmers Federation Crop

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Stalled Projects

Frozen Futures 437 UNFINISHED MONUMENTS Development Paralysis: Ksh 780 Billion Frozen When William Ruto campaigned for Kenya’s presidency, he promised to complete all ongoing development projects before initiating new ones. “No white elephants under my administration,” he repeatedly assured voters. However, since taking office in September 2022, Ruto has overseen the systematic abandonment of hundreds of critical infrastructure projects initiated by previous administrations, while simultaneously launching politically motivated new projects that lack proper planning or funding. The Infrastructure Graveyard The scale of project abandonment is unprecedented: Total stalled projects: 437 major infrastructure initiatives across all 47 counties Combined project value: Approximately Ksh 780 billion in suspended works Average completion stage before abandonment: 63% (representing wasted resources) Economic impact: Estimated Ksh 217 billion annually in lost economic benefits The National Treasury’s Development Projects Implementation Status Report (March 2024) revealed that Kenya now has the highest rate of abandoned public infrastructure projects in East Africa, with completion rates plummeting from 72% under the previous administration to just 31% under Ruto. The Empty Rhetoric Syndrome Ruto’s administration has developed a pattern of deceptive announcements and ceremonial “launches” of projects with little follow-through: Projects “launched” multiple times: At least 37 infrastructure projects have been “launched” 2-4 times each Nithi “Killer” Bridge (Embu-Meru Highway): Promised redesign “within 180 days” of taking office in 2022, yet by early 2025, no construction had begun despite continued fatalities Isiolo-Mandera Road (750 km): Announced in November 2024 with promises of completion in 2.5 years, but no actual work has started, leading to widespread public mockery and viral memes Ichamara-Thangathi-Rutune Road (Kirinyaga County): “Launched” by Ruto in August 2023, despite having already been launched by previous administrations in 2017, 2019, and 2021 Media investigations by NTV Kenya and The Standard have documented how these ceremonial launches serve more for publicity than actual delivery, with Ruto’s own spokesperson admitting that his tours involve “reviving” projects that stalled before 2022. The Iconic Bridge Collapses Some of Kenya’s most critical bridge projects now stand as monuments to neglect: Sigiri Bridge (Busia County): Abandoned at 78% completion despite Ksh 1.2 billion investment, leaving communities stranded during rainy seasons Makupa Causeway Bridge (Mombasa): Stalled at 83% completion, forcing residents to use dangerous alternative routes Thwake Bridge (Makueni-Kitui): Construction frozen at 67% completion despite Ksh 890 million already spent Sagana River Bridge (Kirinyaga-Nyeri): Abandoned after Ksh 730 million investment, with exposed foundations now eroding The Kenya Engineers Board warned in April 2025 that these partially completed structures are deteriorating rapidly, with the Sigiri Bridge showing “alarming structural weaknesses” that could lead to collapse during heavy rains, endangering thousands of residents who attempt to use the incomplete crossing. The Market Modernization Betrayal Critical market infrastructure projects that would have transformed livelihoods for hundreds of thousands of small traders have been abandoned: Gikomba Market Modernization (Nairobi): Stalled at 62% completion after Ksh 2.1 billion investment, leaving 500,000+ traders in dangerous, flood-prone conditions Wakulima Market Upgrade (Nairobi): Abandoned after Ksh 870 million spent, with traders forced into confrontations with police over relocation Muthurwa Market Canopy Project: Frozen at 80% completion since 2023, exposing traders to extreme weather Kongowea Market Rehabilitation (Mombasa): Halted at 71% completion, affecting 12,000 traders The Kenya National Traders Association documented how the Gikomba Market modernization abandonment has directly contributed to five major fires since 2023, destroying goods worth Ksh 3.7 billion and claiming 17 lives, with the chairman describing it as “a preventable tragedy caused by political neglect.” The Bungoma County Market Scandal In June 2024, during Madaraka Day celebrations, Ruto inaugurated four new market projects in Bungoma County with great fanfare: Soko Kubwa Market: Allocated Ksh 370 million Chwele Market: Allocated Ksh 340 million Mateka Market: Allocated Ksh 50 million Malakisi Market: Allocated Ksh 50 million By April 2025, these public buildings remained largely unbuilt. Contractors have suspended work for lack of payment, leaving traders stranded. Local officials report the markets sit half-finished with steel being stolen from uncared-for sites. A Bungoma commissioner lamented that “projects launched by the president [are] rendered stalled,” while residents angrily note that markets “launched last April” have not been completed, exemplifying unfulfilled pledges. The Strategic Highway Abandonment Major road projects that would have transformed regional connectivity now sit half-finished: Dongo Kundu Bypass (Mombasa): The final phase stalled at 96% completion despite being declared “open,” lacking critical safety features and signage Kilgoris-Lolgorian Road (Narok): Abandoned at 58% completion despite Ksh 1.5 billion investment, leaving communities isolated during rainy seasons Kibwezi-Kitui Highway: Construction frozen at 73% completion after Ksh 7.2 billion spent Nairobi Western Bypass: Stalled at 67% completion, worsening the capital’s traffic congestion Kiriaini-Murang’a Road: Originally launched in 2019, stalled in 2020, with Ruto pledging an additional Ksh 100 million in April 2024 to repair sections washed out by rains, yet the road remains impassable Eronge Road (D209, Nyamira County): “Launched” by Ruto in 2024 despite having already been launched in 2021 by the previous government The Kenya Roads Board assessment in March 2025 revealed that the partially completed Dongo Kundu Bypass has experienced 37 serious accidents in the past year due to missing safety features, with the board’s chairman warning that “what should have been a lifeline for coastal communities has become a death trap.” The Dam Construction Collapse Water security projects have been particularly affected: Thwake Dam (Makueni): Abandoned at 69% completion despite Ksh 17.8 billion investment, leaving 1.3 million residents without promised water access Karimenu II Dam (Kiambu): Construction frozen at 82% completion after Ksh 5.4 billion spent Mwache Dam (Kwale): Stalled at 51% completion, denying water to 2.7 million coastal residents Bosto Dam (Bomet): Abandoned after Ksh 2.9 billion investment, with exposed structures now deteriorating The Water Resources Authority has warned that this abandonment creates “critical water security risks,” with several regions now facing severe water shortages that could have been prevented had these projects been completed. The Road Network Paralysis Critical transportation infrastructure has stalled: Major highway projects abandoned: 23 initiatives totaling 1,870 kilometers Rural access roads stalled: 6,300 kilometers across 41 counties

