Browsing: Justice

In many societies, politics is meant to be a public contract. Citizens give leaders authority through votes, and in return, leaders are expected to deliver services, protection, and development. That is the theory.

But in practice, a different pattern often emerges—one where citizens are kept just above the threshold of survival, while real opportunity, resources, and national wealth circulate within a small circle of political and business elites.

This is what many describe as the politics of shortchanging citizens.

Fuel at KSh 200 is not just an economic statistic.

It is a signal.

A signal that something in the system is not working the way it should.

And until that is addressed,

the pressure will not just remain—

it will rise.

The pressure will increase.

Nonviolence has never been neutral.
It has never been automatic.
And it has never worked in isolation.

At its core, nonviolence is not just a moral stance—it is a test.
A test of whether those in power still possess the capacity to feel shame, to recognize injustice, and to respond to moral pressure.

And when that capacity is absent, the entire equation changes.

In a functioning democracy, voter registration is meant to be simple, predictable, and secure. It is the quiet foundation upon which the loud drama of elections is built. But sometimes, a single moment at a registration desk can shake that foundation.

We are not beneficiaries of the government.
We are its source.

This shift in thinking changes everything.

It turns:

gratitude into expectation
silence into questioning
distance into engagement

And it reminds both citizens and leaders of a fundamental truth:

The government does not stand above the people.
It stands because of them.

Then Amin stood and delivered his idea:

Uganda would be renamed… Idi.

What followed was not discussion.
It was silence.

But not ordinary silence.

This was the kind of silence shaped by fear—the kind where even your thoughts feel like they need permission.

There is no doubt that high-ranking officials often operate under demanding schedules. Security concerns, time constraints, and national duties can justify certain logistical decisions—including air travel.

But justification must always be balanced with restraint.

Because public office is not just about what one can do.

It is about what one should do.

The difference between the two is where leadership is truly tested

The recent attack on Godfrey Osotsi is not just an isolated incident—it is a signal. A warning.

An elected leader was attacked in broad daylight.

Pause and think about that.

If someone with visibility, influence, and security can be targeted so openly, what does that say about the safety of ordinary citizens? The market vendor. The boda boda rider. The student walking home at dusk.

It sends a chilling message: no one is truly beyond reach.

And that realization spreads faster than any official statement can contain.

Kenya does not lack laws.

It lacks consistency.

It lacks accountability in enforcement.
It lacks consequences for institutional failure.

Fixing this is not optional—it is essential.

Because a nation that punishes compliance creates a dangerous incentive:

To bypass the system altogether.

Cases like this do not happen automatically.

They happen because someone refuses to accept injustice as normal.

Because someone decides that being wronged is not the same as being defeated.

Because someone is willing to endure the long road to accountability.

And in doing so, they widen that road for others.

The Politics That Won’t Stay Out
Now enter the part everyone says we should avoid—
Politics.
But politics, like gravity, has a way of pulling everything into its orbit.
Tuju was not just a businessman.
He was a political actor.
And in 2022, he made explosive revelations—the kind that don’t just disappear into the air.
And in Kenya, there is a saying, whispered more than spoken:
Power neither forgets… nor forgives.
It waits. Then it revisits.
Some believe that what we are seeing today is not just a financial reckoning—
But a delayed response.

The Human Reality Behind Headlines

It is easy to read about “bodies” and “mass graves” and let the words blur.

But each body was a person.

Someone with a name.
A family.
A story that did not deserve to end this way.

Behind every sack is a life interrupted.
Behind every grave is a circle of grief that has no answers.

When we reduce victims to numbers, we distance ourselves from the urgency of justice.

If rules can be stretched now—
If influence can be justified now—
If interference can be normalized now—

Then what happens in five more years?