Media personality Ciru Muriuki has stirred intense debate after suggesting that Kenyans should consider flinging feces at government officials as a form of protest. Her shocking statement, , comes amid heightened public frustration over governance and state brutality.
Highlights:
- Ciru Muriuki proposed using human waste to protest against government officials
- Her comment has drawn mixed reactions — from outrage to support
- She framed it as an expression of rising frustration with the political class
Main Story:
Ciru’s Radical Suggestion Goes Viral
Media personality Ciru Muriuki did not mince words when expressing her frustration with Kenya’s leadership. During the segment, she floated an unorthodox idea: that Kenyans should consider hurling feces at corrupt politicians, police, and other government officials as a radical act of protest.
“What if we just started flinging… feces at these people,” she said, calling out public officials for failing citizens and violating rights.
Ciru’s remark was clearly symbolic, aimed at spotlighting the rage many young Kenyans feel about issues like corruption, police brutality, and disregard for the Constitution. Still, the graphic nature of her suggestion struck a nerve — and reactions came in fast and fierce.
Some Kenyans applauded her for voicing a raw truth that many feel but few dare to say. Others called the comment reckless, urging her to promote more constructive, legal forms of dissent.
The context behind her words is a nation gripped by tension. In recent weeks, Gen Z-led protests have rocked the country, especially in Nairobi, Mombasa, and Kisumu, with demonstrators calling out oppressive laws and economic hardship.
Ciru’s comment, though extreme, taps into that boiling frustration. It echoes the voices of a generation that feels pushed to the brink and desperate to be heard.
While some are calling for her to retract the statement, others argue that her comment should open a deeper conversation about why Kenyans feel driven to such desperate forms of protest. Whether or not you agree with her method, her message is clear: the system must change — or face the consequences of public fury.
As frustrations escalate, Ciru’s shocking words force us to ask: when the usual protests fall on deaf ears, how far is too far in the fight for justice?