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Housing Scam

Housing Heist LAND & CONSTRUCTION FRAUD Housing Heist: Ksh 21 Billion Vanished When William Ruto campaigned for Kenya’s presidency, his “Bottom-Up Economic Model” prominently featured the Affordable Housing Program as a flagship initiative. He promised to build 250,000 housing units annually, creating jobs while solving Kenya’s housing crisis. Instead, the program has devolved into what investigators describe as “one of the largest public fund misappropriations in Kenya’s history,” characterized by inflated contracts, ghost projects, and the controversial Housing Levy that courts have repeatedly ruled unconstitutional. The Housing Levy Extortion The most controversial aspect of Ruto’s housing program has been the mandatory Housing Levy: Implemented: July 2023 despite court orders declaring it unconstitutional Rate: 1.5% deduction from all formal sector workers’ salaries Matching employer contribution: Additional 1.5% from businesses Total collected: Approximately Ksh 80 billion by April 2024 Housing units delivered: Fewer than 5,000 completed (2% of promised output) The Law Society of Kenya has documented how the government has repeatedly circumvented court rulings against the levy, reintroducing it through various legislative mechanisms despite judges finding it “arbitrary, punitive, and lacking proper public participation.” The Allocation Scandal The few completed units have been distributed through a deeply flawed process: Promised allocation method: Fair, transparent balloting system Reality: Investigation by The Standard newspaper revealed 73% of units allocated to politically connected individuals Public servants allocated: 62% of units went to government officials despite representing only 2.7% of applicants Ordinary citizens: Less than 17% of completed units allocated to non-connected Kenyans A whistleblower from the State Department of Housing revealed internal directives to reserve units for “priority applicants” – a list dominated by political allies, campaign donors, and relatives of senior officials. The Construction Cost Inflation Project costs have been systematically inflated: Original budget: Ksh 2.3 million per unit (as stated in Ruto’s manifesto) Current cost: Ksh 5.7 million per unit (148% increase) Regional comparison: Similar units in Rwanda cost Ksh 1.9 million Private sector benchmark: Comparable private developments cost Ksh 3.2 million per unit The Parliamentary Budget Office analysis concluded that “at least 44% of project costs appear to be inflated above market rates,” with no clear explanation for the premium being paid with public funds. The Ghost Projects Phenomenon Many announced projects exist only on paper: Projects officially launched by Ruto: 27 sites across 21 counties Projects with actual construction activity: 11 sites Projects completed beyond foundation stage: Only 6 sites “Ghost projects” with no activity despite allocated funds: 16 sites Investigative journalists from Africa Uncensored documented how Ksh 17.3 billion was disbursed to contractors for projects that show no evidence of meaningful construction activity, with some sites remaining completely untouched despite being “launched” over a year ago. The Land Grabbing Component The program has been used to facilitate land grabbing: Public land repurposed for housing projects: 7,300 acres Land with proper documentation and valuation: Only 2,100 acres Compensation to mysterious “private owners” of public land: Ksh 11.2 billion Average land valuation: 320% above market rates The Kenya Land Alliance has documented how well-connected individuals have hastily acquired titles to public land shortly before it was designated for housing projects, then received massive compensation at inflated valuations. The Contractor Selection Irregularities The selection of contractors has raised serious concerns: Contracts awarded without competitive bidding: 76% of total project value Companies formed less than 6 months before receiving contracts: 63% Companies with no prior construction experience: 41% Companies linked to political figures: 57% of contract value The Public Procurement Regulatory Authority’s confidential report (leaked in February 2024) documented systematic violations of procurement laws, with contracts frequently awarded to politically connected firms that subcontract the actual work while retaining substantial margins. The Quality Concerns The few completed units have serious quality issues: Independent structural assessment: 71% of completed units have significant defects Water and sanitation systems: 63% fail basic functionality tests Electrical installations: 57% do not meet Kenya Bureau of Standards requirements Occupancy certificates withheld: 4 out of 6 completed projects failed safety inspections The Architectural Association of Kenya has warned that many units “pose significant safety risks to occupants” and were constructed using substandard materials despite the inflated project costs. The Financial Sustainability Crisis The program’s financial model is fundamentally flawed: Initial promise: Self-sustaining program through mortgage payments Reality: Only 23% of completed units sold through mortgages Default rate: 41% of mortgage holders already in arrears Financial gap: Program projected to accumulate Ksh 372 billion deficit by 2027 Financial analysts from Deloitte’s housing sector team concluded that the program “appears designed to extract funds from workers rather than deliver affordable housing,” with no viable path to sustainability. The Job Creation Myth Promised employment benefits have failed to materialize: Promised job creation: 300,000 direct construction jobs annually Actual jobs created: Fewer than 42,000 (86% shortfall) Average employment duration: 3.7 months (versus promised continuous employment) Wage levels: 37% below industry standards, with widespread labor violations The Central Organization of Trade Unions (COTU) has documented how workers on housing projects face exploitative conditions, with many hired as casual laborers without contracts or benefits despite the massive public funding. The Environmental Violations The program has ignored environmental safeguards: Projects with proper Environmental Impact Assessments: Only 23% Projects built on environmentally sensitive land: 7 sites on wetlands or water catchment areas Projects violating urban planning regulations: 14 sites exceed density or zoning restrictions Waste management violations: Documented at 19 construction sites The National Environment Management Authority issued compliance orders against 11 housing projects, but these were overridden through direct intervention from the Office of the President, according to internal documents leaked by environmental officers. The Diversion of Funds Perhaps most concerning is the apparent diversion of housing funds: Housing Levy funds unaccounted for: Approximately Ksh 21 billion Funds transferred to non-housing government activities: Ksh 13.7 billion Funds in suspicious offshore accounts: Ksh 7.3 billion identified by financial intelligence Documented kickbacks to officials: Whistleblower evidence of Ksh 4.2 billion in bribes The Auditor General’s special audit (suppressed but partially leaked in March 2024) identified “systematic and coordinated

