Martha Karua explains the Azimio strategy behind collecting 10 million signatures from Kenyans (Ruto government in big trouble)
The end-game behind the 10 million signatures that the Azimio la Umoja Coalition is gathering has been clarified by Narc Kenya Party leader and Azimio deputy, Martha Karua.
She says the main aim is to get a verifiable count of Kenyans who support Azimio's anti-government demonstrations through the signatures.
"Those signatures are a body count of individuals directly exercising their will. They are not intended for admission to any university. In an interview with Spice FM, Karua stated, "It is merely a body count of people supporting the cause.
Raila Odinga, the leader of Azimio, stated last Friday that the coalition aims to collect 10 million signatures by Friday, July 14, while speaking at the packed Saba Saba rally at Nairobi's Kamukunji Grounds.
The government's failure to address the opposition's complaints, such as punitive taxes, a high cost of living, electoral fraud, and biased hiring of electoral commissioners, according to Raila, forced the decision.
Karua went on to say that without the required number of signatures, the opposition was not interested in ousting President William Ruto.
It is a venue for Kenyans to air their complaints and disappointments, according to the leader of the Narc Kenya party.
We will have as many meetings as we can all over Kenya since there isn't a venue big enough to hold a general meeting of the Kenyan populace, stated Karua.
She emphasized that Kenyans may immediately express their desire and sovereignty by appending their signatures.
Treasury Cabinet Secretary Njuguna Ndung'u had requested the court to overturn the directives in his case. He argued that the government will experience a budget catastrophe as a result. He told Justice Mugure Thande that the government had continued to lose Sh578 million daily in taxes since the orders were issued on June 30.
In one instance, Elijah Okumu's family said that, when he was closing up shop in Nairobi's Dandora district, police shot and killed the 26-year-old. Okumu was transported by family members to Mama Lucy Hospital in eastern Nairobi before being moved to Kenyatta National Hospital, where he passed away from his wounds. And there are still a ton more instances like this one.
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Spending the weekend in police detention, two senior female managers who ordered female employees to remove their underwear in order to cover a sanitary pad that was thrown away in the wrong bin will return to court on Monday (Today).
The saying "the dead don't tell tales" has come to haunt police and a Kakamega town when the body of a lady who had been missing for more than a week was found after its location was revealed in a dream.
The strange episode has reignited the long-running argument over whether the dead may speak to the living and the applicability of "their messages" to those they may have talked to.
Police are unsure of whether to treat the person to whom the revelation was made as a whistle-blower or a suspect as the villagers speculate that the dream may be a testament to the deceased's desire for a proper funeral and her determination to see her killers brought to justice.
Former chief Justice Willy Mutunga, shortly after making remarks captured on this channel about the police force being a colonial police force and the colonialist who is still too powerful in Kenya, gets tear-gassed in Nairobi.
Sometimes in politics, events and developments that unfold quietly behind the scene have the biggest impact. Like the human factor (which Chairman Mao once said was a key determinant in any great undertaking.).
In this Kumekucha video we conclude a full analysis of what Kenyans should expect going forward as a result of a most impactful saba saba day 2023.
Captivating read in the Sunday Nation this morning in the Weekly Review section on Tom Mboya. Confirms information available on this channel over 5 years ago on who killed Mboya and why.
Our series on Mboya: It was more than an assassination even gives you the name of the man who pulled the trigger and later died a miserable man full of regrets in Kenya (NOT Nahashon Njenga).
Victims of saba saba, some of them in serious condition.
BREAKING NEWS! KINDIKI IG KOOME TO BE PROSECUTED IN COURT FOR BREAKING THE LAW
Sometimes in politics, events and developments that unfold quietly behind the scene have the biggest impact. Like the human factor (which Chairman Mao once said was a key determinant in any great undertaking.).
In this Kumekucha video we conclude a full analysis of what Kenyans should expect going forward as a result of a most impactful saba saba day 2023.
See also;
The Tom Osinde story is more than disturbing, even as a key clue emerges that points to the usual suspects of unsolved puzzles in Kenya.
And even as this is unravelling Irene Cherop Masit former IEBC commissioner in the "Cherera four" flees the country. This Masit move points to something else that Kenyans need to pay attention to.
What has controversial CS Trade Moses Kuria been up to behind the scenes? What impact do his actions have on Kenyan politics? This Kumekucha video digs up a can of worms that you will not believe.
There is also a fascinating link Moses Kuria has to the very puzzling Kiambu gubernatorial elections last August. Indeed Kiambu voters are still pretty puzzled about the results to this day. We dig deeper to come out with some astonishing answers to that mystery...
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Any posts breaking the house rules of COMMON DECENCY will be promptly deleted, i.e. NO TRIBALISTIC, racist, sexist, homophobic, sexually explicit, abusive, swearing, DIVERSIONS, impersonation and spam AMONG OTHERS. No exceptions WHATSOEVER.