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Kuresoi North?Transformation
13/02/2026

Kuresoi North?

Transformation

They Nicknamed him Deno-SpotterWhen Dennis Ombwori Bagaka, known to those around him as Deno, was brought into Nairobi W...
07/02/2026

They Nicknamed him Deno-Spotter

When Dennis Ombwori Bagaka, known to those around him as Deno, was brought into Nairobi West Prison in 2019, he was facing a court martial case.

Within the tightly controlled routines of the prison, where personal histories are quickly stripped away, Deno retained the posture and alertness of someone shaped by military discipline. He remained at the facility for two more years and quietly completed his sentence in early 2024.

After his release, Dennis struggled to re establish himself. He took up short term work as a security guard, rotating through nightclubs in Nakuru and Ruaka. The work was unpredictable and poorly paid, offering little sense of direction or long term security. During this period, he stayed in contact with former inmates and acquaintances, maintaining conversations through WhatsApp even as some of them were still serving their sentences.

On 16 July, Dennis made a call while in Kigali, where he was transiting on his way to the United Arab Emirates.

He explained that he had decided to pursue an opportunity in Russia, describing Dubai as only a temporary stop before continuing his journey. He sounded resolved and confident, assuring those he spoke to that he would call again once he arrived.

He did.

From Russia, Dennis spoke with renewed optimism. He described what he believed to be steady pay, structured contracts, and a future that extended beyond the battlefield. He spoke of finishing a year of service and being given choices to continue, to study, or to begin the process of acquiring Russian citizenship.

In his telling, the risk appeared calculated and the reward tangible. He encouraged others to consider following the same path.

As these conversations continued, questions began to surface. When pressed for more detail, Dennis shared contacts linked to the recruitment process. One was a Russian woman. The other was a Kenyan man named Musyoka. Both were contacted shortly before reports began circulating of Kenyan nationals becoming entangled in recruitment pipelines connected to Russia’s war in Ukraine, with some facing arrest or disappearing from communication altogether.

Information about these recruitment links was quietly passed to a senior editor at a major Kenyan media house, with the hope that it would be developed into a serious investigative piece. No response followed. The material was set aside, archived while awaiting clearer evidence and safer conditions to pursue the story independently.

Later, Dennis confirmed that he had been deployed to Donetsk, a region heavily affected by fighting in eastern Ukraine. Another Kenyan former serviceman, who had also passed through Nairobi West Prison, remained in St Petersburg, waiting for deployment. The two had not seen each other since arriving in Russia.

In September, Kenyan authorities began cracking down on suspected recruiters and facilitators linked to the conflict. Around the same time, communication with Dennis abruptly stopped.

His phone went silent. So did that of the other Kenyan.

Recently, information emerged that Dennis Ombwori Bagaka had been killed while serving in Russia.

No formal announcement accompanied the news. His body has not been returned home, and the precise circumstances of his death remain unknown.

The whereabouts of the other Kenyan have still not been established.

Dennis’s journey, from incarceration to unstable civilian work and ultimately to a distant battlefield, reflects a broader and largely unseen pattern.

It is a story shaped by limited options, informal recruitment networks, and the powerful pull of promised stability in a world that offers few clear paths forward.

Kinamba_Chepkinoiyo road tarmac construction is going on
06/02/2026

Kinamba_Chepkinoiyo road tarmac construction is going on

Meet Joshua Waiganjo, High Ranking Police Commander without any training or papers... In the early 2010s, if you were a ...
06/02/2026

Meet Joshua Waiganjo, High Ranking Police Commander without any training or papers... In the early 2010s, if you were a high-ranking police officer in the Rift Valley, you probably knew Joshua Waiganjo.

He was a man of presence. Sharp in his starched blue uniform.
Wearing the pips of a "Police Commissioner," and commanding respect wherever he went.

He flew in police helicopters, chaired high-level security meetings, and even led a mission to the volatile Suguta Valley after the infamous Baragoi massacre.

Responsibility?
HE EVEN HAD THE POWER TO HIRE, FIRE, AND TRANSFER OFFICERS...There was just one small problem:

JOSHUA WAIGANJO WAS NOT A POLICEMAN.... HOW DID HE GET THERE?

Here is the story;
Waiganjo was a primary school dropout who had simply decided to play the role of a lifetime.

Waiganjo’s performance was flawless because he understood the Kenyan obsession with hierarchy and "orders from above."

For five years, he lived a double life that would put a spy to shame.
He wasn't just hiding in the shadows; he was hiding in plain sight at THE PROVINCIAL POLICE HEADQUARTERS in NAKURU.

NOT JUST AN ORDINARY OFFICER
He enjoyed the perks of the office.