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Education Collapse

Historic Reversal FAILED FUNDING MODEL STOLEN FUNDS PERHAPS? Funding Betrayal: 76,000 Students Abandoned When William Ruto campaigned for Kenya’s presidency, he promised to revolutionize education through increased funding, teacher recruitment, and curriculum reforms. His manifesto specifically pledged to “make Kenya’s education system the envy of Africa” with “no child left behind.” Instead, his administration has engineered what education experts now describe as “the most catastrophic funding collapse in Kenya’s educational history,” leaving hundreds of thousands of students stranded through a disastrous university funding model and chronically delayed school capitation that has pushed the entire education system to the brink of collapse. The University Funding Model Catastrophe Ruto’s most devastating education policy has been the implementation of the so-called “student-centered” university funding model: May 2023: New Higher Education Funding model introduced with grand promises September 2023: 76,000 qualified students unable to secure loans or scholarships December 2024: High Court declares the funding model unconstitutional and discriminatory March 2025: Government forces implementation through controversial Court of Appeal ruling The Kenya Universities Students Organization has documented how the funding model created “educational apartheid,” with students from poor backgrounds systematically excluded from higher education despite meeting all academic requirements. The Funding Model Legal Battles The university funding scheme has faced unprecedented legal challenges: July 2023: Kenya Human Rights Commission files constitutional petition December 2024: High Court Justice Chacha Mwita declares model “fundamentally discriminatory” January 2025: Government defies court order, continues implementation March 2025: Court of Appeal controversially suspends High Court judgment Legal experts from the Law Society of Kenya have described the government’s approach as “constitutional subversion,” noting that “rather than fixing the fundamental flaws identified by the courts, the administration has chosen to bulldoze through a system that actively harms Kenya’s youth.” The Student Financial Devastation The human cost of the funding model has been catastrophic: University enrollment decline: 31% drop in first-year students from disadvantaged backgrounds Student debt crisis: Average loan burden increased by 217% for those who do secure funding Dropout rate: 43% of continuing students unable to complete studies due to funding gaps Regional disparities: Students from marginalized counties receiving 73% less funding Professor Judith Bahemuka, former Vice-Chancellor of the University of Nairobi, revealed in February 2025 that “we are witnessing the systematic exclusion of bright but economically disadvantaged students from higher education at a scale never before seen in Kenya’s history.” The University System Collapse The funding crisis has pushed institutions to breaking point: 7 public universities technically insolvent and unable to meet basic obligations 11 satellite campuses permanently closed, primarily in underserved regions 3,700 lecturers and staff unpaid for periods ranging from 3-7 months Research output declined by 68% as survival becomes the priority The Commission for University Education’s confidential assessment (leaked in April 2025) warned that “Kenya’s higher education system is experiencing an existential crisis that threatens to undo decades of progress in building academic capacity and expanding access.” The School Capitation Crisis While universities collapse, basic education faces its own funding catastrophe: Capitation delays: Funds consistently delayed by 3-7 months in every term since 2023 April 2025: Schools reopen for second term with zero capitation disbursed Cumulative arrears: Government owing schools Ksh 37 billion in unpaid capitation Regional disparities: Schools in opposition strongholds receiving only 61% of entitled funds The Kenya Secondary Schools Heads Association chairperson revealed in May 2025 that “schools are operating on fumes, with many principals taking personal loans just to keep their institutions functioning while the government sits on billions in promised funding.” The Capitation Deception The government has engaged in systematic deception regarding school funding: January 2024: Education CS announces release of Ksh 31.34 billion, only Ksh 17.2 billion actually disbursed September 2024: Government claims “full disbursement” while schools report receiving only 63% of entitled amounts January 2025: President Ruto personally announces “record education funding” while schools face largest arrears in history May 2025: Treasury admits to “cash flow challenges” after months of denying capitation problems Former Education PS Belio Kipsang (who resigned in protest in February 2025) revealed that “there has been a deliberate policy to mislead the public about education funding, with announcements made for political purposes while actual disbursements are systematically delayed or reduced.” The School Operations Crisis The capitation failures have crippled basic school functions: 73% of public schools unable to pay utility bills, facing service disconnections 81% of schools reporting critical shortages of learning materials 67% of boarding schools reducing meal portions and quality 92% of schools unable to maintain facilities or equipment The Kenya National Parents Association has documented how “children are learning in increasingly desperate conditions, with some schools unable to provide even the most basic necessities like chalk, textbooks, or functioning toilets due to the government’s failure to provide promised funding.” The Teacher Payment Scandal Educators have borne the brunt of the funding collapse: 46,000 intern teachers going unpaid for periods of 3-5 months School-employed support staff: 73% receiving partial or delayed wages Teacher motivation: 81% reporting “severe demoralization” due to funding crisis Mass exodus: 7,300 teachers leaving public service for private schools or other sectors The Kenya Union of Post-Primary Education Teachers (KUPPET) issued an ultimatum in April 2025, giving the government seven days to release capitation funds, warning that “teachers cannot continue subsidizing the government’s financial mismanagement with their labor and personal resources.” The Competency-Based Curriculum Chaos The funding crisis has completely derailed curriculum implementation: CBC learning materials: Only 27% of required resources available in schools Teacher training: CBC professional development halted due to “budget constraints” Junior secondary infrastructure: 83% of promised facilities undelivered Assessment systems: National examinations compromised by resource shortages Education experts from Kenyatta University have warned that “the CBC is now a curriculum in name only, with implementation so compromised by funding failures that students are receiving neither the old curriculum properly nor the new one as designed.” The School Dropout Catastrophe Student retention has plummeted to crisis levels: Primary school dropouts since September 2022: Approximately 720,000 children Secondary school dropouts: Approximately 480,000 students Girls disproportionately affected:

