Hii mchezo ina wenyewe

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So bado anakula salo

Means he will be the new Governor.

And what if he kicks out NMS and all other old cartels from county like sonko?

Surely, even in a normal office job, you are deemed to have deserted duty when you don’t show up for a specified amount of time without explanation. Sembuse ofisi muhimu kama hii ya deputy governor?

Is the shambolic IEBC his appointing authority or is it the county government?

Their explanation is vague, to say the least. What they need to do is show the people how he got pushed out of office illegally. To vindicate a public official, even a man of repute like Igathe, it is important to build a case of legitimacy and public acceptance, if the plan is to re-instate him, or appoint him elsewhere.

The citizens of Nairobi dont care. They are okay with the government taking away their democratic right but you will hear them blame people of mashinani for the poor governance of the country

IEBC straight outa alternate universe, maybe Mars!!

The years of convoluted politics, the poor management of the city, the congestion, the noise, the insecurity, and the traffic madness, have all made people mentally exhausted. For far too long things have not been done right, till no one seems to care how anything gets done. At the end of a day in town one just wants to get out quickly and seek some peace and quiet.

But if you live in Nairobi and you have to work in town you have to care coz these decisions affect your life.
The removal of Sonko gave Nairobi residents a second chance to right their wrongs but they are not even asking for their rights

I think he was just a small part of the problem. The mess was there before him and will continue, if the invisible people stifling development (the so called cartels) still hold sway. Look at Haile Selassie Avenue for example. It’s almost impossible to walk/drive there because the road is dangerously choked with people selling in the road, handcarts wheeling about, and cars and matatus hooting. It has been so for a very long time, one might think it’s normal, or that that’s just how the place is. No city has any business having places like that, esp. in the CBD. Look at the state of the streets, and how people use them. Even after the building of bicycle and pedestrian lanes, boda bodas are now occupying those, as parking areas. A good example is Kenyatta Avenue, next to GPO. Hawkers are on practically every pavement in town. Cars are parked all over the roads, because the are no parking spaces. Where aren’t there open public spaces, apart from Jeevanjee Gardens? There is simply a culture of not planning for space, not respecting order, and not observing simple rules that would make things easier for everyone. Why is it that a person about their business in town must pay to use a “public” toilet? Who allows this situation to thrive? These questions may need more than simply changing the guy who sits at City Hall. They need proper planning, a highly disciplined mindset, and an overall willingness to change the face of the city.