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Sahdam Africa Driven by curiosity, guided by civic responsibility. Here you’ll find insights, resources, and conversations that empower communities through civic education


I like helping , creating peace and reading alot .

12/02/2026

The Status of the Ruhman and amir case Mombasa. also most likely legal outcomes
What the law says on drugs

Ruhman abubakar

What makes people rally around ODM SG Edwin Sifuna isn’t sympathy.It’s recognition.He said out loud what many feared to ...
11/02/2026

What makes people rally around ODM SG Edwin Sifuna isn’t sympathy.

It’s recognition.

He said out loud what many feared to say.
He stood firm when silence was rewarded.

And moments like this have a way of revealing who values courage, and who fears it.

Credit sholla Ard

One uncomfortable truth many people are whispering:  This could not have unfolded this way if Baba were still alive.  St...
11/02/2026

One uncomfortable truth many people are whispering:

This could not have unfolded this way if Baba were still alive.

Strong leaders don’t fear bold lieutenants like Edwin Sifuna.
They protect them.

What we are witnessing is not discipline.

It is the pain of an Orange Democratic Movement struggling with leadership in a moment of absence.

I’m watching how Kenyans are reacting to Edwin Sifuna ’s purge by Oburu & ODM, and one thing is clear:People aren’t angr...
11/02/2026

I’m watching how Kenyans are reacting to Edwin Sifuna ’s purge by Oburu & ODM, and one thing is clear:

People aren’t angry because he lost a position.
They’re angry because they feel a voice was punished for being bold.
That alone tells you where the people’s heart is.

Maybe the problem isn’t Sifuna.
Maybe it’s what he reminded people ODM used to be.

When parties start fearing outspoken leaders, it’s rarely about discipline.

It’s about control.
History will remember this moment.

Copied from sholla Ard on X

I have just watched President William Ruto angrily refer to Rigathi Gachagua as “a fool” during remarks in North Eastern...
11/02/2026

I have just watched President William Ruto angrily refer to Rigathi Gachagua as “a fool” during remarks in North Eastern.

I have also seen CS Aden Duale publicly and angrily urge Somalis not to listen to Rigathi and challenge him to a JKL live session.

Pause.

When senior leaders shift from policy language to personal language, it is rarely accidental. It is often a signal.

In political psychology, when confidence in a narrative weakens, tone changes first. Calm gives way to emotion. Personal rebuttals replace structured policy responses.

The real question is not who insults whom.

The real question is:

- Why is civic awareness in North-Eastern generating this level of reaction?
- Why are questions about drought response, hunger mitigation, and SHA transparency being framed as political provocation rather than governance discussion?

When citizens begin connecting released national funds to lived realities on the ground, political equations naturally shift, and thus the reaction.

An informed society cannot be managed through emotion.
It must be governed through accountability.

If leaders are confident in their record, the solution is simple:
Publish the data. Clarify allocations. Show implementation. Engage the questions directly.

If Rigathi Gachagua, or any leader, continues encouraging citizens to interrogate governance peacefully and factually, that strengthens democracy.

An informed society is not a threat to transparent leadership.

It is only uncomfortable for opacity.

Let civic education expand.
Let accountability deepen.
Let the people think.

That is how democracies mature.

copied from sholla ard on x

I’ve reflected on Boniface Mwangi’s call to abolish private schools and upgrade public ones.I understand the anger behin...
11/02/2026

I’ve reflected on Boniface Mwangi’s call to abolish private schools and upgrade public ones.

I understand the anger behind it.

Many leaders educate their children in elite private schools while millions of Kenyan children study under trees, without labs, computers, or enough teachers. Policies are passed by people who will never feel their consequences.

But abolishing private schools treats a symptom, not the disease.

Even within public schools, inequality is obvious.
Alliance and Mang’u are public schools overly resourced.
So are severely under-resourced rural schools in Kilifi or Western Kenya.

The real problem is uneven state investment.

Shut down private schools tomorrow in kenya and the wealthy will simply take their kids abroad. Inequality will remain, just relocated.

Real reform requires courage and the following:

- Free & fully funded primary & secondary education
- Properly subsidized universities
- creation of a protected school infrastructure fund that will do classrooms and labs, etc., for all schools to bring them to the levels of private schools
- Serious teacher training reform to have high-quality teachers in all schools
- Equal teacher distribution nationwide, not alliance having 50 teachers and Mwihoko having 6 teachers

When public schools become excellent everywhere, private schools will shrink naturally, not by force, but by irrelevance.

Leadership should not be about restricting choice.
It is about raising standards.

Copied from Sholla Ard on X

Another building has collapsed under construction in OTC, Nairobi.After the January collapse, the National Construction ...
11/02/2026

Another building has collapsed under construction in OTC, Nairobi.

After the January collapse, the National Construction Authority and the county promised audits and enforcement. What happened?

This is the Kenyan pattern:
Loud statements after tragedy.
No action after the cameras leave.