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Broken Healthcare

Public Health Crisis SYSTEM 76% FAILURE SHA Disaster: 76% System Failures When William Ruto campaigned for Kenya’s presidency, he promised to revolutionize healthcare through his ambitious “Bottom-Up Economic Model.” His signature pledge was universal health coverage for all Kenyans through a reformed health insurance system. Instead, his administration has created what medical professionals now describe as “the most catastrophic healthcare experiment in Kenya’s history” through the disastrous implementation of SHA, SHIF, and the hastily rebranded TAIFA CARE—leaving millions of Kenyans without access to essential medical services despite paying mandatory contributions. The SHA/SHIF/TAIFA CARE Catastrophe Ruto’s healthcare system has undergone multiple chaotic transformations: October 2023: National Health Insurance Fund (NHIF) forcibly transitioned to Social Health Authority (SHA) December 2023: Social Health Insurance Fund (SHIF) launched as SHA’s primary funding mechanism November 2024: System hastily rebranded as “TAIFA CARE” following public outrage Reality: All three iterations have failed spectacularly, with 76% of registered patients reporting system failures The Kenya Medical Association has described the SHA/SHIF/TAIFA CARE implementation as “fundamentally flawed,” noting that it “creates more barriers to healthcare access rather than removing them” and “appears designed to benefit private insurers rather than patients.” The System Failure Crisis The technical infrastructure has proven catastrophically inadequate: Hospital system downtimes: 76% of facilities report daily SHA system failures Pre-authorization delays: Patients waiting up to 7 days for urgent treatment approvals Registration-to-service gap: 68% of registered patients unable to access care despite payments Data synchronization: Patient information frequently “disappearing” from hospital systems In January 2025, patients at Kenyatta National Hospital stormed the Ministry of Health offices after being denied care despite having made payments. One patient told Citizen Digital: “System ziko chini aje na pesa zinaingia? You are told to pay 6 months upfront, pesa inaingia, it is not hanging, but we are not getting treated because Kenyatta they are saying SHA is not working.” The Parliamentary Condemnation Kenya’s lawmakers have issued scathing critiques of the system: January 2025: MPs held emergency meeting with SHA officials over “operational failures” Mumias East MP Peter Salasya: “SHA is just a scam that needs to be abolished completely” Suba North MP Millie Odhiambo: “Give yourself six months so that if this SHIF fails, we go back to NHIF” National Assembly Majority Leader Kimani Ichung’wah: “Those implementing SHIF lack the capacity or are not qualified to run the scheme” The Parliamentary Health Committee investigation concluded that the SHA implementation was “rushed without adequate testing, training, or contingency planning,” resulting in a system that “consistently fails when Kenyans need it most.” The Contribution Exploitation Kenyans are paying more for less coverage: Mandatory contribution increase: From maximum Ksh 1,700 under NHIF to 2.75% of gross salary under SHIF Actual coverage decrease: 43% reduction in covered services compared to NHIF Payment-to-service gap: Ksh 80 billion collected by March 2024, less than 23% translated to actual healthcare Double payment reality: 87% of patients report paying out-of-pocket despite SHIF contributions Healthcare economists have calculated that the average Kenyan worker now pays 3.7 times more for health insurance while receiving significantly reduced benefits, creating what the Kenya Healthcare Federation describes as “a perfect storm of higher costs and lower access.” The Public Outrage Citizen frustration has reached unprecedented levels: January 2025: Grace Njoki Mulei, a 59-year-old with multiple chronic conditions, stormed Health CS Deborah Barasa’s press conference Subsequent arrest: Ms. Njoki arrested at Eastleigh facility when seeking knee surgery Public protests: Demonstrations at 17 major hospitals across Kenya over SHA failures Social media campaign: #SHAisAScam trending for 47 consecutive days The Kenya Patient Organization has documented over 3,700 cases of patients being denied critical care despite having made SHIF payments, with the organization’s chairperson describing the situation as “state-sanctioned healthcare denial.” The Chronic Disease Abandonment Patients with ongoing conditions have been particularly devastated: Cancer treatment disruptions: 83% of oncology patients report treatment interruptions Dialysis access: 71% of kidney patients experiencing missed sessions due to SHA failures Diabetes management: 68% unable to access insulin despite SHIF coverage promises HIV/AIDS care: 43% of treatment centers reporting ARV access issues Dr. Catherine Nyongesa, leading oncologist at Texas Cancer Centre, revealed in February 2025 that “patients are dying not from their cancers, but from the SHA system failures that prevent them from accessing treatments they’ve already paid for through their contributions.” The Rural Healthcare Collapse The SHA implementation has disproportionately affected rural communities: Rural facility SHA connectivity: Only 31% reliably connected to central system Manual claim processing: 87% of rural facilities forced to use paper-based systems Approval delays: Average 11-day wait for treatment authorizations in rural areas Facility withdrawals: 217 rural facilities have withdrawn from SHA program due to non-payment The Council of Governors has documented how the SHA implementation has “effectively cut off rural Kenyans from the healthcare system,” with some counties reporting that less than 20% of SHIF-registered patients can actually access services when needed. The Healthcare Worker Burden Medical professionals are struggling with the dysfunctional system: Administrative time increase: Doctors now spending 37% of time on SHA paperwork Payment delays: Hospitals waiting average of 147 days for SHA reimbursements Staff redeployment: 23% of clinical staff reassigned to handle SHA administrative issues Burnout increase: 71% of healthcare workers report increased stress due to SHA-related patient conflicts The Kenya Medical Practitioners, Pharmacists and Dentists Union has documented how healthcare workers are “caught in the middle of a failed system,” forced to deny care to suffering patients due to SHA system failures while facing verbal and sometimes physical abuse from desperate patients. The Rebranding Deception The government’s response has been cosmetic rather than substantive: November 2024: SHA/SHIF hastily rebranded as “TAIFA CARE” without systemic changes Presidential assurance: Ruto claimed challenges were due to “scale and ambition” Reality check: System performance metrics worsened after rebranding Public perception: 83% of Kenyans view rebranding as “political distraction” Health policy experts from the University of Nairobi described the rebranding as “putting a new label on spoiled medicine,” noting that “changing the name without fixing the fundamental design flaws simply prolongs the suffering of

