Nipate
Forum => Kenya Discussion => Topic started by: Pragmatic on February 27, 2019, 01:14:07 PM
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......a deer in the headlights! Nowhere to run, what a way that it all ends.....
As i intimated in my very last posting before i took a retreat out of here for quiet moments and reflection, it has come to pass.....it is not a matter of if but when they will come knocking on the Czar of Sugoi's door. At this point his only way out is to negotiate for a benevolent pardon, "honorable" and managed exit. His insatiable appetite for all things illicit has reached its zenith and done him in.
In the end there was no "night of long knives", that would have been too dramatic; It was such an easy job, as the theft was too blatant and glaring even careless to be honest.... seems like these fellows were in a hurry to steal as much as possible as if Kenya was a patient soon going to die!
Why can't one live off some hard earned and honest labour? How can one aspire for leadership of this land that he has plundered so much? What would you be presiding over! Thank God it may well be that we could just as well have him behind bars by the next elections unless Uhuru decides to do what Moi did to Njonjo and sends him to retirement while allowing him to keep his stolen loot. At this rate, his Kalenjin king status is fast fading as the Kalenjin see what theft and penury he has sunk them into at their expense. The dams where the most grotesque looting has happened are mostly in Kalenjin land.
And I will advise all those who have been his collecting agents/bag-men/gate keepers especially Dr. Muge (based in London), his most notorious collector to better be careful lest they are dispatched to the maker too soon to keep them from ratting... I know hm all too well and if he is on these streets, that is free advice I am giving him...If I were him, I would be better advised to be already talking with the investigating agents and negotiating a plea bargain. Better do it in the comfort of the UK where he is a citizen and can secure better whistleblower protection than here.
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Kwani Baba Abby was looting by himself? Mind you the loot Uhuru and his cronies have accumulated in the last few years is a tenfold of what Baba Abby has accumulated. He was only stupid to show it off. He should have laid low like an envelope. Most of these cases of looting some highlighted and some not are in the hands of TNA wing of Jubilee. Btw, how come the looting at MOH under the watch of CS Macharia and PS Muraguri has never been addressed again and the corruption at the Transport ministry especially in the Roads department has never come to light.
Ruto is just a scapegoat, though not an innocent one.
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Weka link when you finally have Ruto in the dock. Uhuru took 30B from SGR - nobody can beat that.
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Actually 40B SGR I and another 15B in SGR II.
Can we compare that with Ruto's few billions from KPC?
Weka link when you finally have Ruto in the dock. Uhuru took 30B from SGR - nobody can beat that.
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I am not sure about Ruto - but generally in Kenya gov - people were generally taking 10% - some would share their 10% with many - others powerful could demand nearly the whole of it. Grapevine has it that Ruto took 10% everywhere else Uhuru was not interested. Both knew they were going to recoup their money by looting.
People like Uhuru or Ruto have lots of experience to be caught stealing- they will not sign anything - they will not bank anything - they will not be found dead talking about those deals except in code language. Moi looted kenya dry and there was not a single evidence to be used against him.
What they are doing is basically managing corruption. Otherwise NEARLY everyone in kenya running for public office or in public office is doing it for NOTHING ELSE than CORRUPTION.
Lots of newbies who are just learning about corruption will go down as usual. The big boys will laugh all the way to the bank.
Actually 40B SGR I and another 15B in SGR II.
Can we compare that with Ruto's few billions from KPC?
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......a deer in the headlights! Nowhere to run, what a way that it all ends.....
As i intimated in my very last posting before i took a retreat out of here for quiet moments and reflection, it has come to pass.....it is not a matter of if but when they will come knocking on the Czar of Sugoi's door. At this point his only way out is to negotiate for a benevolent pardon, "honorable" and managed exit. His insatiable appetite for all things illicit has reached its zenith and done him in.
In the end there was no "night of long knives", that would have been too dramatic; It was such an easy job, as the theft was too blatant and glaring even careless to be honest.... seems like these fellows were in a hurry to steal as much as possible as if Kenya was a patient soon going to die!
Why can't one live off some hard earned and honest labour? How can one aspire for leadership of this land that he has plundered so much? What would you be presiding over! Thank God it may well be that we could just as well have him behind bars by the next elections unless Uhuru decides to do what Moi did to Njonjo and sends him to retirement while allowing him to keep his stolen loot. At this rate, his Kalenjin king status is fast fading as the Kalenjin see what theft and penury he has sunk them into at their expense. The dams where the most grotesque looting has happened are mostly in Kalenjin land.
And I will advise all those who have been his collecting agents/bag-men/gate keepers especially Dr. Muge (based in London), his most notorious collector to better be careful lest they are dispatched to the maker too soon to keep them from ratting... I know hm all too well and if he is on these streets, that is free advice I am giving him...If I were him, I would be better advised to be already talking with the investigating agents and negotiating a plea bargain. Better do it in the comfort of the UK where he is a citizen and can secure better whistleblower protection than here.
Kenyatta family criminal Enterprise has you fooled, the Dam issue is Uhuru's baby.....that is how jubilee raised campaign money to pay cambride Analytica and facebook.
(https://www.standardmedia.co.ke/images/tuesday/xshus6qrmxilu5c758d1588755.jpg.pagespeed.ic.z3D8jYennT.jpg)
One night in mid July 2015, then Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi arrived in Nairobi for a two-day visit. Renzi, who served as PM between 2014 and 2016, was chauffeured straight to State House, Nairobi, where he met President Uhuru Kenyatta. What most Kenyans remember from that meeting is a picture of Renzi, appearing to be wearing a bullet-proof vest underneath his suit. But what you may not know is that it was during that meeting that the two leaders witnessed the signing of a Sh34 billion deal with Italy's BNP Paribas and Intesa San Paolo banks for construction of Itare Dam in Kuresoi.
The agreement, a Presidential Strategic Communication Unit (PSCU) dispatch said, brought Italy's total financial assistance to Kenya to Sh59.3 billion. Uhuru and Renzi agreed to strengthen cooperation between the two countries to boost security. “The funds will cover the whole water project which consists of construction of the dam, a tunnel, raw water treatment of 100,000 cubic metres per day and laying of pipes. The dam will serve over 800,000 people in Kuresoi, Molo, Njoro, Rongai and Nakuru,” said PSCU. Renzi was accompanied by Italy's Deputy Foreign Affairs Minister Mario Giro, International Economic Affairs Adviser Prof Marco Simoni, ENI chief executive officer Claudio Descalzi and ENEL Green Power chief executive Francesco Venturi. The next day, Renzi gave a public lecture at the University of Nairobi before leaving.
Uhuru reciprocated the visit by travelling to Rome in September where he held talks with Renzi at the Villa Doria Pamphilj. The project, which looked promising at the start, is now in tatters with reports the contractor, Co-operativa Muratoi Cementisti Di Ravenna (CMC Di Ravenna), has run into cash-flow challenges. The contract was awarded by Rift Valley Water Services Board (RVWSB), the executing agency for Sh38 billion project. RVWSB has been dogged by claims of kickbacks and is under probe. The Government has already paid out over Sh11 billion. DCI boss George Kinoti said preliminary investigations show the project is between two and five per cent complete.
Between 2016 and 2017, the project dominated news after opposition leader Raila Odinga opposed it on claims it posed threat to the environment. Uhuru dismissed Raila’s claims, saying donors would not have funded it if it would have a negative impact. “Kenyans must differentiate between development-conscious leaders and those out to divide them along ethnic lines,” said Uhuru. Italian Prime MinisterMatteo RenziState HousePresident Uhuru KenyattaKenyansItare DamClaudio Descalzi