S
Originally published by Standard Politics
📰 Read Full Article
politics
September 28, 2025
2mo ago

Gachagua accuses Ruto of alleged land grabbing, vows to revoke titles if elected

Gachagua accuses Ruto of alleged land grabbing, vows to revoke titles if elected

Former Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua has accused President William Ruto of allegedly orchestrating widespread land allocations to political allies...

✨ Key Highlights

Former Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua has accused President William Ruto of alleged widespread land allocations to political allies, vowing to revoke irregular titles if his camp comes to power. He made these claims during a PCEA service in Ongata Rongai, rallying citizens to vote Ruto's administration out of office.

  • Gachagua claimed 103,000 acres of land, including 85 acres belonging to the late Arthur Magugu, have been appropriated.
  • He cited alleged land grabs in Ongata Rongai and Kibiku, with 6,000 acres earmarked in Narok and 4,000 acres targeted in Ruiru.
  • Wiper leader Kalonzo Musyoka, also speaking at the event, highlighted security concerns in Nairobi, describing the capital as unsafe despite hosting UN regional headquarters.

Continue Reading

Read the complete article from Standard Politics

📰 Read Full Article

Part of the Day's Coverage

Gachagua Accuses Ruto and MPs; CS Ruku Accuses Uhuru of Incitement - September 2025

Former Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua has made accusations against President William Ruto and Members of Parliament. Speaking at a PCEA service in Ongata Rongai, Gachagua accused President Ruto of alleged widespread land allocations to political allies, vowing to revoke irregular titles. Separately, he accused MPs and local leaders of shortchanging Kenyans who attend meetings at State House, warning citizens to negotiate directly for promised tokens. In a different event, Public Service Cabinet Secretary Geoffrey Ruku accused former President Uhuru Kenyatta of inciting Kenyans against the Kenya Kwanza administration. Ruku urged the former president to cease partisan politics while also defending the current government's record, especially its health initiatives.

3 stories in this topic
View Full Coverage
Advertisement