Government Vehicle. Bodyguard.
A Driver

He was so convincing that senior officers—men with decades of training—never thought to ask for his force number or his appointment letter.

They simply saw the uniform and the confidence, and they saluted.

THE DOWNFALL?? PROTOCOLS. (BARAGOI TRAGEDY)
The charade began to unravel in 2013 when he attended a sensitive security meeting following the Baragoi tragedy.
During a helicopter ride with top brass, his lack of basic tactical knowledge and his overly familiar "civilian" mannerisms.

HOW CAN A SENIOR OFFICER FAILS TO PORTRAY A NORMAL SALUTE PROCEDURE? NOT ONCE, NOT TWICE... (Like a kenyan pupil failing to stand up in class and say Good mooorning teacher...then looks confused seeing all others up!)

A RED FLAG
One senior officer noticed... whispers to another.
He was now being watched, not once, not twice. He failed!...
When the National Police Service finally checked their records, the shockwave hit Nairobi like a thunderbolt.

NO RECORD!
There was no record of Joshua Waiganjo ever having been recruited, trained, or commissioned.

HE WAS A GHOST IN A UNIFORM.., a man who had successfully "hijacked" the police force for half a decade.

The fallout was massive. Provincial police bosses were suspended, and the country was left wondering:

If a man can fake being a Commissioner for five years, who else is pretending?

On 4th January 2013, Waiganjo was arrested and faced a mountain of charges, but in a twist typical of the Kenyan justice system, he remained a defiant figure, even claiming at one point that he was a secret agent working on "orders from the very top."
He became a folk hero to some—a man who had exposed the sheer incompetence and "follow-the-leader" culture of the Kenyan bureaucracy.

Today, the name Joshua Waiganjo is a verb in some Kenyan circles—to "Waiganjo" is to fake it until you make it on a grand scale. His story is a hilarious yet terrifying reminder that power is often just a costume and a confident stride.

He remains the most successful impostor in our history, the man who proved that in Kenya, the only impossible thing has not yet been tried. KENYA, THE CAPITAL CITY OF AFRICA.

01/08/2020
23/12/2019

I take this opportunity to wish you all a Merry Christmas and a successful coming year full of fortune.

01/11/2018

I take this Humble time to wish all Class 8 and form 4 candidates in Temoyetta Success in their exams