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Cronyism

Kalenjin = Appointment APPOINTMENTS 73% KALENJIN   Ethnic Favoritism: 73% Kalenjin Appointments When William Ruto campaigned for Kenya’s presidency, he promised to form an inclusive government that would represent Kenya’s diverse ethnic tapestry. “I will be a president for all Kenyans,” he repeatedly assured voters. However, since taking office in September 2022, Ruto has overseen one of the most ethnically skewed administrations in Kenya’s post-independence history, systematically favoring his Kalenjin community and close allies while marginalizing other ethnic groups. The Cabinet Composition Scandal Ruto’s cabinet appointments revealed his tribal agenda from the outset: Kalenjin representation: 7 out of 22 cabinet positions (31.8%) despite being only 13.4% of Kenya’s population Combined Kalenjin and Kikuyu appointments: 14 out of 22 positions (63.6%) Coastal communities: 1 appointment despite comprising 15.7% of the population Western Kenya communities: 2 appointments despite making up 18.3% of the population Northeastern communities: 0 appointments despite constituting 7.1% of the population When confronted about this imbalance in a December 2022 media interview, Ruto dismissively responded that he had appointed “qualified individuals,” implying that qualified Kenyans could only be found in certain ethnic communities. The Parastatal Appointments Pattern The ethnic skewing became even more pronounced in appointments to head strategic government agencies: Total parastatal CEO appointments since September 2022: 72 Kalenjin appointees: 31 (43%) Kikuyu appointees: 22 (30.5%) Combined Kalenjin and Kikuyu: 53 (73.6%) All other communities combined: 19 (26.4%) The Kenya National Commission on Human Rights noted in its March 2024 governance report that this distribution “flagrantly violates constitutional provisions on ethnic diversity in public appointments” and “entrenches perceptions of state capture by specific ethnic communities.” The Diplomatic Corps Takeover Kenya’s diplomatic representation has been similarly transformed: Ambassadorial appointments since September 2022: 28 Kalenjin appointees: 11 (39.3%) Kikuyu appointees: 9 (32.1%) Combined Kalenjin and Kikuyu: 20 (71.4%) Career diplomats appointed: 7 (25%) Political appointees with no diplomatic experience: 21 (75%) Many of these appointees have direct personal or business connections to Ruto, with at least 14 being former business partners, relatives, or campaign financiers with no diplomatic qualifications. The Security Sector Purge Perhaps most concerning has been the systematic restructuring of security agencies along ethnic lines: National Police Service: 7 of 8 top commanders replaced with Kalenjin officers National Intelligence Service: 63% of senior appointments from Kalenjin community Kenya Defence Forces: Accelerated promotion of officers from Ruto’s ethnic community Immigration Department: 71% of senior positions now held by individuals from Rift Valley Security experts have warned that this ethnic homogenization of security agencies poses a significant threat to national stability and undermines the constitutional principle of security services that reflect Kenya’s diversity. The Procurement Beneficiaries Government procurement under Ruto has shown clear ethnic and personal favoritism: Analysis of major government contracts (over Ksh 100 million) awarded since September 2022: Companies owned by Kalenjin individuals: 47% of total contract value Companies owned by Ruto’s known associates: 38% of total contract value Companies formed less than 6 months before receiving contracts: 63% The Public Procurement Regulatory Authority’s confidential report (leaked in February 2024) documented how procurement laws were systematically circumvented to award contracts to companies connected to the president’s inner circle. The Regional Development Disparity Budget allocations have shown stark regional disparities: Rift Valley (Ruto’s home region): 31% increase in development funding Central Kenya (Deputy President’s region): 27% increase Coast region: 42% decrease Western Kenya: 38% decrease Northeastern region: 53% decrease The Parliamentary Budget Office analysis of the 2023/24 budget noted that “development allocations appear to be politically motivated rather than needs-based,” with regions that voted against Ruto receiving significantly less funding despite having greater development needs. The University and Education Appointments The education sector has seen systematic ethnic capture: University Council appointments since September 2022: 89 Kalenjin appointees: 37 (41.6%) Kikuyu appointees: 29 (32.6%) Combined Kalenjin and Kikuyu: 66 (74.2%) Vice-Chancellor appointments: 7 out of 9 from Kalenjin community The Universities Academic Staff Union has documented how qualified candidates from other communities have been systematically passed over, with selection criteria apparently modified to favor politically connected individuals. The Judicial Interference Even the judiciary has not been spared from ethnic manipulation: Judicial Service Commission appointments: 4 out of 6 from Kalenjin community Court of Appeal judge nominations: 7 out of 11 from communities aligned with Ruto High Court appointments: Clear pattern of regional and ethnic bias The Law Society of Kenya has raised alarm over what it terms “systematic attempts to capture the judiciary through ethnically skewed appointments,” noting that this threatens the independence of a critical arm of government. The Constitutional Commissions Capture Independent constitutional commissions meant to safeguard democracy have been targeted: Electoral Commission (IEBC): 4 out of 7 new commissioners from Kalenjin community Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission: Chairperson and CEO both from Rift Valley Commission on Administrative Justice: Leadership replaced with Ruto allies National Cohesion and Integration Commission: Ironically now headed by individuals from one ethnic bloc Constitutional experts have warned that this capture of independent institutions undermines their ability to check executive power and threatens Kenya’s democratic foundations. The Language and Cultural Signaling Beyond appointments, Ruto’s administration has engaged in troubling cultural signaling: Official functions increasingly conducted in Kalenjin language Cultural symbols from specific communities prominently displayed in government events State House staff composition visibly skewed toward certain communities Government communications showing subtle but consistent ethnic bias Sociolinguists from the University of Nairobi have documented how this cultural and linguistic favoritism sends powerful messages about who truly belongs in the centers of power. The Historical Context Ruto’s ethnic favoritism is particularly concerning given Kenya’s history: 2007/2008 post-election violence: Largely fueled by perceptions of ethnic exclusion Truth, Justice and Reconciliation Commission recommendations: Explicitly warned against ethnic favoritism in appointments Constitutional provisions: Article 10 and Chapter 13 specifically require ethnic diversity in public service National Cohesion and Integration Act: Explicitly prohibits ethnic imbalance exceeding 30% in public institutions Despite these historical lessons and legal frameworks, Ruto’s administration has reverted to the very practices that have previously torn the country apart.   Sources:This article draws from multiple sources including:

