It’s cabbage and ugali as police cell reality sinks in for 8 MPs used to lavish lifestyles

Boda254

JF-Expert Member
Feb 26, 2015
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There was no VIP treatment, no beds, soft pillows or full-course meals — just ugali and cabbage — for eight prominent politicians locked in police cells for alleged hate speech.

The floor was hard, some made due with shoes for pillows. There was dirt and mosquitoes. The toilet was termed stinking and “dehumanising’.

These VIPs used to the good life got a taste of reality, what thousands of ordinary Kenyans experience every day. The seven MPs and one senator were remanded on Tuesday night for four days, as police investigate allegations of incitement. Bail was denied yesterday. It was feared they might interfere with witnesses.

The men got a rude shock at the Pangani police station where they were denied visits by spouses and family and served common fare for lunch and supper. Two women reps were locked up at Muthaiga police station.

Barely an hour after entering Pangani, the politicians started making frantic calls to senior officers, pleading to be relocated to Kileleshwa cells, which they deemed better suited to their status. They publicly complained.

“We allowed them to call whomever they wanted and returned them to the cells. They made many calls to friends, relatives and even senior police officers,” said an officer, who asked not to be named.

Settling in

At around 11 pm Tuesday, it became evident they were unlikely to leave and eventually retired to sleep on the hard floor. Some of them used a shoe as a pillow, as reality sank in.

By yesterday morning, the suspects appeared to have gotten used to their new digs. MPs Moses Kuria and Ferdinand Waititu had removed both shoes, while MP Junet Mohamed and Muthama decided to keep one on.

Police demand that all suspects remove one shoe before entering the cells. At around 8am, Waititu was the only VIP still asleep by the time senior officers came for a routine check and headcount.

When Muthama spotted the senior officers, he quickly informed them Waititu was sick and needed medical attention. The legislators complained they were being held without reason as they were yet to plead to charges in court.

Muthama is said to have complained the station lacked clean drinking water and said the toilets were stinking and “dehumanising”. He asked the station commander to provide them with the daily papers.

They only got food from the police canteen. The menu is bread and tea for breakfast, cabbage and ugali for lunch and supper.

By yesterday noon, none of the politicians camped outside the Pangani station had been allowed to see the suspects. The same applied to women suspects at Muthaiga.

On a typical day, all the high-flying suspects would might be anticipating a sumptuous meal on Tuesday / REUTERS
 
hahahahahahahahahahahagahahahhahahahahagha.....

mi nakumbuka nililala cell for 5 days.... hio police station ilikua na uvivu..so instead of cooking, they outsourced that service to a local small hotel, we were 12 of us in one cell, I have to say, hio skuma hio hotel ilipika was one of the best skuma wiki I have ever tasted.... alafu kuna time flani tuliulizwa kaa tunataka nyama au matumbo..... but kudoze ilikua on the floor, bucket ndo urinal alafu kwenda long call ni like once in two days, hakuna kuona jua.... I realised how much we take sunlight for granted.... anyway hio ndo experience yangu ya cell.... naskia prison za madem ziko better but prison za wanaume ziko in worse state, there needs to be a project to renovate kenyan prisons..... or better yet, we should carefully privatize our prisons, let investors build prisons then we pay them to run them while the govt job would be to audit and monitor how they run them to make sure they dont misuse anything or run special favours......
speaking of privatising, towns and large cities in kenya should also privatise water and sewerage companies so they can efficiently distribute water to every kenyan as long as they pay. some places in urban kenya lack water from time to time not because there is no water in kenya but because there isnt enough investments in water distribution and storage.... a large private company with experience can do a major investment and gain alot of profit for distributibg water to many residents
 
Hao wapuzi watafyata wakitoka huko, hamna uchochezi tena.
 
This isnt enuff. Wafunguliwe mashtaka na wawekwe like 5++more months humo, wakamate adabu.
Hii kuongeaongea kama chizi kila saa ikome.
Muthama, Waititu halafu na huyo Moses Kuria...they are too much now.
 
Hao wapuzi watafyata wakitoka huko, hamna uchochezi tena.
Unfortunately, sidhani this will be a good enuff deterrant. They may still repeat the same offense after their release, as politics hots up.
 
Unfortunately, sidhani this will be a good enuff deterrant. They may still repeat the same offense after their release, as politics hots up.

And they get locked up again and again, no letting go because any other alternative would be dangerous for the country. Politicians have been used to VIP treatment, lip service etc.
I always watch in indignation when they come out of courts all smile after bail bonds befitting of mama mboga.

Suddenly am seeing press conferences and media interviews of politicians complaining how filthy our jails are, it has suddenly come to their attention since their own are locked up. Until a politician gets diagnosed with cancer is only when they see importance of those machines in our hospitals.

The script is the same world over, in my neighborhood there are Sudanese families all over, living so well an indication they must have come from affluent background in South Sudan, and most likely they are families of politicians from that country. They are really enjoying in abundance driving powerful vehicles, while their country-people are languishing in refugee camps.
 
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