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Maverick Aoko questions Sakaja over mysterious death of KCA intern

The disappearance and death of Elvis Munene have raised serious concerns about what is happening inside City Hall under Johnson Sakaja’s leadership.

Maverick Aoko has exposed disturbing details, questioning why police gave conflicting information from what Munene’s parents had when he went missing.

This raises red flags about the forces at play and whether there was something Munene knew from his IT desk at City Hall that made him a target. He was just an intern, a young student from KCA University, yet his death is surrounded by secrecy, fear, and unanswered questions.

It is no secret that Nairobi has become a dangerous place under Sakaja’s rule. The city is not just struggling with poor roads, water shortages, and collapsing systems, it is also being controlled by rogue elements within law enforcement.

Maverick Aoko has pointed fingers, and her claims suggest that powerful figures, including Sakaja, could be colluding with killer cops. These are not baseless accusations.

The patterns are there people disappearing, bodies turning up in strange circumstances, and police failing to give consistent reports.

Why would police contradict the parents of a missing person? That alone is enough to suggest foul play. Munene was just an intern, yet his case has been handled like he was a major threat to someone. What did he know? Was there something in City Hall’s IT systems that exposed corruption or crime?

These are the hard questions that need answers. But instead of accountability, all we see is silence, confusion, and intimidation.

Sakaja has failed Nairobi in many ways, but this is beyond mismanagement. This is about life and death. If young interns can disappear under mysterious circumstances, then no one is safe.

The Agenda 47 movement and leaders like Robert Alai have already expressed discontent with how Sakaja runs the city, but this takes things to another level. When governance is mixed with possible criminal activities, then Nairobians have a reason to be afraid.

Maverick Aoko has not shied away from calling out Sakaja. She has asked the tough questions, refusing to let this case be buried like many others.

Nairobians must also demand the truth. Who was responsible for Munene’s disappearance and death? Why was there conflicting information from the police? What exactly is happening inside City Hall?

The city is being run like a criminal enterprise, and it is time the public wakes up to the reality that Sakaja is not just failing as a governor but might be enabling a much darker system.