Jubilee Party headquarters in Pangani, Nairobi County, has been put up for auction.

Meria

Elder Lister
A notice appearing in the dailies on Monday, August 29, 2022, identifies the building as part of LR No. 209/1530 Emani Business Center, which is registered in the name of Farmers Industry Limited. The seven-storey building has two basement floors and a penthouse, a sentry house and a power house among others.
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Kiarie Muici
@QuadroK4000 kuja usome story ya Kiarie
Kiambu’s most infamous robber-baron (and it is a competitive pool) was undoubtedly a man named JK Mbugua or simply Kiarie wa Njoki or Kiarie Muiici. Legends abound about him, including how he acquired his vast land holdings which once included the parcel Jubilee House in Pangani stands on. Another, common about untouchable robber barons of his day, was that he had been given a ‘license to steal’ by Jomo Kenyatta after he stole one of his rings. Despite the obvious padding, the only true part was that the man was untouchable.
Once, presumably in the early 1980s when Moi was working to break the Kikuyu hold on the economy, Kiarie found himself hounded out of some of his land and properties. He asked for, and got, an audience with Moi. An elderly unassuming man until you crossed him, he was ushered into Moi’s State House office carrying a briefcase. Moi sat on his power seat, sipping a cup of coffee and waiting for the man to state his case.
So Kiarie opened his briefcase and calmly removed several title deeds to show he owned the properties. Then from the briefcase he removed a Ceska pistol, and placed it on the table. In Walking in Kenyatta’s Struggles, Duncan Ndegwa describes how Moi nearly choked on his coffee. He then rushed the meeting, telling the old man that he would look into. Kiarie was arrested and interrogated, but the gun hadn’t been loaded, and his story was that he had simply forgotten to remove his gun from the briefcase. He was released and never bothered again.
 
@QuadroK4000 kuja usome story ya Kiarie
Kiambu’s most infamous robber-baron (and it is a competitive pool) was undoubtedly a man named JK Mbugua or simply Kiarie wa Njoki or Kiarie Muiici. Legends abound about him, including how he acquired his vast land holdings which once included the parcel Jubilee House in Pangani stands on. Another, common about untouchable robber barons of his day, was that he had been given a ‘license to steal’ by Jomo Kenyatta after he stole one of his rings. Despite the obvious padding, the only true part was that the man was untouchable.
Once, presumably in the early 1980s when Moi was working to break the Kikuyu hold on the economy, Kiarie found himself hounded out of some of his land and properties. He asked for, and got, an audience with Moi. An elderly unassuming man until you crossed him, he was ushered into Moi’s State House office carrying a briefcase. Moi sat on his power seat, sipping a cup of coffee and waiting for the man to state his case.
So Kiarie opened his briefcase and calmly removed several title deeds to show he owned the properties. Then from the briefcase he removed a Ceska pistol, and placed it on the table. In Walking in Kenyatta’s Struggles, Duncan Ndegwa describes how Moi nearly choked on his coffee. He then rushed the meeting, telling the old man that he would look into. Kiarie was arrested and interrogated, but the gun hadn’t been loaded, and his story was that he had simply forgotten to remove his gun from the briefcase. He was released and never bothered again.
Hekaya
 
BTW, this building was due to be actioned circa 2012 but was saved by uhuru and jubilee...could it be that the building is purely a loss making entity if the owners have not been able to clear their creditors? Despite making billions from the regime?
 
@QuadroK4000 kuja usome story ya Kiarie
Kiambu’s most infamous robber-baron (and it is a competitive pool) was undoubtedly a man named JK Mbugua or simply Kiarie wa Njoki or Kiarie Muiici. Legends abound about him, including how he acquired his vast land holdings which once included the parcel Jubilee House in Pangani stands on. Another, common about untouchable robber barons of his day, was that he had been given a ‘license to steal’ by Jomo Kenyatta after he stole one of his rings. Despite the obvious padding, the only true part was that the man was untouchable.
Once, presumably in the early 1980s when Moi was working to break the Kikuyu hold on the economy, Kiarie found himself hounded out of some of his land and properties. He asked for, and got, an audience with Moi. An elderly unassuming man until you crossed him, he was ushered into Moi’s State House office carrying a briefcase. Moi sat on his power seat, sipping a cup of coffee and waiting for the man to state his case.
So Kiarie opened his briefcase and calmly removed several title deeds to show he owned the properties. Then from the briefcase he removed a Ceska pistol, and placed it on the table. In Walking in Kenyatta’s Struggles, Duncan Ndegwa describes how Moi nearly choked on his coffee. He then rushed the meeting, telling the old man that he would look into. Kiarie was arrested and interrogated, but the gun hadn’t been loaded, and his story was that he had simply forgotten to remove his gun from the briefcase. He was released and never bothered again.
A nice hekaya. Basics za VIP protection wouldn't allow that. Moi was paranoid when he was cracking down on those Kikuyu mafia. He used to take his personal security seriously.

