Former Cabinet Secretary Moses Kuria has issued a stark warning to Kenyaโ€™s political class after thousands of young people in Othaya, Nyeri County, rallied behind a TikTok content creatorโ€”without any involvement from politicians.

The gathering was organised in support of Vincent โ€œKaluma Boyโ€, a 17-year-old whose story of struggle and resilience has captured national attention. Kuria described the unprecedented mobilisation as a sign of โ€œthe new Republic,โ€ driven by young people determined to chart their own course outside the traditional political elite.

In a pointed message to veteran leaders, he urged them to recognise the generational shift:โ€œSmell the coffee, wazee wenzangu. The young people of this country have moved on without us. We are like that spare wheel at the back of a Land Rover.โ€

He went further, likening the old guard to political relics:โ€œWe lost our deposit,โ€ he told his โ€œfellow octogenarians.โ€

Kalumaโ€™s rise began in August 2024 when his father suffered a severe stroke, leaving him in a coma for three months. As the familyโ€™s situation worsened, the teenager stepped up as the primary caregiver.

To support his fatherโ€™s recovery, he worked long hours on tea farms, earning meagre wages that went directly into medical bills. On TikTok, he began sharing raw videos of his daily lifeโ€”not polished skits, but footage of him picking tea under the sun and appealing for help to pay for a physiotherapist.

His authenticity struck a deep chord with Kenyans online.

On September 28, 2025, the digital movement spilled into real life. Thousands of Kenyans travelled to Othaya in buses and motorcycle convoys to stand with Kaluma Boy. The crowd, which overwhelmed the small town, arrived with donations of food and money aimed at covering his fatherโ€™s ongoing treatment.

The mobilisation quickly became more than charityโ€”it symbolised solidarity and people power in action. Even Busia Senator Okiya Omtatah praised the effort, calling it a display of โ€œreal community vibes.โ€

What started as one teenagerโ€™s personal struggle has transformed into a national moment of unity and reflection. For Kuria, it is also a political wake-up call: young Kenyans are proving they can organise, mobilise, and leadโ€”without the machinery of the old political order.


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