“Aiiiiiiii, kwani Maina ndio wa kwanza kushootiwa? He’s dead bana, wacheni maswali za clinic, ala?!! I don’t know what happened wadau, I’m only responsible for posting ngori images on chochio media, mimi sijui kama alikuwa jambazi au la, si unajua policy yetu huwa shoot first ask questions later? Amekufa, ata mruke, mshute, mlie, hatafufuka…just accept and move on. Mumezidi na haya maswali ya kipuzi banaaa. Aiiiii!!!”
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Omera unasumbua.
Kijana alikuwa anapeana TEDx talks mchana alafu usiku ananyonga watu pale Kibra. Police never lie.
Mwisi ni mwisi Ata kama ni choppy…
Kwanza index 1 shule yetu hakua anataka kuona dictionary na logbook mpya mbele yake… Maform 1 walikua wanamtambua
Ukweli…sikuhizi indez 1 wenu ananyongea watu wapi tuone kama Hessy anaeza tumwa huko?
Accountability is not found in the text book of Kenyan cops. That statement from Hessy is pure shite and exposes his level of education and reasoning.
It’s high time the youth woke up to the reality that, the only thing the govt has in store for them is a bullet.
Ni dagithare… Sijui anaibanga nini siku hizi…
Uko handas… ths statement makes no sense!
Easy to say that when you know you have easy access to the USA. Wacha uchochezi
Wanunulie Kevlar…
Two or three people are killed daily in the usa by cops. The land of the free.
People shot to death by U.S. police, by race 2024 | Statista
Police kill about 3 men per day in the US, according to new study
Frank Edwards, Cornell University, Michael H. Esposito, University of Washington
August 6, 2018 6.40am EDT
Police in the U.S. kill on average more than 1,000 men per year, or about three men per day. According to our estimates, police are responsible for about 8 percent of all adult male homicide deaths in the U.S. each year.
These estimates come from our study, published on July 19. We relied on novel unofficial data collected through Fatal Encounters, a systematic review of media and public records searches by researchers and journalists. Our team of sociologists with expertise on race and health, which includes Hedwig Lee at Washington University in St. Louis, used these new data to estimate Americans’ underlying risk.
Our analysis shows that risk of police-involved death is two times higher than indicated by official data sources.