Law and order cannot be a subject of debate.
The state, through its police and security agencies, must never preside over chaos, or worse, be complicit.
The chairman must demand transparency, integrity and accountability from every officer he will deploy.
Chemicals or products that have been banned or suspended, pending verification, should not be allowed into our market.
Kenya’s plastic surgeons are right to call for population-specific guidelines. Medicine must reflect the people it serves.
The penalty must cause financial pain for it to have the desired effect.
The latest Agra Foundation Food Security Monitor paints a stark picture: by January 2026, an estimated 2.1 million Kenyans will face acute hunger and malnutrition.
Stoking unnecessary anxiety about war and ambitions of a naval force without a coastline is not only unbelievable, it is shocking.
The state cannot preach compassion while funding policies that leave the sick to fend for themselves.