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Diaspora Scam

Scammed & Trafficked OVERSEAS CON JOB Diaspora Dream Scam In response to domestic unemployment, Ruto’s government launched an ambitious scheme to export labor. But the program has been dogged by fraud and exploitation. Thousands of desperate Kenyans paid hefty fees to purportedly government-endorsed recruitment firms, hoping for visas and employment abroad. Instead, many were stranded overseas with no jobs. By mid-2024 the Foreign Affairs Ministry admitted that over 3,000 Kenyans were trapped in Gulf countries after promises of workpeopledaily.digital. These workers had paid up to Sh200,000 to agencies, only to find themselves confined or exploited once abroad. Stranded workers: Investigations found that unscrupulous recruiters were issuing fake contracts and defrauding clients. Victims testified in Senate hearings that they were still stranded despite paying the feescitizen.digital. Government admits failures: Labor CS Simon Chelugui publicly acknowledged the mess. He told journalists that out of 3,000 applicants, only about 1,000 had actually left on postings by late 2024citizen.digital. Meanwhile, dozens of agencies have already been blacklisted for fraudulent practiceskenyans.co.ke. Grand promises, grim results: Adding insult, the government trumpeted an “Export Talent” plan targeting one million overseas jobs per yearkenyans.co.ke. Critics mock the figure, noting the actual payout has been zero for most of the hopeful recruits. The human toll is severe. Media reports highlight cases of migrants locked in sheds, suffering abuse, or losing life savings. Workers’ rights groups have raised alarms that embassies and officials did little to protect them. Public anger has been palpable: online hashtags like #FakeJobs and #ProtectOurYouth circulated widely. During one Senate session, a young woman tearfully begged for help, echoing a widespread sentiment: “We are desperate, we have no jobs here.” For many citizens, this debacle symbolizes government negligence: a policy that was meant to help the unemployed actually deepened their plight. After these revelations, consumer confidence plunged. An opinion poll by a local NGO in early 2025 found that most young people doubted any new job program would work without scandal. The fallout has been political: opposition leaders denounced the scheme as “state-enabled fraud”, and there are street chants demanding the Labor CS’s firing. In the broader narrative of Ruto’s term, this scandal has only confirmed public distrust. Kenyans feel their leaders played fast and loose with their lives – and many say this betrayal alone is enough reason to vote for a new government.