I’m informed that this building was being constructed at night. That alone raises serious questions about enforcement and complicity.

In a functional country, officials responsible at both the county and national levels would step aside immediately.

Kenya must become proactive, not reactive.

I pray for the quick recovery of those injured
Copied from Sholla Ard on X

I’ve noticed something curious.Kazi Majuu is no longer preached by KK bloggers. Even William Ruto barely mentions it now...
11/02/2026

I’ve noticed something curious.

Kazi Majuu is no longer preached by KK bloggers. Even William Ruto barely mentions it now.

What happened?

Perhaps the voices went quiet when the coffins and graves began to speak.

Many Kenyans who followed this program are now reported dead in Russia, others are missing, names have been turned into statistics, and families are left with questions.

Silence is always the last refuge of failed policies.

Kazi Majuu must be investigated and declared a criminal program. Everyone who recruited, facilitated, and benefited from it should face arrest and jail.

Copied from sholla Ard on X

I’ve just watched Agnes Zani on Citizen TV, speaking as chair of the committee tasked with implementing the NADCO report...
11/02/2026

I’ve just watched Agnes Zani on Citizen TV, speaking as chair of the committee tasked with implementing the NADCO report, and what I heard was deeply troubling.

She says they are now collecting public views to assess whether NADCO has been implemented.

But pause for a moment.

NADCO has not been implemented.

Some sections even require parliamentary action. Others required policy decisions. None of that has happened.
The report promised big things:
– An end to extrajudicial killings
– A genuine audit of our public debt
– Reduced political opulence
– Protection of the right to protest
– Counties receiving KSh 450 billion

None of these promises exists in reality today.
Even a primary school pupil would tell you: NADCO is still a promise, not an outcome.

So why are we discussing “implementation views” for something that hasn’t begun?

This is how narratives are being slowly prepared.
When a respected platform like Citizen TV starts asking the wrong question, it doesn’t just inform, it quietly frames.

And once the frame is set, others like Junet and even Ruto will soon follow, loudly declaring that NADCO has been “implemented” even when nothing has been.

We’ve seen this script before.
Discernment matters. Kenyans must learn to separate process from performance.

Disturbing signals from the Council of Governors.Governors now say they will boycott Senate CPAC oversight, hiding behin...
09/02/2026

Disturbing signals from the Council of Governors.

Governors now say they will boycott Senate CPAC oversight, hiding behind claims of a “witch-hunt.”

I have followed CPAC proceedings closely. There has been no witch-hunt, only questions.

What was wrong with asking the Mandera Governor to account for KSh 19 million spent on seedlings that do not exist?
What was wrong with asking why millions were spent on a house-warming in Vihiga?
What was wrong with questioning Bungoma’s Christmas lights budget in September?

Oversight is not persecution.
Accountability is not optional.

When leaders flee scrutiny, it is not democracy under attack, it is public money being protected from the public.

Kenyans must reject this retreat from accountability.
Copied from Sholla Ard on X

There is a dangerous lie that keeps resurfacing whenever Africans are lured to fight for Russia.Someone always says: "Wh...
09/02/2026

There is a dangerous lie that keeps resurfacing whenever Africans are lured to fight for Russia.

Someone always says:
"Why complain, yet Africans also join the US, UK, or French armies?"
I once asked that question too.

Then I learned the difference between service and disposability.

Let me explain, slowly.

I am not against adults making choices.
If someone chooses to fight, that is their life.

But even in war, dignity must exist.
Accountability must exist.
Human value must exist.
In the US, UK, and France, a soldier is documented.
A contract is signed.
Your embassy is aware.

If you fall, your family is notified.
Your body is recovered.
Compensation is paid.
If you are injured, you are extracted.
Your family can go to the embassy and be helped
You are treated as a human being.

Now look at Russia.

Recruitment is hidden.
Visas are routed through third countries, not embassies. A Kenyan having their visa done in Uganda or Qatar
Why?
So that when you die, no office claims you.
When your family asks questions, no one answers.
When you are wounded, no one comes.
And the Rus embassy can deny everything

Bodies are left behind.
Salaries vanish. Most never receive even their first pay.
Compensation never reaches families.
Silence replaces responsibility.
This is not military service.

This is using African bodies and discarding African lives.
So hear me clearly:

Going to fight for Russia is not courage.
It is abandonment dressed up as opportunity.

Do not go.
Your life is worth more than secrecy.

Copied from sholla Ard on X

09/02/2026

Hired crowds at president ruto event yesterday Nairobi pipeline . It's crazy

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Dr Saddam Kenya

Welcome to my page .In addition feel free to visit my Instagram page -Dr Saddam Kenya ,Twitter account -Dr Saddam Kenya and YouTube channel -Dr Saddam Kenya.

On my page and other social media accounts i tend to discus everything from politics to heath etc .

So feel welcome and as well you can inbox me or reach me on whatsap as well .

Welcome