14/04/2018

**THE SHAMBA BOY SAGA:ONE**

I had always admired Ken, our resident Shamba boy. The man had a way better physique compared to that of my husband who was plump, with a huge pot belly and layers of fat hanging from his body while weighing almost 100 kg. it was always tiresome having s*x with him. But Ken was muscular due to working hard in our farm, he would easily lift a 90 kg sack of cow feed and carry it to the store with much ease. He always wore a vest when working which made his bulging muscles even more pronounced as he walked around. Though not being the dark type as he was a little light skinned, he had a great complexion. The problem with Ken is he was uneducated and would barely speak English.
But whenever I saw him working in our shamba at our rural home, my heart would skip a bit wondering how it would feel to be in his powerful arms in an embrace or doing even some more erotic acts. This always made me feel guilty as I had never cheated on my husband since I got married to him for almost 10 years. But my husband had put on so much weight since we got married such that it got to a point I no longer fancied his physique. Trying to tell him to cut some weight was always frowned upon as he would keep telling me that the pride of an African man is his pot belly that showcased his hard work and how he eats properly, arguing that men who are settled and happy always end up with a pot belly and that having a pot belly is a sign of achievement and respect amongst men. But this ended up taking toll on our s*x life as I even stopped admiring him. I dreaded seeing him naked.
But my husband was indeed a hard-working man with several business outlets in the county of Kiambu. He was respected even in our locality in clubs, churches and social joints he used to go. People thought we were the perfect couple but I was s*xually starved and my husband was doing nothing to make it work. Him being the provider made him think that is enough for me and our 2 children we had gotten together since we got married.
The fatter my husband became, the more I began fantasizing about Ken. Some days I would watch him carrying something heavy with his muscles bulging and I would catch my breath for no apparent reason. But I was keeping my distance not to fall into temptations as I found my body wanting Ken from time to time until I hated myself. I even contemplated telling my husband to fire him but what reason would I give of dismissing him? He was a good worker by all means.
Sometimes I felt like it could be I had a problem since I never got satisfied s*xually and my husband would get tired easily.
=====
However this all seemed to change when one day, when my husband had travelled to Uganda to meet a business partner I got home early and found Ken feeding the cows as usual. I had carried some goods in my car and some were heavy than I could lift comfortably. As I was trying to lift them, I hit a small stone and fell.
“Oh! Sorry Madam, you would have told me to assist you. Please let me assist you.” Ken told me with his heavy Kikuyu accent.
“Oh! No, I am all right.” I tried telling him but all the same he came over and lifted the sacks for me. He carried them with ease to the kitchen store since most were food items. I just stood there just watching at him doing what he does best wearing a tight T shirt. After he was done, I just found myself telling him, “Ken, thank you so much. Do you mind joining me for supper today?” I asked him.
He usually ate at his staff quarters so he got surprised when I suggested him to join me for supper.
“No, Madam, I am ok, I will just eat at my place.” Ken tried saying but I insisted until he promised to finish his work and come over at the evening. My children had travelled to Nairobi to visit their aunt and so I was alone in the house, even our house girl was not around too as he had taken a one week off to visit her mum in Bungoma.
I prepared some supper and at around 8 pm, I sat at the table room expecting Ken to come. He sure did not fail to come. He came and knocked the front door.
“Oh! Please come in, have a seat.” I told Ken.
“Thank you, Mama Kamau.” Ken told me as he got in and sat. Ken was a jovial man so it was not difficult maintaining a conversation with him, even though I was feeling awkward and nervous since I had never really gotten to be with Ken alone in the house.
I kept asking Ken about his personal past. It is when I got to know his actual age, he was 24 years old. I felt even more guilty admiring him since being 35 years old I did not know whether it was right fantasizing about a man over a decade younger than me.
I however did not know how to break the ice and let him know what I was feeling for him. I did not want to come out as a cheap woman, or immoral for that matter and I did not know how he would react if I told him what I was feeling for him. We were watching some random movies and the weather outside was cold since it was drizzling outside.
“Ken, how do you manage to stay like that when it is so cold?” I asked him since he was wearing a T shirt only.
“I eat a lot of mutura and soap at Kanyara’s place daily.” He said.
“Just that?” I asked him. I wished I would gather more courage to let him know I really admired him.
He smiled, a simple smile that made me even weaker.
“Yes, Madam. If you eat healthy, you will be able to withstand cold weather.” He said.
“You also have big arms and a nice physique. Do you work out?” I asked him.
He laughed a little, looked at his left arm and said, “I lift some stones that I made. My work needs me to be physically strong so I have to ensure I stay strong and healthy, otherwise, I might collapse under the workload here.” He said.
“Do we give you a lot of work?” I asked him.
“Oh! No, I am all right with the work, I can manage it.” He said.
Our dog barked outside severally. It was dark almost 10 pm.
“Why is he barking?” I asked.
“I don’t know, let me go and check.” Ken said standing up.
“Did you close the gate?” I asked him.
“Yes, I always lock it after 8 pm.” Ken said.
Ken opened the door and went outside. The dogs came running after him. He asked them why they were barking as if he would get a response. He went around our expansive compound before coming back.
“There is nothing, just some mongoose, perhaps or a wild cat. They are many around here and they normally steal chicken.” Ken said.
We sat watching the movie and just talking until it was around 11 pm.
Suddenly, Ken stood up and said, “Madam, I want to go to sleep. I want to be able to wake up tomorrow early in the morning to milk the cows.”
I wished I had the courage to just let it out of my mouth what I was feeling. I had always seen it in movies and heard of women who openly told a man what she was feeling for him, but I never imagined it would be so difficult to let it out. I felt like there was a huge stone seated in my heart that I was unable to lift. I even wondered, how does a woman tell a man she wants him? How?
“Ken, we can stay for a while. I am not feeling like sleeping.” I tried to talk him into making him stay a little more. I wanted to see if I would gather enough courage to tell him. But I kept wondering, what will Ken think of me? Is it even right for a woman of my social status sleeping with her shamba boy? Would I really bring myself to cheat on my husband with a shamba boy? A stream of questions formulated in my head.
“I shall come tomorrow and stay more, today I was tired. Tomorrow I shall plan myself not to get so tired and I shall come and watch more movies.” Ken told me.
I thought perhaps I should let him go and wait for the following day.
>>>To be continued>>
By P~ngure.

10/08/2017

I thank you people for making the right choice during the election day. Let us hope our New leaders will commit in their services to the public. Congratulations our Governor(Lee), Senator(Kihika), Women rep, MP(Chemboi), and our MCA. May God give you courage and wisdom

29/04/2016

being realistic is the most common path to mediocrity. money and success dont changepeople, they merely amplify what is already there.
NB; everybody is ignorant, only on different subjects.

Experience is the best teacher.Today am wiser than yesterday.
26/02/2016

Experience is the best teacher.Today am wiser than yesterday.

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