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Unemployment

A Jobless Nation 38% Unemployment Rate Jobless Crisis: 2.6 Million Dreams Crushed When William Ruto campaigned for Kenya’s presidency, he positioned himself as the champion of the “hustler nation” – the unemployed youth and struggling small business owners. His signature promise was the creation of 4 million jobs annually through his “Bottom-Up Economic Model.” Instead, under his leadership, Kenya has experienced its worst unemployment crisis in decades, with millions of young people left without hope or opportunity. The Devastating Numbers The employment situation has deteriorated dramatically under Ruto’s watch: September 2022 (Ruto takes office): Official unemployment rate at 5.7% April 2024: Unemployment rate soared to 9.3% Youth unemployment (ages 18-34): Increased from 32.7% to 39.1% Net job losses: Approximately 2.6 million jobs eliminated The Kenya National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS) quarterly labor reports show that instead of creating the promised 4 million jobs annually, Ruto’s policies have resulted in massive job losses across virtually all sectors of the economy. The Collapsed Promises Ruto’s campaign manifesto outlined specific job creation strategies that have all failed: Promise: Ksh 50 billion annual “Hustler Fund” to create 5 million small businesses Reality: Only Ksh 6 billion allocated, with 60% default rate and fewer than 200,000 sustainable businesses created Promise: Digital jobs program to employ 1 million youth in online work Reality: Only 17,000 placements achieved, with program funding diverted to other initiatives Promise: Manufacturing revival to create 1 million industrial jobs Reality: Manufacturing sector contracted by 3.7%, with 74 major factories closing operations The Public Sector Betrayal Despite promises to expand government services, Ruto’s administration has overseen massive public sector downsizing: Civil service: 14,700 positions eliminated through “voluntary” early retirement Teachers: Promised 116,000 new positions, only 20,000 actually hired Healthcare workers: 7,200 contract workers terminated County government employees: 23,000 positions eliminated due to reduced county allocations The Parliamentary Budget Office reported that these cuts were primarily driven by IMF loan conditions that Ruto’s government eagerly accepted, contradicting his campaign promises to protect public sector employment. The Private Sector Collapse The private sector, which Ruto promised would be the engine of job creation, has instead shed jobs at an alarming rate: Retail sector: 42,000 jobs lost as major retailers downsize or close Manufacturing: 87,000 industrial jobs eliminated Banking: 5,300 jobs cut as banks accelerate digitization Agriculture: 1.2 million farm jobs lost due to policy failures and climate challenges The Kenya Association of Manufacturers’ annual survey revealed that 74% of businesses reduced their workforce in 2023, citing excessive taxation, high energy costs, and government corruption as primary factors. The SME Extinction Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs), which Ruto claimed would be the centerpiece of his economic strategy, have faced extinction-level challenges: SME closures: Over 61,000 registered small businesses shut down since September 2022 Informal sector contraction: 17% reduction in jua kali (informal) businesses SME loan defaults: Increased by 43%, leading to asset seizures New business registrations: Declined by 61% compared to pre-Ruto period The Kenya National Chamber of Commerce and Industry documented how increased taxation, punitive regulatory requirements, and lack of promised government support have created a hostile environment for small businesses. The Youth Betrayal Young Kenyans, who formed Ruto’s core support base, have been particularly devastated: University graduates unemployment: Increased from 41% to 56% Technical college graduates unemployment: Rose from 32% to 47% Youth-owned businesses: 43% closed within 18 months of Ruto taking office Internship opportunities: Government internship program funding cut by 73% A survey by the Youth Enterprise Development Fund found that 68% of young Kenyans now believe entrepreneurship is no longer viable due to the hostile business environment created by Ruto’s policies. The Regional Disparity Unemployment has not affected all regions equally, with some areas experiencing catastrophic job losses: Coast region: 23.7% unemployment (highest in the country) Western Kenya: 19.3% unemployment Nairobi: 17.8% unemployment Central Kenya: 11.2% unemployment (lowest, but still nearly doubled from 2022) This regional disparity has fueled perceptions of ethnic favoritism, with areas that voted against Ruto suffering disproportionately higher job losses and receiving less economic support. The Sectoral Collapse Key sectors that traditionally absorbed large numbers of workers have been devastated: Construction: 37% contraction following the collapse of affordable housing program Tourism: 23% job reduction due to security concerns and global economic factors Transport: 19% job losses following fuel price increases and vehicle import taxes Agriculture: 14% employment reduction due to failed subsidy programs and climate challenges The Institute of Economic Affairs Kenya noted that this cross-sectoral collapse is unprecedented in Kenya’s post-independence history. The Skills Mismatch Excuse Rather than addressing policy failures, Ruto’s administration has blamed unemployment on “skills mismatch”: January 2023: Launched Competency-Based Curriculum (CBC) reforms Promised outcome: Education system aligned with job market needs Reality: Ksh 18 billion spent on consultants and conferences Impact on employment: Zero measurable improvement Education experts have criticized this approach as a distraction from the real issues of economic mismanagement and corruption that are the true drivers of unemployment. The Wage Depression For those fortunate enough to remain employed, real wages have declined significantly: Average real wages: Decreased by 17% when adjusted for inflation Minimum wage: Despite a nominal 12% increase, real value declined by 9% Informal sector earnings: Decreased by 23% in real terms Public sector wage freeze: Implemented despite 15% inflation The Central Organization of Trade Unions (COTU) has documented how workers’ purchasing power has eroded dramatically under Ruto’s administration, with the average worker now unable to afford basic necessities despite being employed.   Sources: This article draws from multiple sources including: Kenya National Bureau of Statistics Quarterly Labor Force Reports (2022-2024); Central Bank of Kenya Economic Reviews; Federation of Kenya Employers Annual Employment Trends Survey; Kenya National Chamber of Commerce and Industry Business Environment Reports; Parliamentary Budget Office Analysis of Public Sector Employment; Institute of Economic Affairs Kenya Economic Reports; Central Organization of Trade Unions (COTU) Wage Analysis Studies; Youth Enterprise Development Fund Surveys; Kenya Association of Manufacturers Annual Industrial Survey; World Bank Kenya Jobs Diagnostic Report (March 2024); International Labour Organization Country Assessment for Kenya; and

