Gilgil residents on infrastructure. We are fed up.

Gilgil residents are demanding developent especially on roads. They say their contract with the current Member of parliament was election for road network development, but so far, one year to the end of the 2017-2022 term, no visible progress has been made.

Especially the residents of Olkarau, the constituenys complain because their produce can not get to the market, and when it does, most of the times it is too late and hence low in return.

CJ Martha Koome Notes on Judiciary, leadership and elections

Chief Justice and president of supreme court, Martha Koome

speaking during a multi-agency meeting of senior officials from the Judiciary, Ministry of Interior, the Independent Elections and Boundaries Commission and the National Cohesion and Integration Commission during the event at the Kenya School of Government, Chief justice Martha Koome said alot, but wort noting;

That the pending election cases impacted the process of free and fair elections and should therefore be completed to pave the way for the next polls in 2022.

 That we are carrying our mandate to ensure there is protection under the rule of law and that you have somewhere to go if you have any problem

That the courts had noted the vice of hate speech with rising concern and that plans are underway to set up a specialised court to deal with hate-speech cases.

That the first five courts dealing with hate speech will be set up in areas that have been noted as hotspots of the crime, including Nairobi, Mombasa, Kisumu, Nakuru and Eldoret. 

That political parties were also asked to comply with the law during campaigns and meetings and take responsibility for any occurrence that might arise.

That Kenyans should check their behavior and take responsibility for their actions.

CJ Martha Koome during a past event

No more Curfew

Due to the wake of Covid 19 and its arrival in Kenya in March 2020, the government has been prividing guidelines and measured to be followed to mitigate the spread and effects of the dealdly desease. Among the many measures are compulsory wearing of face masks, 1.5 metres social and physical distance, limitation of attendance of public meetings and religious gathering to 1/3 of the normal capacity and a dusk to dawn curfew that saw business people suffer especially conducting their day to day business.

In his speech during the Mashujaa day celebrations in Kirinyaga county on 20th Oct, H.E. the president Uhuru Kenyatta made an order to end the Nationwide dusk to dawn curfew that had been pushed forward so many times upon expiry. This however did not end other guidelines that had come with the curfew, such as the hours of operating in bars and restaurants.

Nevertheless, the move was welcomed by all kenyans and gave hope of a new begining and a reconstryction of the econony among other personal projects and businesses.

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