The same reason I am confused elsewhere on the thread what the whole point of the AG report is. Who is supposed to follow up? Is it EACC? Police? DPP? Raila? David Ndii? Parliament perhaps?
The 30% theft figure has been known for a few years now. Most of it garden variety daylight robbery. It seems to bother exactly nobody, including(perhaps especially) the opposition. The whole state apparatus seems to have some sort of symbiosis when it comes to the issue. None of these guys is interested in anything more than lip service.
Perhaps everyone is eating and therefore not keen that things should be put under the microscope. And, as you noted earlier, perhaps even Wanjiku herself doesn't care as along as the eating is done by the "right" people. The AG's report is yet another huge confirmation of a "bandit economy", but look at the trivia that is currently keeping the Kenya media busy and the
wananchi excited. Does anyone really care?
Politicians are fond of telling the youth that they are "the future of our great country". The less that is actually so, the more often the line is repeated. But ironically or incredibly or whatever, that is actually so in the case of Kenya: at some point they will stop buying the stories of how they will leap from
boda-boda to getting rich in the "Silicon Savannah"---just wait for 2030, etc.---and go grab it for themselves. To my mind, the signs are already there. For example, where Pundit sees something positive in more and more people being employed as watchmen, I see signs of dangerous inequities in society.
The current reality is that even an attempt at an honest discussion of anything is impossible---tribe, politics, etc. (Just take a look at the various insults flying about in the social media.)
Real change in Kenya will come "the hard way". Our history shows shows that to be the "preferred" way.