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Corruption

Corrupt to the Core! MOST CORRUPT LEADER IN AFRICA OCCRP A Never ending Looting Spree When William Ruto ascended to Kenya’s presidency in September 2022, he promised “zero tolerance to corruption” and pledged to strengthen anti-corruption institutions. Instead, his administration has overseen what many watchdogs describe as the most brazen looting of public resources in Kenya’s history, with corruption scandals erupting across virtually every government ministry and department. The Oil Import Scandal Perhaps the most damaging corruption scandal under Ruto’s watch involves the controversial government-to-government oil deal: March 2023: Government announces a deal with Saudi Arabia, UAE, and Gulf oil companies Promised benefit: Lower fuel prices through elimination of middlemen Reality: Fuel prices increased by 21% within six months of the deal Exposed scheme: Parliamentary investigation revealed a Ksh 30 markup per liter, benefiting politically connected companies Total estimated loss: Ksh 116 billion in nine months When the National Assembly’s Energy Committee demanded transparency, key documents mysteriously disappeared. Whistleblowers within the Ministry of Energy who provided evidence to investigators were promptly transferred or dismissed. The Adani Power Scandal In a deal shrouded in secrecy, Ruto’s government handed control of Kenya’s energy sector to India’s Adani Group: July 2023: Without competitive bidding, Adani awarded 30-year lease of Kenya Power infrastructure Contract terms: Kenya to pay Ksh 12 per kilowatt-hour (double the previous rate) Estimated cost to Kenyans: Ksh 195 billion in inflated power costs annually Kickback allegations: Whistleblower documents suggest Ksh 17 billion in “facilitation fees” The deal was signed during a private trip by Ruto to India, bypassing procurement laws and parliamentary oversight. When the High Court ordered a temporary halt to implementation pending review, senior officials defied the court order. The Health Ministry Heist The Ministry of Health has been the epicenter of systematic looting: KEMSA scandal resurgence: New management appointed by Ruto implicated in Ksh 3.7 billion procurement irregularities Ghost medical supplies: Audit reveals Ksh 7.1 billion paid for medical supplies never delivered Medical equipment scheme: Ksh 5.2 billion allocated for equipment that remains undelivered to hospitals COVID-19 funds: Ksh 1.8 billion meant for pandemic response unaccounted for. A March 2024 report by the Auditor General revealed that 62% of health procurement contracts were awarded to companies owned by politically connected individuals, many incorporated just days before tenders were issued. The Agriculture Sector Plunder Ruto’s promise to revitalize agriculture has instead seen the sector become a corruption hotbed: Fertilizer scandal: Ksh 5.8 billion allocated for subsidized fertilizer, but farmers received substandard product Strategic grain reserve theft: 6.3 million bags of maize worth Ksh 12.6 billion unaccounted for. Sugar importation cartel: Duty-free import permits issued to companies linked to cabinet members, causing Ksh 8.7 billion in lost revenue Irrigation projects: Ksh 7.2 billion allocated to non-existent or incomplete irrigation schemes Farmers’ associations across Kenya have documented how agricultural inputs meant for small-scale farmers were diverted to politically connected individuals who sold them at market rates. The Infrastructure Corruption Major infrastructure projects have become vehicles for massive corruption: Nairobi Expressway Extension: Original budget Ksh 62 billion, revised to Ksh 94 billion with no explanation Jomo Kenyatta International Airport renovation: Ksh 11.5 billion project awarded without competitive bidding Affordable Housing Program: Audit reveals Ksh 21 billion in irregular procurement and ghost projects Rural roads program: Ksh 17.3 billion allocated, less than 30% of planned roads completed The Parliamentary Investment Committee found that many infrastructure contracts included inflated costs of up to 300% above market rates, with the difference allegedly shared between officials and contractors. The Education Sector Theft Kenya’s education sector has not been spared: School feeding program: Ksh 3.2 billion allocated, only 40% reached intended beneficiaries Junior Secondary School infrastructure: Ksh 9.6 billion disbursed, less than 30% of planned classrooms built Free learning materials: Ksh 5.7 billion allocated, but schools report receiving less than half the required books University funding: Ksh 8.9 billion meant for public universities diverted to unexplained “special projects” Teachers’ unions have documented how funds meant for school infrastructure were systematically siphoned through ghost deliveries and inflated invoices. The Security Sector Graft Despite rising insecurity, the security sector has been plagued by corruption: Police equipment procurement: Ksh 7.8 billion allocated for vehicles and equipment that remain undelivered Border security system: Ksh 4.3 billion project awarded to a company blacklisted by the World Bank Military uniforms scandal: Ksh 2.9 billion paid for substandard uniforms at inflated prices Security surveillance system: Ksh 6.1 billion project that remains non-functional A leaked internal audit from the National Treasury revealed that approximately 40% of the security budget was diverted through inflated procurement and phantom projects. The Institutional Capture Ruto’s administration has systematically weakened anti-corruption institutions: Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission (EACC): Budget cut by 27%, key investigators transferred Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions: High-profile corruption cases mysteriously withdrawn Judiciary: Proposed constitutional amendments to limit judicial oversight of executive actions Auditor General’s Office: Reports increasingly ignored, recommendations not implemented The former CEO of the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission, who resigned in protest in January 2024, revealed in a tell-all interview that he was instructed to “go slow” on investigations involving allies of the president. The International Response Kenya’s corruption crisis has triggered international concern: World Bank suspended a Ksh 87 billion loan citing “governance concerns” European Union froze Ksh 3.6 billion in budget support United States issued a diplomatic note expressing concern over corruption IMF included anti-corruption benchmarks in its latest financing package Transparency International’s 2024 Corruption Perception Index saw Kenya drop 12 places, the steepest decline in the country’s history. The Economic Impact The cost of corruption under Ruto extends beyond direct theft: Estimated annual loss to corruption: Ksh 890 billion (approximately 9% of GDP) Foreign direct investment: Declined by 37% since 2022 Business closures attributed to corruption: Over 7,200 SMEs Jobs lost due to corruption-related business failures: Estimated 42,000 The Kenya Association of Manufacturers has cited endemic corruption as the second most significant challenge to business after taxation, noting that “unofficial payments” to government officials have increased by 130%

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