Advertisement

Omtatah claims Kenya’s debt is ‘odious’, warns against silence over state looting

Omtatah claims Kenya’s debt is ‘odious’, warns against silence over state looting
Busia Senator Okiya Omtatah at a past function. PHOTO/@OkiyaOmtatah/X

Busia Senator Okiya Omtatah has launched an attack on the country’s political leadership, accusing successive governments of burdening citizens with unconstitutional debt, corruption, and the erosion of public services.

In a statement on his X account on Friday, May 8, 2026, Omtatah argued that the country’s crisis did not begin recently but is rooted in years of unchecked borrowing, corruption, and failure by political leaders to uphold the Constitution.

According to Omtatah, Kenya borrowed Ksh9.11 trillion between 2014 and 2024, but only Ksh2.57 trillion received proper parliamentary approval, with the remaining Ksh6.54 trillion described as ‘odious debt’ imposed on citizens without constitutional backing.

Busia Senator Okiya Omtatah's X post on May 8, 2026. PHOTO/Screengrab by People Daily DIgital/@OkiyaOmtatah/X
Busia Senator Okiya Omtatah’s X post on May 8, 2026. PHOTO/Screengrab by People Daily Digital from @OkiyaOmtatah/X

“Fellow Kenyans, our crisis did not begin yesterday. The looting. The illegal debt. The betrayal of the Constitution. The collapse of public services. The silence of career politicians. These are old scripts repeated by leaders who believe Kenyans forget quickly,” Omtatah wrote.

“Between 2014 and 2024, Kenya borrowed Ksh9.11 trillion. Only Ksh2.57 trillion received proper parliamentary approval. The remaining Ksh6.54 trillion is odious debt, unconstitutional borrowing forced onto the backs of struggling citizens.”

Impact of debt crisis

Omtatah claimed that the debt crisis has contributed to rising food prices, struggling healthcare services, declining education standards, and growing unemployment among young people.

National Treasury buildings.@KeTreasury/X
National Treasury buildings. PHOTO/@KeTreasury/X

“This is why food prices rise while wages stagnate. This is why hospitals lack medicine while billions disappear. This is why schools decline while politicians grow richer. This is why young people graduate into hopelessness,” Omtatah said.

Some leaders are failing

Omtatah accused sections of the politicians of prioritising succession politics over reforms. He argued that a number of them are focused on inheriting the current political system instead of fixing it.

He further criticised the state over the suppression of dissent, claiming protesters are being criminalized while corruption networks continue to thrive unchecked.

“And while Kenya bleeds, legacy politicians remain silent. Many are not fighting to fix the system. They are fighting to inherit it,” Omtatah stated.

Author

Emmanuel Rono

Rono is a digital journalist with a proven track record in newsroom leadership and content creation. Currently a Digital Writer for People Daily Digital, Emmanuel’s career is rooted in a lifelong passion for storytelling. Let's talk here: [email protected] or [email protected]

View all posts by Emmanuel Rono

For these and more credible stories, join our revamped Telegram and WhatsApp channels.
Advertisement