Let me stop getting in the way of a good story 😅.
 
@QuadroK4000 kuja usome story ya Kiarie
Kiambu’s most infamous robber-baron (and it is a competitive pool) was undoubtedly a man named JK Mbugua or simply Kiarie wa Njoki or Kiarie Muiici. Legends abound about him, including how he acquired his vast land holdings which once included the parcel Jubilee House in Pangani stands on. Another, common about untouchable robber barons of his day, was that he had been given a ‘license to steal’ by Jomo Kenyatta after he stole one of his rings. Despite the obvious padding, the only true part was that the man was untouchable.
Once, presumably in the early 1980s when Moi was working to break the Kikuyu hold on the economy, Kiarie found himself hounded out of some of his land and properties. He asked for, and got, an audience with Moi. An elderly unassuming man until you crossed him, he was ushered into Moi’s State House office carrying a briefcase. Moi sat on his power seat, sipping a cup of coffee and waiting for the man to state his case.
So Kiarie opened his briefcase and calmly removed several title deeds to show he owned the properties. Then from the briefcase he removed a Ceska pistol, and placed it on the table. In Walking in Kenyatta’s Struggles, Duncan Ndegwa describes how Moi nearly choked on his coffee. He then rushed the meeting, telling the old man that he would look into. Kiarie was arrested and interrogated, but the gun hadn’t been loaded, and his story was that he had simply forgotten to remove his gun from the briefcase. He was released and never bothered again.
He passed Moi an old mafioso message from Mt Kenya - whoever you think you are, we can get to you...
 
A nice hekaya. Basics za VIP protection wouldn't allow that. Moi was paranoid when he was cracking down on those Kikuyu mafia. He used to take his personal security seriously.

Let me stop getting in the way of a good story 😅.
Not true. Security protocols were not as strict in the past. Visitors could show up at the gate of Kabarnet gardens and still get audience with Moi. When Moi visited Jamhuri park for functions, I would spend hours admiring his blue Mercedes, undisturbed.
 
@QuadroK4000 kuja usome story ya Kiarie
Kiambu’s most infamous robber-baron (and it is a competitive pool) was undoubtedly a man named JK Mbugua or simply Kiarie wa Njoki or Kiarie Muiici. Legends abound about him, including how he acquired his vast land holdings which once included the parcel Jubilee House in Pangani stands on. Another, common about untouchable robber barons of his day, was that he had been given a ‘license to steal’ by Jomo Kenyatta after he stole one of his rings. Despite the obvious padding, the only true part was that the man was untouchable.
Once, presumably in the early 1980s when Moi was working to break the Kikuyu hold on the economy, Kiarie found himself hounded out of some of his land and properties. He asked for, and got, an audience with Moi. An elderly unassuming man until you crossed him, he was ushered into Moi’s State House office carrying a briefcase. Moi sat on his power seat, sipping a cup of coffee and waiting for the man to state his case.
So Kiarie opened his briefcase and calmly removed several title deeds to show he owned the properties. Then from the briefcase he removed a Ceska pistol, and placed it on the table. In Walking in Kenyatta’s Struggles, Duncan Ndegwa describes how Moi nearly choked on his coffee. He then rushed the meeting, telling the old man that he would look into. Kiarie was arrested and interrogated, but the gun hadn’t been loaded, and his story was that he had simply forgotten to remove his gun from the briefcase. He was released and never bothered again.
Sio hekaya, his son Kadonga showed us the alleged ceska pistol. Huyo mzae alikuwa mnoma sana.
 
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