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OKANGO: A generation in pain, a nation at a crossroads: Time for a people-led national conversation

Justice cannot come from burning tyres. It must rise from structured dialogue. Let this be a revolution of ideas, not blood.

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by FREDRICK OKANGO

Opinion16 July 2025 - 07:45
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In Summary


  • This conversation cannot become another elite performance. It must be citizen-owned.
  • Half the seats must go to young people, because half the burden already lies on their shoulders. They exposed injustice when the cameras looked away. 

The streets of Kenya are stained with the blood of the youth. Smoke from burned businesses still lingers. The cries of mothers searching for abducted sons haunt our courtrooms and weigh on our collective conscience. What we are witnessing is not just a political standoff; it is a national heartbreak.

Thirty-five years after Saba Saba gave birth to multiparty democracy, Kenya again stands at a precipice. Youth-led protests sparked by economic despair, police brutality, and corruption have flooded the streets, not to destroy, but to demand dignity. They’ve been met not with dialogue, but with bullets and abductions.

This isn't about Raila Odinga. It's not about William Ruto. It's about Kenya—about us, our children, and especially the young people who have marched, cried, bled and screamed into a system that has ignored their pain for too long.

The numbers tell the story. Over 100 lives lost. More than 1,000 injured. Businesses worth over Sh50 billion were destroyed. Dozens remain unaccounted for, kidnapped or jailed. Most of the casualties are young people, either dead, imprisoned, abducted or maimed. Their pain is real.

Yet in every tragedy lies a sliver of hope. A moment to say: enough is enough. Not to ask what politicians will do, but what we as citizens are willing to fight for—peacefully and together.

It is in this context that Raila’s call for an Intergenerational National Conclave must be understood—not as a political gambit, but as Kenya’s most credible blueprint for survival.

This conversation cannot become another elite performance. It must be citizen-owned. Half the seats must go to young people, because half the burden already lies on their shoulders. They exposed injustice when the cameras looked away. They built this moment—we must now protect it.

Justice cannot come from burning tyres or broken glass. It must rise from structured dialogue. Let this be a revolution of ideas, not blood. The protests gave us momentum; the table can give us answers.

This dialogue must be anchored in non-negotiables: safe return of abducted citizens; prosecution of those behind extrajudicial killings; compensation to all the affected families; and a binding commitment from all stakeholders. Youth must be co-creators, not spectators.

We do not need to start from scratch. We must revisit the TJRC report, the BBI framework, Nadco recommendations and the 10-point Raila-Ruto agreement. Kenya’s problem has never been a lack of ideas—it’s the lack of will to implement them.

The people-led national conversation must deliver what Kenyans have demanded for decades: justice, inclusion and accountability. It must implement the truth-telling and healing of TJRC; the constitutional promises of BBI; the reforms in Nadco; and the 10-point Raila-Ruto agenda, ranging from youth economic inclusion, devolution, peaceful assembly and police accountability, to auditing debt, ending corruption, enforcing diversity in public appointments and ensuring the rule of law.

This time, something is different. The youth are awake. The country is stirring. And the idea of a people-led national conversation is gaining momentum. From the Political Parties Liaison Committee to the Meru Youth Assembly, from the Garissa Council of Elders to Nakuru Civil Society, and now Kepsa—key voices across Kenya have endorsed this call.

These are not empty gestures. They reflect a national hunger for real dialogue. Kenyans are uniting—not by tribe or party, but by truth and purpose. That is what frightens the old order. This is no longer just a protest—it is a generational awakening.

For the first time in our generation, Kikuyus, Luos, Kalenjins, Luhyas, Muslims, Christians—even atheists—are standing together. Not around a personality, but around justice. That is our strength.

Kenyans now face two stark choices. We can choose chaos—more bloodshed, destruction, grieving mothers and deeper wounds. Or we can choose a people-led national conversation—a path of peace, justice and long-overdue reform. One road leads to funerals and failure. The other leads to healing and a future built by the people. This is not a time for indifference—it is a time for moral clarity.

To the youth of Kenya, you have already made history. Now make a future. Do not leave the streets only to retreat. Join the rest at the conversation table—not to ask for permission, but to take your rightful place.

Kenya is at a crossroads. We either dialogue or bury more of our youth. We either co-create our future or let chaos consume us. The world is watching. But more importantly, your children will ask: When Kenya cried, where were you?

Let the answer be: We rose. We healed. We built. Let that be our legacy. Let it begin now—with a people-led national conversation.

Okango is a public affairs commentator and expert in leadership and governance

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