Articles

  • Jan 17, 2025 | debunk.media | Isaac Otidi Amuke |Ras Mengesha |Bobby Mkangi |Chia Kayanda |Soila Kenya

    William Ruto’s Grand Hustle Whether he ascends to Kenya’s presidency on August 9 or not, at 55, deputy president William Samoei Ruto has done the impossible.

  • Jan 17, 2025 | debunk.media | Mwalimu MatiUpdated |Mwalimu Mati |Isaac Otidi Amuke

    There is so much to say in this sad moment but I can only profess that Rasna Warah was one of the bravest and most truthful Kenyans I have known. She stood on principle and exposed mischief within the United Nations at the cost of her job. She quit a prominent columnist role at the Nation because she wouldn’t stomach government-directed editorial interference with her writing.

  • Jan 17, 2025 | debunk.media | Mohamed Amin Abdishukri |Isaac Otidi Amuke |Lilian Mutinda

    In 2017, during my second year studying International Relations at university, my sister gave me a book that would go on to reshape my perspective on my coursework. This book became my companion and reference point during countless evening debates with coursemates in the school cafeteria over masala tea, and a frequent source of citations in my term papers. The book was UNsilenced: Unmasking the United Nations’ Culture of Cover-Ups, Corruption and Impunity. The author was Rasna Warah.

  • Jan 17, 2025 | debunk.media | Bobby Mkangi |Isaac Otidi Amuke |Lilian Mutinda |Soila Kenya

    Although I never got to meet Rasna Warah in person, I feel like I knew her very well. This is because of her open, forthright, and provocative style of writing. I met her through her words, sentences, paragraphs, articles, tweets, and books, through which she effectively weaved and curated her thoughts and emotions. Her oeuvre was sincere, engaging and generous, to the extent that interacting with it over the years left me feeling like I personally knew her.

  • Jan 17, 2025 | debunk.media | Chia Kayanda |Isaac Otidi Amuke |Lilian Mutinda

    My father loved to retweet Rasna Warah. I think in her, he believed he’d found a kindred political spirit. Someone who saw all the injustice for what it was and had the courage to scream, “For crying out loud!” But my father, being the parastatal man that he was, born during colonialism and adulting through the Jomo Kenyatta to Daniel arap Moi eras, was imbued with The Fear. The fear of arbitrary arrest. The fear of abduction. The fear of torture. The fear of death.

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